Binding of small acid-soluble spore proteins from Bacillus subtilis changes the conformation of DNA from B to A

  1. S C Mohr,
  2. N V Sokolov,
  3. C M He, and
  4. P Setlow
  1. Department of Chemistry, Boston University, MA 02215.

Abstract

Small acid-soluble spore proteins (SASPs) appear 3-4 hr after the onset of sporulation in Gram-positive bacteria and constitute up to 20% of the protein of mature spores. Previous studies using Bacillus subtilis deletion mutants lacking SASP-alpha and -beta have shown that such mutations abolish the elevated resistance of spores to UV radiation. Analyses using circular dichroism and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy now demonstrate that binding alpha/beta-type SASPs to DNA in vitro causes a structural change in DNA, from the B to the A conformation. This may provide the basis whereby alpha/beta-type SASPs confer increased spore UV resistance in vivo--by changing spore DNA conformation, they alter DNA photochemistry such that UV irradiation produces spore photoproduct instead of the more lethal cyclobutane-type thymine dimers.

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