The restriction fold turns to the dark side: A bacterial homing endonuclease with a PD-(D/E)-XK motif

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Abstract

The homing endonuclease I-Ssp6803I causes the insertion of a group I intron into a bacterial tRNA gene-the only example of an invasive mobile intron within a bacterial genome. Using a computational fold prediction, mutagenic screen and crystal structure determination, we demonstrate that this protein is a tetrameric PD-(D/E)-XK endonuclease-a fold normally used to protect a bacterial genome from invading DNA through the action of restriction endonucleases. I-Ssp6803I uses its tetrameric assembly to promote recognition of a single long target site, whereas restriction endonuclease tetramers facilitate cooperative binding and cleavage of two short sites. The limited use of the PD-(D/E)-XK nucleases by mobile introns stands in contrast to their frequent use of LAGLIDADG and HNH endonucleases-which in turn, are rarely incorporated into restriction/modification systems. ©2007 European Molecular Biology Organization.

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APA

Zhao, L., Bonocora, R. P., Shub, D. A., & Stoddard, B. L. (2007). The restriction fold turns to the dark side: A bacterial homing endonuclease with a PD-(D/E)-XK motif. EMBO Journal, 26(9), 2432–2442. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.emboj.7601672

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