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Transposase

A transposase is any of a class of enzymes capable of binding to the end of a transposon and catalysing its movement to another part of a genome, typically by a cut-and-paste mechanism or a replicative mechanism, in a process known as transposition. The word "transposase" was first coined by the individuals who cloned the enzyme required for transposition of the Tn3 transposon.[1] The existence of transposons was postulated in the late 1940s by Barbara McClintock, who was studying the inheritance of maize, but the actual molecular basis for transposition was described by later groups. McClintock discovered that some segments of chromosomes changed their position, jumping between different loci or from one chromosome to another. The repositioning of these transposons (which coded for color) allowed other genes for pigment to be expressed.[2] Transposition in maize causes changes in color; however, in other organisms, such as bacteria, it can cause antibiotic resistance.[2] Transposition is also important in creating genetic diversity within species and generating adaptability to changing living conditions.[3]

Transposases are classified under EC number EC 2.7.7. Genes encoding transposases are widespread in the genomes of most organisms and are the most abundant genes known.[4] During the course of human evolution, as much as 40% of the human genome has moved around via methods such as transposition of transposons.[2]

Transposase Tn5

Transposase Tn5 dimerisation domain
 
tn5 transposase: 20mer outside end 2 mn complex
Identifiers
SymbolDimer_Tnp_Tn5
PfamPF02281
InterProIPR003201
SCOP21b7e / SCOPe / SUPFAM
Available protein structures:
Pfam  structures / ECOD  
PDBRCSB PDB; PDBe; PDBj
PDBsumstructure summary

Transposase (Tnp) Tn5 is a member of the RNase superfamily of proteins which includes retroviral integrases. Tn5 can be found in Shewanella and Escherichia bacteria.[5] The transposon codes for antibiotic resistance to kanamycin and other aminoglycoside antibiotics.[3][6]

Tn5 and other transposases are notably inactive. Because DNA transposition events are inherently mutagenic, the low activity of transposases is necessary to reduce the risk of causing a fatal mutation in the host, and thus eliminating the transposable element. One of the reasons Tn5 is so unreactive is because the N- and C-termini are located in relatively close proximity to one another and tend to inhibit each other. This was elucidated by the characterization of several mutations which resulted in hyperactive forms of transposases. One such mutation, L372P, is a mutation of amino acid 372 in the Tn5 transposase. This amino acid is generally a leucine residue in the middle of an alpha helix. When this leucine is replaced with a proline residue the alpha helix is broken, introducing a conformational change to the C-terminal domain, separating it from the N-terminal domain enough to promote higher activity of the protein.[3] The transposition of a transposon often needs only three pieces: the transposon, the transposase enzyme, and the target DNA for the insertion of the transposon.[3] This is the case with Tn5, which uses a cut-and-paste mechanism for moving around transposons.[3]

Tn5 and most other transposases contain a DDE motif, which is the active site that catalyzes the movement of the transposon. Aspartate-97, aspartate-188, and glutamate-326 make up the active site, which is a triad of acidic residues.[7] The DDE motif is said to coordinate divalent metal ions, most often magnesium and manganese, which are important in the catalytic reaction.[7] Because transposase is incredibly inactive, the DDE region is mutated so that the transposase becomes hyperactive and catalyzes the movement of the transposon.[7] The glutamate is transformed into an aspartate and the two aspartates into glutamates.[7] Through this mutation, the study of Tn5 becomes possible, but some steps in the catalytic process are lost as a result.[3]

 

There are several steps which catalyze the movement of the transposon, including Tnp binding, synapsis (the creation of a synaptic complex), cleavage, target capture, and strand transfer. Transposase then binds to the DNA strand and creates a clamp over the transposon end of the DNA and inserts into the active site. Once the transposase binds to the transposon, it produces a synaptic complex in which two transposases are bound in a cis/trans relationship with the transposon.[3]

