| Literature DB >> 26478180 |
Jiuyu Wang1, Jiazhi Li2, Hongtu Zhao2, Gang Sheng1, Min Wang1, Maolu Yin2, Yanli Wang3.
Abstract
Bacteria acquire memory of viral invaders by incorporating invasive DNA sequence elements into the host CRISPR locus, generating a new spacer within the CRISPR array. We report on the structures of Cas1-Cas2-dual-forked DNA complexes in an effort toward understanding how the protospacer is sampled prior to insertion into the CRISPR locus. Our study reveals a protospacer DNA comprising a 23-bp duplex bracketed by tyrosine residues, together with anchored flanking 3' overhang segments. The PAM-complementary sequence in the 3' overhang is recognized by the Cas1a catalytic subunits in a base-specific manner, and subsequent cleavage at positions 5 nt from the duplex boundary generates a 33-nt DNA intermediate that is incorporated into the CRISPR array via a cut-and-paste mechanism. Upon protospacer binding, Cas1-Cas2 undergoes a significant conformational change, generating a flat surface conducive to proper protospacer recognition. Here, our study provides important structure-based mechanistic insights into PAM-dependent spacer acquisition.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26478180 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.10.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582