Single-molecule analysis of {phi}C31 integrase-mediated site-specific recombination by tethered particle motion

Serine and tyrosine site-specific recombinases (SRs and YRs, respectively) provide templates for understanding the chemical mechanisms and conformational dynamics of strand cleavage/exchange between DNA partners. Current evidence suggests a rather intriguing mechanism for serine recombination, in which one half of the cleaved synaptic complex undergoes a 180° rotation relative to the other. The ‘small’ and ‘large’ SRs contain a compact amino-terminal catalytic domain, but differ conspicuously in their carboxyl-terminal domains. So far, only one serine recombinase has been analyzed using single substrate molecules. We now utilized single-molecule tethered particle motion (TPM) to follow step-by-step recombination catalyzed by a large SR, phage C31 integrase. The integrase promotes unidirectional DNA exchange between attB and attP sites to integrate the phage genome into the host chromosome. The recombination directionality factor (RDF; C31 gp3) activates the excision reaction (attL x attR). From integrase-induced changes in TPM in the presence or absence of gp3, we delineated the individual steps of recombination and their kinetic features. The gp3 protein appears to regulate recombination directionality by selectively promoting or excluding active conformations of the synapse formed by specific att site partners. Our results support a ‘gated rotation’ of the synaptic complex between DNA cleavage and joining.
Source: Nucleic Acids Research - Category: Research Authors: Tags: Nucleic Acid Enzymes Source Type: research
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