Literature DB >> 16756503

Mechanisms of site-specific recombination.

Nigel D F Grindley1, Katrine L Whiteson, Phoebe A Rice.   

Abstract

Integration, excision, and inversion of defined DNA segments commonly occur through site-specific recombination, a process of DNA breakage and reunion that requires no DNA synthesis or high-energy cofactor. Virtually all identified site-specific recombinases fall into one of just two families, the tyrosine recombinases and the serine recombinases, named after the amino acid residue that forms a covalent protein-DNA linkage in the reaction intermediate. Their recombination mechanisms are distinctly different. Tyrosine recombinases break and rejoin single strands in pairs to form a Holliday junction intermediate. By contrast, serine recombinases cut all strands in advance of strand exchange and religation. Many natural systems of site-specific recombination impose sophisticated regulatory mechanisms on the basic recombinational process to favor one particular outcome of recombination over another (for example, excision over inversion or deletion). Details of the site-specific recombination processes have been revealed by recent structural and biochemical studies of members of both families.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16756503     DOI: 10.1146/annurev.biochem.73.011303.073908

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Biochem        ISSN: 0066-4154            Impact factor:   23.643


  289 in total

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5.  Potent antimicrobial small molecules screened as inhibitors of tyrosine recombinases and Holliday junction-resolving enzymes.

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7.  Electrostatic suppression allows tyrosine site-specific recombination in the absence of a conserved catalytic arginine.

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8.  DNA-catalyzed serine side chain reactivity and selectivity.

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9.  Structure-guided reprogramming of serine recombinase DNA sequence specificity.

Authors:  Thomas Gaj; Andrew C Mercer; Charles A Gersbach; Russell M Gordley; Carlos F Barbas
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-12-27       Impact factor: 11.205

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