학술논문

A Functional Mini-Integrase in a Two-Protein-type V-C CRISPR System.
Document Type
article
Source
Molecular cell. 73(4)
Subject
Escherichia coli
Endodeoxyribonucleases
Endonucleases
Integrases
Escherichia coli Proteins
DNA
Bacterial
Gene Expression Regulation
Bacterial
Base Pairing
Substrate Specificity
Nucleotide Motifs
CRISPR-Cas Systems
Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats
CRISPR-Associated Proteins
Gene Editing
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Biological Sciences
Genetics
CRISPR
integrase
protein-DNA recognition
spacer acquisition
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
CRISPR-Cas immunity requires integration of short, foreign DNA fragments into the host genome at the CRISPR locus, a site consisting of alternating repeat sequences and foreign-derived spacers. In most CRISPR systems, the proteins Cas1 and Cas2 form the integration complex and are both essential for DNA acquisition. Most type V-C and V-D systems lack the cas2 gene and have unusually short CRISPR repeats and spacers. Here, we show that a mini-integrase comprising the type V-C Cas1 protein alone catalyzes DNA integration with a preference for short (17- to 19-base-pair) DNA fragments. The mini-integrase has weak specificity for the CRISPR array. We present evidence that the Cas1 proteins form a tetramer for integration. Our findings support a model of a minimal integrase with an internal ruler mechanism that favors shorter repeats and spacers. This minimal integrase may represent the function of the ancestral Cas1 prior to Cas2 adoption.