Article

  • The EMBO Journal (1998) 17, 7139 - 7148
  • doi:10.1093/emboj/17.23.7139

ATP-dependent aggregation of single-stranded DNA by a bacterial SMC homodimer

Michiko Hirano1 and Tatsuya Hirano1

  1. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, PO Box 100, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724, USA

Correspondence to:

Tatsuya Hirano, E-mail: hirano@cshl.org

Received 12 August 1998; Accepted 28 September 1998; Revised 28 September 1998


SMC (structural maintenance of chromosomes) proteins are putative ATPases that are highly conserved among Bacteria, Archaea and Eucarya. Eukaryotic SMC proteins are implicated in a diverse range of chromosome dynamics including chromosome condensation, dosage compensation and recombinational repair. In eukaryotes, two different SMC proteins form a heterodimer, which in turn acts as the core component of a large protein complex. Despite recent progress, no ATP-dependent activity has been found in individual SMC subunits. We report here the first biochemical characterization of a bacterial SMC protein from Bacillus subtilis. Unlike eukaryotic versions, the B.subtilis SMC protein (BsSMC) is a simple homodimer with no associated subunits. It binds preferentially to single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and has a ssDNA-stimulated ATPase activity. In the presence of ATP, BsSMC forms large nucleoprotein aggregates in a ssDNA-specific manner. Proteolytic cleavage of BsSMC is changed upon binding to ATP and ssDNA. The energy-dependent aggregation of ssDNA might represent a primitive type of chromosome condensation that occurs during segregation of bacterial chromosomes.

  • Keywords:

    • ATPase,
    • Bacillus subtilis,
    • chromosome organization,
    • SMC proteins,
    • ssDNA