Drosophila P-element transposase is a novel site-specific endonuclease

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Abstract

We developed in vitro assays to study the first step of the P-element transposition reaction: donor DNA cleavage. We found that P-element transposase required both 5' and 3' P-element termini for efficient DNA cleavage to occur, suggesting that a synaptic complex forms prior to cleavage. Transposase made a staggered cleavage at the P-element termini that is novel for all known site-specific endonucleases: the 3' cleavage site is at the end of the P-element, whereas the 5' cleavage site is 17 bp within the P-element 31-bp inverted repeats. The P-element termini were protected from exonucleolytic degradation following the cleavage reaction, suggesting that a stable protein complex remains bound to the element termini after cleavage. These data are consistent with a cut-and-paste mechanism for P-element transposition and may explain why P elements predominantly excise imprecisely in vivo.

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Beall, E. L., & Rio, D. C. (1997). Drosophila P-element transposase is a novel site-specific endonuclease. Genes and Development, 11(16), 2137–2151. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.11.16.2137

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