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DNA-loop-extruding SMC complexes can traverse one another in vivo

Hugo B. Brandão,Zhongqing Ren,2 Autores,Xindan Wang

2020 · DOI: 10.1038/s41594-021-00626-1
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology · 72 citas

TLDR

A crash-course track system is created to study SMC complex encounters in vivo by engineering defined SMC loading sites in the Bacillus subtilis chromosome and suggests that the bypassing activity enables SMC complexes to avoid traffic jams while spatially organizing the genome.

Resumen

Chromosome organization mediated by structural maintenance of chromosomes (SMC) complexes is vital in many organisms. SMC complexes act as motors that extrude DNA loops, but it remains unclear what happens when multiple complexes encounter one another on the same DNA in living cells and how these interactions may help to organize an active genome. We therefore created a crash-course track system to study SMC complex encounters in vivo by engineering defined SMC loading sites in the Bacillus subtilis chromosome. Chromosome conformation capture (Hi-C) analyses of over 20 engineered strains show an amazing variety of chromosome folding patterns. Through three-dimensional polymer simulations and theory, we determine that these patterns require SMC complexes to bypass each other in vivo, as recently seen in an in vitro study. We posit that the bypassing activity enables SMC complexes to avoid traffic jams while spatially organizing the genome. Hi-C analyses of engineered Bacillus subtilis strains with defined SMC loading sites and 3D polymer simulations indicate that SMC complex encounters on the same DNA are resolved via bypassing in vivo.