A monomeric mycobacteriophage immunity repressor utilizes two domains to recognize an asymmetric DNA sequence

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Abstract

Regulation of bacteriophage gene expression involves repressor proteins that bind and downregulate early lytic promoters. A large group of mycobacteriophages code for repressors that are unusual in also terminating transcription elongation at numerous binding sites (stoperators) distributed across the phage genome. Here we provide the X-ray crystal structure of a mycobacteriophage immunity repressor bound to DNA, which reveals the binding of a monomer to an asymmetric DNA sequence using two independent DNA binding domains. The structure is supported by small-angle X-ray scattering, DNA binding, molecular dynamics, and in vivo immunity assays. We propose a model for how dual DNA binding domains facilitate regulation of both transcription initiation and elongation, while enabling evolution of other superinfection immune specificities.

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McGinnis, R. J., Brambley, C. A., Stamey, B., Green, W. C., Gragg, K. N., Cafferty, E. R., … Wallen, J. R. (2022). A monomeric mycobacteriophage immunity repressor utilizes two domains to recognize an asymmetric DNA sequence. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-31678-6

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