In cleavage, the magnesium ions activate oxygen from water molecules and expose them to nucleophilic attack.[6] This allows the water molecules to nick the 3' strands on both ends and create a hairpin formation, which separates the transposon from the donor DNA.[3] Next, the transposase moves the transposon to a suitable location. Not much is known about the target capture, although there is a sequence bias which has not yet been determined.[3] After target capture, the transposase attacks the target DNA nine base pairs apart, resulting in the integration of the transposon into the target DNA.[3]

As mentioned before, due to the mutations of the DDE, some steps of the process are lost—for example, when this experiment is performed in vitro, and SDS heat treatment denatures the transposase. However, it is still uncertain what happens to the transposase in vivo.[3]

The study of transposase Tn5 is of general importance because of its similarities to HIV-1 and other retroviral diseases. By studying Tn5, much can also be discovered about other transposases and their activities.[3]

Tn5 is utilized in genome sequencing by using the Tn5 to append sequencing adaptors and fragment the DNA in a single enzymatic reaction in 2010,[8] reducing the time and input requirements over traditional next-generation sequencing library preparation. The Tn5-based strategy can simplify the library preparation protocol significantly and can even can be incorporated into the direct colony-PCR for large numbers of bacterial isolates with no obvious coverage bias.[8] The main disadvantages are less control of fragmented size compared to enzymatic fragmentation and mechanical fragmentation, and a bias toward high G-C content.[8] This means of library preparation is also used in the ATAC-seq technique.

Sleeping Beauty transposase

The Sleeping Beauty (SB) transposase is the recombinase that drives the Sleeping Beauty transposon system.[9] SB transposase belongs to the DD[E/D] family of transposases, which in turn belong to a large superfamily of polynucleotidyl transferases that includes RNase H, RuvC Holliday resolvase, RAG proteins, and retroviral integrases.[10][11] The SB system is used primarily in vertebrate animals for gene transfer,[12] including gene therapy,[13][14] and gene discovery.[15][16] The engineered SB100X is an enzyme that directs the high levels of transposon integration.[17][18]

Tn7 transposon

The Tn7 transposon is a mobile genetic element found in many prokaryotes such as Escherichia coli (E. coli), and was first discovered as a DNA sequence in bacterial chromosomes and naturally occurring plasmids that encoded resistance to the antibiotics trimethoprim and streptomycin.[19][20] Specifically classified as a transposable element (transposon), the sequence can duplicate and move itself within a genome by utilizing a self-encoded recombinase enzyme called a transposase, resulting in effects such as creating or reversing mutations and changing genome size. The Tn7 transposon has developed two mechanisms to promote its propagation among prokaryotes.[21] Like many other bacterial transposons, Tn7 transposes at low-frequency and inserts into many different sites with little to no site-selectivity. Through this first pathway, Tn7 is preferentially directed into conjugable plasmids, which can be replicated and distributed between bacteria. However, Tn7 is unique in that it also transposes at high-frequency into a single specific site in bacterial chromosomes called attTn7.[22] This specific sequence is an essential and highly conserved gene found in many strains of bacteria. However, the recombination is not deleterious to the host bacterium as Tn7 actually transposes downstream of the gene after recognizing it, resulting in a safe way to propagate the transposon without killing the host. This highly evolved and sophisticated target-site selection pathway suggests this pathway evolved to promote coexistence between the transposon and it host, as well as Tn7's successful transmission into future generations of bacterium.[21]

The Tn7 transposon is 14 kb long and codes for five enzymes.[21] The ends of the DNA sequence consists of two segments that the Tn7 transposase interacts with during recombination. The left segment (Tn7-L) is 150 bp long and the right sequence (Tn7-R) is 90 bp long. Both ends of the transposon contain a series of 22 bp binding sites that the Tn7 transposase recognizes and binds to. Within the transposon are five discrete genes encoding for proteins that make up the transposition machinery. In addition, the transposon contains an integron, a DNA segment containing several cassettes of genes encoding for antibiotic-resistance.[21]

