Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/33186
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dc.contributor.advisorRudolph, C-
dc.contributor.advisorRoberts, T-
dc.contributor.authorPeros, Stelinda-
dc.date.accessioned2026-04-21T16:52:47Z-
dc.date.available2026-04-21T16:52:47Z-
dc.date.issued2025-
dc.identifier.urihttp://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/33186-
dc.descriptionThis thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University Londonen_US
dc.description.abstractDNA replication is essential for genome stability, but it is constantly jeopardized by various obstacles such as nucleoprotein complexes and transcription–replication conflicts. If not properly resolved, these impediments lead to replication fork collapse, genomic instability, and even cell death. This thesis investigates how Escherichia coli preserves its replication integrity using three experimental systems: site-specific protein– DNA blockades, engineered replication–transcription conflicts, and chemical stress induced by saccharin exposure. These studies were supported by the development of an automated bioimage informatics pipeline, utilizing deep-learning segmentation to enable high-throughput quantitative analysis of cellular morphology and SOS-induced stress phenotypes in live-cell time-lapse microscopy. Using a novel inducible fork-block model, I demonstrate that the PriA–PriB– DnaT pathway is the primary restart mechanism at nucleoprotein obstacles, with PriA helicase activity being essential for efficient replication restart. Surprisingly, when large tandem repeats were placed on the opposite replichore, PriC rather than PriB played the dominant role, raising the possibility that restart pathway usage is influenced by obstacle size or chromosomal context. Replication–transcription conflicts, generated by introducing an ectopic origin of replication (oriZ), similarly required PriA helicase and PriB for efficient fork restart. In their absence, cells displayed severe filamentation, heterogeneous stress phenotypes, and elevated Cas1–Cas2 foci. To further define the nature of these collisions, I utilized an alternative origin (oriX); the comparison between head-on and co-directional orientations confirmed that cellular pathology was specifically conflict- dependent. Genetic suppression with an RNA polymerase–destabilizing mutation confirmed that these defects stem directly from transcriptional collisions rather than indirect effects. Finally, I show that saccharin, a widely used artificial sweetener, induces replication stress in E. coli, with PriB-deficient cells exhibiting pronounced defects and loss of viability. These findings highlight how dietary compounds may disrupt gut microbial physiology. Collectively, this work establishes PriA helicase as a central player in replication restart and a promising antibacterial target. Since stalled fork rescue is also critical in cancer cells, these results also provide conceptual bridges between bacterial DNA replication and oncogene-induced replication stress, opening avenues for both antimicrobial and cancer therapeutic development.en_US
dc.description.sponsorshipBiotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) through the project “How bacteria replicate their DNA in spite of barriers, one molecule at a time” (Project Reference: BB/W000393/1)en_US
dc.publisherBrunel University Londonen_US
dc.subjectNucleoprotein obstacles and replication-transcription collisionsen_US
dc.subjectGenome stability and DNA damage responseen_US
dc.subjectPriA helicase and replication restart mechanismsen_US
dc.subjectMachine Learning-based image analysis for live-cell time-lapse microscopyen_US
dc.subjectSaccharin and artificial sweeteners molecular toxicologyen_US
dc.titleInvestigating replication fork blocks, replication-transcription conflicts and replication restart dynamics in Escherichia colien_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
Appears in Collections:Biological Sciences
Department of Biosciences Theses *

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