RecA-dependent programmable endonuclease Ref cleaves DNA in two distinct steps

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Abstract

The bacteriophage P1 recombination enhancement function (Ref) protein is a RecA-dependent programmable endonuclease. Ref targets displacement loops formed when an oligonucleotide is bound by a RecA filament and invades homologous doublestranded DNA sequences. Mechanistic details of this reaction have been explored, revealing that (i) Ref is nickase, cleaving the two target strands of a displacement loop sequentially, (ii) the two strands are cleaved in a prescribed order, with the paired strand cut first and (iii) the two cleavage events have different requirements. Cutting the paired strand is rapid, does not require RecAmediated ATP hydrolysis and is promoted even by Ref active site variant H153A. The displaced strand is cleaved much more slowly, requires RecA-mediated ATP hydrolysis and does not occur with Ref H153A. The two cleavage events are also affected differently by solution conditions. We postulate that the second cleavage (displaced strand) is limited by some activity of RecA protein.© The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press.

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Ronayne, E. A., & Cox, M. M. (2014). RecA-dependent programmable endonuclease Ref cleaves DNA in two distinct steps. Nucleic Acids Research, 42(6), 3871–3883. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkt1342

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