The Tn7 transposon codes for five proteins: TnsA, TnsB, TnsC, TnsD, and TnsE.[21] TnsA and TnsB interact together to form the Tn7 transposase enzyme TnsAB. The enzyme specifically recognizes and binds to the ends of the DNA sequence of the transposon, and excises it by introducing double-stranded DNA breaks to each end. The excised sequence is then inserted to another target DNA site. Much like other characterized transposons, the mechanism for Tn7 transposition involves cleavage of the 3' ends from the donating DNA by the TnsA protein of the TnsAB transposase. However, Tn7 is also uniquely cleaved near the 5' ends, about 5 bp from the 5' end towards the Tn7 transposon, by the TnsB protein of TnsAB. After the insertion of the transposon into the target DNA site, the 3' ends are covalently linked to the target DNA, but the 5 bp gaps are still present at the 5' ends. As a result, repair of these gaps leads to a further 5 bp duplication at the target site. The TnsC protein interacts with the transposase enzyme and the target DNA to promote the excision and insertion processes. The ability of TnsC to activate the transposase depends on its interaction with a target DNA along with its appropriate targeting protein, TnsD or TnsE. The TnsD and TnsE proteins are alternative target selectors that are also DNA binding activators that promote excision and insertion of Tn7. Their ability to interact with a particular target DNA is key to the target-site selection of Tn7. The proteins TnsA, TnsB, and TnsC thus form the core machinery of Tn7: TnsA and TnsB interact together to form the transposase, while TnsC functions as a regulator of the transposase's activity, communicating between the transposase and TnsD and TnsE. When the TnsE protein interacts with the TnsABC core machinery, Tn7 preferentially directs insertions into conjugable plasmids. When the TnsD protein interacts with TnsABC, Tn7 preferentially directs insertions downstream into a single essential and highly conserved site in the bacterial chromosome. This site, attTn7, is specifically recognized by TnsD.[21]

