4.8 Article

Discovery of natural nicking endonucleases Nb.BsrDI and Nb.BtsI and engineering of top-strand nicking variants from BsrDI and BtsI

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 35, Issue 14, Pages 4608-4618

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkm481

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Funding

  1. NHGRI NIH HHS [5 R42 HG003976-03, R42 HG003976] Funding Source: Medline

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BsrDI and BtsI restriction endonucleases recognize and cleave double-strand DNA at the sequences GCAATG (2/0) and GCAGTG (2/0), respectively. We have purified and partially characterized these two enzymes, and analyzed the genes that encode them. BsrDI and BtsI are unusual in two respects: each cleaves DNA as a heterodimer of one large subunit (B subunit) and one small subunit (A subunit); and, in the absence of their small subunits, the large subunits behave as sequence-specific DNA nicking enzymes and only nick the bottom strand of the sequences at these respective positions: GCAATG (-/0) and GCAGTG (-/0). We refer to the single subunit, the bottom-strand nicking forms as 'hemidimers'. Amino acid sequence comparisons reveal that BsrDI and BtsI belong to a family of restriction enzymes that possess two catalytic sites: a canonical PD-Xn-EXK and a second non-canonical PD-Xn-E-X12-QR. Interestingly, the other family members, which include BsrI (ACTGG1/-1) and BsmI/Mva1269I (GAATGC1/-1) are single polypeptide chains, i. e. monomers, rather than heterodimers. In BsrDI and BtsI, the two catalytic sites are found in two separate subunits. Site-directed mutagenesis confirmed that the canonical catalytic site located at the N-terminus of the large subunit is responsible for the bottom-strand cleavage, whereas the non-canonical catalytic site located in the small subunit is responsible for hydrolysis of the top strand. Top-strand specific nicking variants, Nt. BsrDI and Nt. BtsI, were successfully engineered by combining the catalytic-deficient B subunit with wild-type A subunit.

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