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Transposon-encoded nucleases use guide RNAs to promote their selfish spread

Authors :
Meers, Chance
Le, Hoang C.
Pesari, Sanjana R.
Hoffmann, Florian T.
Walker, Matt W. G.
Gezelle, Jeanine
Tang, Stephen
Sternberg, Samuel H.
Source :
Nature; October 2023, Vol. 622 Issue: 7984 p863-871, 9p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Insertion sequences are compact and pervasive transposable elements found in bacteria, which encode only the genes necessary for their mobilization and maintenance1. IS200- and IS605-family transposons undergo ‘peel-and-paste’ transposition catalysed by a TnpA transposase2, but they also encode diverse, TnpB- and IscB-family proteins that are evolutionarily related to the CRISPR-associated effectors Cas12 and Cas9, respectively3,4. Recent studies have demonstrated that TnpB and IscB function as RNA-guided DNA endonucleases5,6, but the broader biological role of this activity has remained enigmatic. Here we show that TnpB and IscB are essential to prevent permanent transposon loss as a consequence of the TnpA transposition mechanism. We selected a family of related insertion sequences from Geobacillus stearothermophilusthat encode several TnpB and IscB orthologues, and showed that a single TnpA transposase was broadly active for transposon mobilization. The donor joints formed upon religation of transposon-flanking sequences were efficiently targeted for cleavage by RNA-guided TnpB and IscB nucleases, and co-expression of TnpB and TnpA led to substantially greater transposon retention relative to conditions in which TnpA was expressed alone. Notably, TnpA and TnpB also stimulated recombination frequencies, surpassing rates observed with TnpB alone. Collectively, this study reveals that RNA-guided DNA cleavage arose as a primal biochemical activity to bias the selfish inheritance and spread of transposable elements, which was later co-opted during the evolution of CRISPR–Cas adaptive immunity for antiviral defence.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
622
Issue :
7984
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs64092777
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06597-1