References

  1. ^ Heffron F, McCarthy BJ, Ohtsubo H, Ohtsubo E (December 1979). "DNA sequence analysis of the transposon Tn3: three genes and three sites involved in transposition of Tn3". Cell. 18 (4): 1153–63. doi:10.1016/0092-8674(79)90228-9. PMID 391406.
  2. ^ a b c Goodsell D (December 2006). "Transposase". Molecule of the Month. Protein Data Bank.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Reznikoff WS (March 2003). "Tn5 as a model for understanding DNA transposition". Molecular Microbiology. 47 (5): 1199–206. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2958.2003.03382.x. PMID 12603728.
  4. ^ Aziz, R.K., M. Breitbart and R.A. Edwards (2010). Transposases are the most abundant, most ubiquitous genes in nature. Nucleic Acids Research 38(13): 4207–4217.Aziz RK, Breitbart M, Edwards RA (July 2010). "Transposases are the most abundant, most ubiquitous genes in nature". Nucleic Acids Research. 38 (13): 4207–17. doi:10.1093/nar/gkq140. PMC 2910039. PMID 20215432.
  5. ^ McDowall J. "Transposase". InterPro.
  6. ^ a b Lovell S, Goryshin IY, Reznikoff WR, Rayment I (April 2002). "Two-metal active site binding of a Tn5 transposase synaptic complex". Nature Structural Biology. 9 (4): 278–81. doi:10.1038/nsb778. PMID 11896402. S2CID 9721663.
  7. ^ a b c d Peterson G, Reznikoff W (January 2003). "Tn5 transposase active site mutations suggest position of donor backbone DNA in synaptic complex". The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 278 (3): 1904–9. doi:10.1074/jbc.M208968200. PMID 12424243.
  8. ^ a b c Adey, Andrew (December 2010). "Rapid, low-input, low-bias construction of shotgun fragment libraries by high-density in vitro transposition". Genome Biology. 11 (12): R119. doi:10.1186/gb-2010-11-12-r119. PMC 3046479. PMID 21143862.
  9. ^ Ivics, Z.; Hackett, P.B.; Plasterk, R.A.; Izsvak, Z. (1997). "Molecular reconstruction of Sleeping Beauty: a Tc1-like transposon from fish and its transposition in human cells". Cell. 91 (4): 501–510. doi:10.1016/s0092-8674(00)80436-5. PMID 9390559.
  10. ^ Craig NL (October 1995). "Unity in transposition reactions". Science. 270 (5234): 253–4. Bibcode:1995Sci...270..253C. doi:10.1126/science.270.5234.253. PMID 7569973. S2CID 29930180.
  11. ^ Nesmelova IV, Hackett PB (September 2010). "DDE transposases: Structural similarity and diversity". Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews. 62 (12): 1187–95. doi:10.1016/j.addr.2010.06.006. PMC 2991504. PMID 20615441.
  12. ^ Ivics Z, Izsvák Z (January 2005). "A whole lotta jumpin' goin' on: new transposon tools for vertebrate functional genomics". Trends in Genetics. 21 (1): 8–11. doi:10.1016/j.tig.2004.11.008. PMID 15680506.
  13. ^ Izsvák Z, Hackett PB, Cooper LJ, Ivics Z (September 2010). "Translating Sleeping Beauty transposition into cellular therapies: victories and challenges". BioEssays. 32 (9): 756–67. doi:10.1002/bies.201000027. PMC 3971908. PMID 20652893.
  14. ^ Aronovich, E.L., McIvor, R.S., and Hackett, P.B. (2011). The Sleeping Beauty transposon system – A non-viral vector for gene therapy. Hum. Mol. Genet. (in press)Aronovich EL, McIvor RS, Hackett PB (April 2011). "The Sleeping Beauty transposon system: a non-viral vector for gene therapy". Human Molecular Genetics. 20 (R1): R14-20. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddr140. PMC 3095056. PMID 21459777.
  15. ^ Carlson CM, Largaespada DA (July 2005). "Insertional mutagenesis in mice: new perspectives and tools". Nature Reviews Genetics. 6 (7): 568–80. doi:10.1038/nrg1638. PMID 15995698. S2CID 3194633.
  16. ^ Copeland NG, Jenkins NA (October 2010). "Harnessing transposons for cancer gene discovery". Nature Reviews. Cancer. 10 (10): 696–706. doi:10.1038/nrc2916. PMID 20844553. S2CID 6910577.
  17. ^ Mátés L, Chuah MK, Belay E, Jerchow B, Manoj N, Acosta-Sanchez A, et al. (June 2009). "Molecular evolution of a novel hyperactive Sleeping Beauty transposase enables robust stable gene transfer in vertebrates". Nature Genetics. 41 (6): 753–61. doi:10.1038/ng.343. PMID 19412179. S2CID 27373372.
  18. ^ Grabundzija I, Irgang M, Mátés L, Belay E, Matrai J, Gogol-Döring A, Kawakami K, Chen W, Ruiz P, Chuah MK, VandenDriessche T, Izsvák Z, Ivics Z (June 2010). "Comparative analysis of transposable element vector systems in human cells". Molecular Therapy. 18 (6): 1200–9. doi:10.1038/mt.2010.47. PMC 2889740. PMID 20372108.
  19. ^ Barth PT, Datta N, Hedges RW, Grinter NJ (March 1976). "Transposition of a DNA sequence encoding trimethoprim and streptomycin resistances from R483 to other replicons". Journal of Bacteriology. 125 (3): 800–810. doi:10.1128/JB.125.3.800-810.1976. PMC 236152. PMID 767328.
  20. ^ Barth PT, Datta N (Sep 1977). "Two Naturally Occurring Transposons Indistinguishable from Tn7". Journal of General Microbiology. 102 (1): 129–134. doi:10.1099/00221287-102-1-129. PMID 915473.
  21. ^ a b c d e f Peters J, Craig NL (Nov 2001). "Tn7: smarter than we thought". Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology. 2 (11): 806–814. doi:10.1038/35099006. PMID 11715047. S2CID 34733892.
  22. ^ Gringauz E, Orle KA, Waddell CS, Craig NL (Jun 1988). "Recognition of Escherichia coli attTn7 by transposon Tn7: lack of specific sequence requirements at the point of Tn7 insertion". Journal of Bacteriology. 170 (6): 2832–2840. doi:10.1128/jb.170.6.2832-2840.1988. PMC 211210. PMID 2836374.

