1. Structural basis of DNA targeting by a transposon-encoded CRISPR–Cas system
- Author
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Tyler S. Halpin-Healy, Sanne E. Klompe, Israel S. Fernández, Samuel H. Sternberg, Simons Foundation, and National Institute of General Medical Sciences (US)
- Subjects
Trans-activating crRNA ,Transposable element ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,Protein engineering ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Fusion protein ,Genome engineering ,Protospacer adjacent motif ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Protein structure ,chemistry ,Cryoelectron microscopy ,Transposition ,RNA ,CRISPR ,Mobile genetic elements ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Transposase ,DNA ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Bacteria use adaptive immune systems encoded by CRISPR and Cas genes to maintain genomic integrity when challenged by pathogens and mobile genetic elements1,2,3. Type I CRISPR–Cas systems typically target foreign DNA for degradation via joint action of the ribonucleoprotein complex Cascade and the helicase–nuclease Cas34,5, but nuclease-deficient type I systems lacking Cas3 have been repurposed for RNA-guided transposition by bacterial Tn7-like transposons6,7. How CRISPR- and transposon-associated machineries collaborate during DNA targeting and insertion remains unknown. Here we describe structures of a TniQ–Cascade complex encoded by the Vibrio cholerae Tn6677 transposon using cryo-electron microscopy, revealing the mechanistic basis of this functional coupling. The cryo-electron microscopy maps enabled de novo modelling and refinement of the transposition protein TniQ, which binds to the Cascade complex as a dimer in a head-to-tail configuration, at the interface formed by Cas6 and Cas7 near the 3′ end of the CRISPR RNA (crRNA). The natural Cas8–Cas5 fusion protein binds the 5′ crRNA handle and contacts the TniQ dimer via a flexible insertion domain. A target DNA-bound structure reveals critical interactions necessary for protospacer-adjacent motif recognition and R-loop formation. This work lays the foundation for a structural understanding of how DNA targeting by TniQ–Cascade leads to downstream recruitment of additional transposase proteins, and will guide protein engineering efforts to leverage this system for programmable DNA insertions in genome-engineering applications., Part of this work was performed at the Simons Electron Microscopy Center and National Resource for Automated Molecular Microscopy located at the New York Structural Biology Center, supported by grants from the Simons Foundation (SF349247), NYSTAR and the NIH National Institute of General Medical Sciences (GM103310).
- Published
- 2019
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