4.8 Article

Rapid evolution of the DNA-binding site in LAGLIDADG homing endonucleases

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 4, Pages 960-969

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/29.4.960

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Sequence analysis of chloroplast and mitochondrial large subunit rRNA genes from over 75 green algae disclosed 28 new group I intron-encoded proteins carrying a single LAGLIDADG motif, These putative homing endonucleases form four subfamilies of homologous enzymes, with the members of each subfamily being encoded by introns sharing the same insertion site, We showed that four divergent endonucleases from the I-Crel subfamily cleave the same DNA substrates, Mapping of the 66 amino acids that are conserved among the members of this subfamily on the 3-dimensional structure of I-Crel bound:to its recognition sequence revealed that these residues participate in protein folding, homodimerization, DNA recognition and catalysis. Surprisingly, only seven of the 21 I-Crel amino acids interacting with DNA are conserved, suggesting that I-Crel and its homologs use different subsets of residues to recognize the same DNA sequence. Our sequence comparison of all 45 single-LADLIDADG proteins identified so far suggests that these proteins share related structures and that there is a weak:pressure in each subfamily to maintain identical protein-DNA contacts. The high sequence variability we observed in the DNA-binding site of homologous LAGLIDADG endonucleases provides insight into how these proteins evolve new DNA specificity.

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