4.7 Article

Coordination of phage genome degradation versus host genome protection by a bifunctional restriction-modification enzyme visualized by CryoEM

期刊

STRUCTURE
卷 29, 期 6, 页码 521-+

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.str.2021.03.012

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资金

  1. NIH [R01 GM105691, U24GM129547]
  2. Amazon Cloud Credit
  3. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
  4. Office of Biological and Environmental Research
  5. New England Biolabs

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The study explores the catalytic behavior and structure of a bifunctional restriction-modification enzyme, highlighting a possible solution to DNA modification through competition between slow methylation and cleavage at different speeds.
Restriction enzymes that combine methylation and cleavage into a single assemblage and modify one DNA strand are capable of efficient adaptation toward novel targets. However, they must reliably cleave invasive DNA and methylate newly replicated unmodified host sites. One possible solution is to enforce a competition between slow methylation at a single unmodified host target, versus faster cleavage that requires multiple unmodified target sites in foreign DNA to be brought together in a reaction synapse. To examine this model, we have determined the catalytic behavior of a bifunctional type IIL restriction-modification enzyme and determined its structure, via cryoelectron microscopy, at several different stages of assembly and coordination with bound DNA targets. The structures demonstrate a mechanism in which an initial dimer is formed between two DNA-bound enzyme molecules, positioning the endonuclease domain from each enzyme against the other's DNA and requiring further additional DNA-bound enzyme molecules to enable cleavage.

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