4.7 Article

Tetrameric structure of a serine integrase catalytic domain

Journal

STRUCTURE
Volume 16, Issue 8, Pages 1275-1286

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.str.2008.04.018

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  2. NSF [DMR 0225180]
  3. NIH [RR-01646]

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The serine integrases have recently emerged as powerful new chromosome engineering tools in various organisms and show promise for therapeutic use in human cells. The serine integrases are structurally and mechanistically unrelated to the bacteriophage), integrase but share a similar catalytic domain with the resolvase/invertase, enzymes typified by the resolvase proteins from transposons Tn3 and y8. Here we report the crystal structure and solution properties of the catalytic domain from bacteriophage TP901 -1 integrase. The protein is a dimer in solution but crystallizes as a tetramer that is closely related in overall architecture to structures of activated y6-resolvase mutants. The ability of the integrase tetramer to explain biochemical experiments performed in the resolvase and invertase systems suggests that the TP901 integrase tetramer represents a unique intermediate on the recombination pathway that is shared within the serine recombinase superfamily.

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