9 Reverse Gyrase and Other Archaebacterial Topoisomerases
Abstract
It has often been suggested that in some aspects archaebacteria are more closely related to eukaryotes than prokaryotes (e.g., Zillig et al. 1985), although nuclear structures have never been shown in archaebacterial cells. An important issue in the study of archaebacteria is how chromosome structure is maintained under such extreme conditions, such as 75°C for acidothermophiles or 3–4 M KCl for halophiles. Under these conditions many proteins from other kingdoms dissociate from DNA, and the DNA itself would be expected not to have the canonical B-form configuration. To keep chromosomal structure intact, histone-like proteins or other DNA-binding proteins might play important roles (Notbohn 1982; Kimura et al. 1984; Kikuchi et al. 1986). Accordingly, specific topoisomerases might be needed to change local constraints on DNA and to construct tight DNA/protein complexes in obnoxious conditions. One of...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.285-298