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Cell division is required for resolution of dimer chromosomes at the <i>dif</i> locus of <i>Escherichia coli</i>
89
Citations
34
References
1998
Year
GeneticsMolecular BiologyEscherichia ColiMolecular GeneticsCell CycleDif LocusChromosome 22Cell DivisionMeiosisDna ReplicationDimer ChromosomesChromosomal RearrangementMolecular MicrobiologyCell BiologyChromosome DynamicsNatural SciencesGenetic MechanismChromosome BiologyMicrobiologyRecombination DynamicMedicineMutagenesis
The dif locus is a RecA-independent resolvase site in the terminus region of the chromosome of Escherichia coli. The locus reduces dimer chromosomes, which result from sister chromatid exchange, to monomers. A density label assay demonstrates that recombination occurs at dif, and that it requires XerC and XerD. The frequency of this recombination is approximately 14% per site per generation, which is doubled in polA12 mutants. We have determined that recombination occurs late in the cell cycle, and that resolution is blocked if cell division is inhibited with cephalexin or by a ftsZts mutation. Fluorescence microscopy has demonstrated that abnormal nucleoids are present in cells incubated in cephalexin, and this is increased in polA12 mutants.
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