| Literature DB >> 31798958 |
Murat Buyukyoruk1, Blake Wiedenheft1.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Non-coding RNAs; Small RNAs
Year: 2019 PMID: 31798958 PMCID: PMC6868142 DOI: 10.1038/s41421-019-0123-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Discov ISSN: 2056-5968 Impact factor: 10.849
Fig. 1Testing the efficiency of type I-F CRISPR defense against RNA and DNA phages.
a The type I-F CRISPR–Cas system of P. aeruginosa (PA14) contains six cas genes flanked by two CRISPR loci. DNA binding by the crRNA-guided surveillance complex (Csy complex) relies on recognition of a double-stranded PAM followed by a complementary protospacer. Base pairing occurs in discrete increments of five. Every sixth nucleobase is covered by a beta-hairpin on Cas7 and these bases do not contribute to target interactions[4,5]. Target binding drives a conformational change in the Csy complex that recruits the Cas2/3 nuclease for target cleavage. In contrast to dsDNA binding, the proposed RNA-binding model requires the recognition of a single-stranded “PAM-like” sequence followed by a 12-nt core sequence. b Schematics of CRISPRs 1, 2, and 3. CRISPR-1 (top) represents the model proposed by Li et al.[3] CRISPR-2 (middle) targets the same sequences as CRISPR-1, but the crRNA-guide is completely complementarity. CRISPR-3 (bottom) was designed using well-established rules for dsDNA-binding mechanism. c Tenfold of dilutions of MS2 phage (top) or lambda (λ) phage (bottom) on a lawn of wild-type E. coli NB(DE3) cells or NB(DE3) expressing the type I-F CRISPR system. d The efficiency of plaquing (EOP) of MS2 phage (left) and lambda phage (right). EOP was calculated as the ratio of plaque-forming units (PFUs) on I-F CRISPR expressing cells divided by the number of PFUs on control cells