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Exchange of functional domains between a bacterial conjugative relaxase and the integrase of the human adeno-associated virus

Endonucleases of the HUH family are specialized in processing single-stranded DNA in a variety of evolutionarily highly conserved biological processes related to mobile genetic elements. They share a structurally defined catalytic domain for site-specific nicking and strand-transfer reactions, which...

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Autores principales: Agúndez, Leticia, Zárate-Pérez, Francisco, Meier, Anita F., Bardelli, Martino, Llosa, Matxalen, Escalante, Carlos R., Linden, R. Michael, Henckaerts, Els
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6049929/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30016371
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0200841
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author Agúndez, Leticia
Zárate-Pérez, Francisco
Meier, Anita F.
Bardelli, Martino
Llosa, Matxalen
Escalante, Carlos R.
Linden, R. Michael
Henckaerts, Els
author_facet Agúndez, Leticia
Zárate-Pérez, Francisco
Meier, Anita F.
Bardelli, Martino
Llosa, Matxalen
Escalante, Carlos R.
Linden, R. Michael
Henckaerts, Els
author_sort Agúndez, Leticia
collection PubMed
description Endonucleases of the HUH family are specialized in processing single-stranded DNA in a variety of evolutionarily highly conserved biological processes related to mobile genetic elements. They share a structurally defined catalytic domain for site-specific nicking and strand-transfer reactions, which is often linked to the activities of additional functional domains, contributing to their overall versatility. To assess if these HUH domains could be interchanged, we created a chimeric protein from two distantly related HUH endonucleases, containing the N-terminal HUH domain of the bacterial conjugative relaxase TrwC and the C-terminal DNA helicase domain of the human adeno-associated virus (AAV) replicase and site-specific integrase. The purified chimeric protein retained oligomerization properties and DNA helicase activities similar to Rep68, while its DNA binding specificity and cleaving-joining activity at oriT was similar to TrwC. Interestingly, the chimeric protein could catalyse site-specific integration in bacteria with an efficiency comparable to that of TrwC, while the HUH domain of TrwC alone was unable to catalyze this reaction, implying that the Rep68 C-terminal helicase domain is complementing the TrwC HUH domain to achieve site-specific integration into TrwC targets in bacteria. Our results illustrate how HUH domains could have acquired through evolution other domains in order to attain new roles, contributing to the functional flexibility observed in this protein superfamily.
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spelling pubmed-60499292018-07-26 Exchange of functional domains between a bacterial conjugative relaxase and the integrase of the human adeno-associated virus Agúndez, Leticia Zárate-Pérez, Francisco Meier, Anita F. Bardelli, Martino Llosa, Matxalen Escalante, Carlos R. Linden, R. Michael Henckaerts, Els PLoS One Research Article Endonucleases of the HUH family are specialized in processing single-stranded DNA in a variety of evolutionarily highly conserved biological processes related to mobile genetic elements. They share a structurally defined catalytic domain for site-specific nicking and strand-transfer reactions, which is often linked to the activities of additional functional domains, contributing to their overall versatility. To assess if these HUH domains could be interchanged, we created a chimeric protein from two distantly related HUH endonucleases, containing the N-terminal HUH domain of the bacterial conjugative relaxase TrwC and the C-terminal DNA helicase domain of the human adeno-associated virus (AAV) replicase and site-specific integrase. The purified chimeric protein retained oligomerization properties and DNA helicase activities similar to Rep68, while its DNA binding specificity and cleaving-joining activity at oriT was similar to TrwC. Interestingly, the chimeric protein could catalyse site-specific integration in bacteria with an efficiency comparable to that of TrwC, while the HUH domain of TrwC alone was unable to catalyze this reaction, implying that the Rep68 C-terminal helicase domain is complementing the TrwC HUH domain to achieve site-specific integration into TrwC targets in bacteria. Our results illustrate how HUH domains could have acquired through evolution other domains in order to attain new roles, contributing to the functional flexibility observed in this protein superfamily. Public Library of Science 2018-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC6049929/ /pubmed/30016371 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0200841 Text en © 2018 Agúndez et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Agúndez, Leticia
Zárate-Pérez, Francisco
Meier, Anita F.
Bardelli, Martino
Llosa, Matxalen
Escalante, Carlos R.
Linden, R. Michael
Henckaerts, Els
Exchange of functional domains between a bacterial conjugative relaxase and the integrase of the human adeno-associated virus
title Exchange of functional domains between a bacterial conjugative relaxase and the integrase of the human adeno-associated virus
title_full Exchange of functional domains between a bacterial conjugative relaxase and the integrase of the human adeno-associated virus
title_fullStr Exchange of functional domains between a bacterial conjugative relaxase and the integrase of the human adeno-associated virus
title_full_unstemmed Exchange of functional domains between a bacterial conjugative relaxase and the integrase of the human adeno-associated virus
title_short Exchange of functional domains between a bacterial conjugative relaxase and the integrase of the human adeno-associated virus
title_sort exchange of functional domains between a bacterial conjugative relaxase and the integrase of the human adeno-associated virus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6049929/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30016371
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0200841
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