4.8 Article

A Free-Standing Homing Endonuclease Targets an Intron Insertion Site in the psbA Gene of Cyanophages

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages 218-222

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2008.11.069

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Funding

  1. College of Arts and Sciences, University at Albany

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Homing endonuclease genes are mobile elements that promote their duplication into cognate sites that lack the endonuclease gene [1, 2]. The homing endonuclease initiates this event through site-specific DNA cleavage. Copying of the endonuclease gene follows as a consequence of DNA repair. A genome containing a homing endonuclease gene is subject to self-cleavage. Protection is accomplished through DNA sequence polymorphisms, as is the case in intronless homing of free-standing endonuclease genes [3, 4], or by disruption of the recognition site by a group I intron (or intein) into which the endonuclease ORF is embedded. We describe here a novel free-standing homing endonuclease from cyanobacteriophage S-PM2, which is similar to the DNA resolvase of bacteriophage T4 and is encoded adjacent to an intron-containing psbA gene [5, 6]. The endonuclease makes a specific double-strand cut near the intron insertion site (IIS), its DNA recognition site spans the IIS, and it is unable to cleave intron-containing psbA genes. This interdependence of a free-standing endonuclease gene and a group I intron, which we denote collaborative homing, has not been reported previously and gives support to a hypothesis of formation of composite mobile introns by independent convergence of an intron and an endonuclease gene on the same target sequence.

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