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Structural insights into the mechanism of double strand break formation by Hermes, a hAT family eukaryotic DNA transposase

Authors :
Alison B. Hickman
Nancy L. Craig
Fred Dyda
Hosam Ewis
Xianghong Li
Andrea Regier Voth
Source :
Nucleic Acids Research
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2018.

Abstract

Some DNA transposons relocate from one genomic location to another using a mechanism that involves generating double-strand breaks at their transposon ends by forming hairpins on flanking DNA. The same double-strand break mode is employed by the V(D)J recombinase at signal-end/coding-end junctions during the generation of antibody diversity. How flanking hairpins are formed during DNA transposition has remained elusive. Here, we describe several co-crystal structures of the Hermes transposase bound to DNA that mimics the reaction step immediately prior to hairpin formation. Our results reveal a large DNA conformational change between the initial cleavage step and subsequent hairpin formation that changes which strand is acted upon by a single active site. We observed that two factors affect the conformational change: the complement of divalent metal ions bound by the catalytically essential DDE residues, and the identity of the –2 flanking base pair. Our data also provides a mechanistic link between the efficiency of hairpin formation (an A:T basepair is favored at the –2 position) and Hermes' strong target site preference. Furthermore, we have established that the histidine residue within a conserved C/DxxH motif present in many transposase families interacts directly with the scissile phosphate, suggesting a crucial role in catalysis.

Details

ISSN :
13624962 and 03051048
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nucleic Acids Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....27a7819fb65df7efc1f16ac7967f655a