Temporospatial control of topoisomerases by essential cellular processes

IF 5.9 2区 生物学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
Sora Kim, Monica S Guo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Topoisomerases are essential, ubiquitous enzymes that break and rejoin the DNA strand to control supercoiling. Because topoisomerases are DNA scissors, these enzymes are highly regulated to avoid excessive DNA cleavage, a vulnerability exploited by many antibiotics. Topoisomerase activity must be co-ordinated in time and space with transcription, replication, and cell division or else these processes stall, leading to genome loss. Recent work in Escherichia coli has revealed that topoisomerases do not act alone. Most topoisomerases interact with the essential process that they promote, a coupling that may stimulate topoisomerase activity precisely when and where cleavage is required. Surprisingly, in E. coli and most other bacteria, gyrase is not apparently regulated in this manner. We review how each E. coli topoisomerase is regulated, propose possible solutions to ‘the gyrase problem’, and conclude by highlighting how this regulation may present opportunities for antimicrobial development.
细胞基本过程对拓扑异构酶的时空控制
拓扑异构酶是一种重要的、无处不在的酶,可断开和重新连接 DNA 链,从而控制超卷曲。由于拓扑异构酶是 DNA 剪刀,这些酶受到高度调控,以避免过度切割 DNA,而这正是许多抗生素所利用的弱点。拓扑异构酶的活性必须在时间和空间上与转录、复制和细胞分裂相协调,否则这些过程就会停滞,导致基因组丢失。最近在大肠杆菌中进行的研究发现,拓扑异构酶并非单独发挥作用。大多数拓扑异构酶与它们所促进的基本过程相互作用,这种耦合作用可能会在需要裂解的时间和地点精确地刺激拓扑异构酶的活性。令人惊讶的是,在大肠杆菌和大多数其他细菌中,回旋酶显然不是以这种方式调节的。我们回顾了每种大肠杆菌拓扑异构酶是如何被调控的,提出了 "回旋酶问题 "的可能解决方案,最后强调了这种调控如何为抗菌药开发带来机遇。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Current opinion in microbiology
Current opinion in microbiology 生物-微生物学
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
114
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Current Opinion in Microbiology is a systematic review journal that aims to provide specialists with a unique and educational platform to keep up-to-date with the expanding volume of information published in the field of microbiology. It consists of 6 issues per year covering the following 11 sections, each of which is reviewed once a year: Host-microbe interactions: bacteria Cell regulation Environmental microbiology Host-microbe interactions: fungi/parasites/viruses Antimicrobials Microbial systems biology Growth and development: eukaryotes/prokaryotes
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