External links

  • Transposases at the US National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
  • Overview of all the structural information available in the PDB for UniProt: Q46731 (Transposase for transposon Tn5) at the PDBe-KB.

transposase, transposase, class, enzymes, capable, binding, transposon, catalysing, movement, another, part, genome, typically, paste, mechanism, replicative, mechanism, process, known, transposition, word, transposase, first, coined, individuals, cloned, enzy. A transposase is any of a class of enzymes capable of binding to the end of a transposon and catalysing its movement to another part of a genome typically by a cut and paste mechanism or a replicative mechanism in a process known as transposition The word transposase was first coined by the individuals who cloned the enzyme required for transposition of the Tn3 transposon 1 The existence of transposons was postulated in the late 1940s by Barbara McClintock who was studying the inheritance of maize but the actual molecular basis for transposition was described by later groups McClintock discovered that some segments of chromosomes changed their position jumping between different loci or from one chromosome to another The repositioning of these transposons which coded for color allowed other genes for pigment to be expressed 2 Transposition in maize causes changes in color however in other organisms such as bacteria it can cause antibiotic resistance 2 Transposition is also important in creating genetic diversity within species and generating adaptability to changing living conditions 3 Transposases are classified under EC number EC 2 7 7 Genes encoding transposases are widespread in the genomes of most organisms and are the most abundant genes known 4 During the course of human evolution as much as 40 of the human genome has moved around via methods such as transposition of transposons 2 Contents 1 Transposase Tn5 2 Sleeping Beauty transposase 3 Tn7 transposon 4 References 5 External linksTransposase Tn5 EditTransposase Tn5 dimerisation domain tn5 transposase 20mer outside end 2 mn complexIdentifiersSymbolDimer Tnp Tn5PfamPF02281InterProIPR003201SCOP21b7e SCOPe SUPFAMAvailable protein structures Pfam structures ECOD PDBRCSB PDB PDBe PDBjPDBsumstructure summaryTransposase Tnp Tn5 is a member of the RNase superfamily of proteins which includes retroviral integrases Tn5 can be found in Shewanella and Escherichia bacteria 5 The transposon codes for antibiotic resistance to kanamycin and other aminoglycoside antibiotics 3 6 Tn5 and other transposases are notably inactive Because DNA transposition events are inherently mutagenic the low activity of transposases is necessary to reduce the risk of causing a fatal mutation in the host and thus eliminating the transposable element One of the reasons Tn5 is so unreactive is because the N and C termini are located in relatively close proximity to one another and tend to inhibit each other This was elucidated by the characterization of several mutations which resulted in hyperactive forms of transposases One such mutation L372P is a mutation of amino acid 372 in the Tn5 transposase This amino acid is generally a leucine residue in the middle of an alpha helix When this leucine is replaced with a proline residue the alpha helix is broken introducing a conformational change to the C terminal domain separating it from the N terminal domain enough to promote higher activity of the protein 3 The transposition of a transposon often needs only three pieces the transposon the transposase enzyme and the target DNA for the insertion of the transposon 3 This is the case with Tn5 which uses a cut and paste mechanism for moving around transposons 3 Tn5 and most other transposases contain a DDE motif which is the active site that catalyzes the movement of the transposon Aspartate 97 aspartate 188 and glutamate 326 make up the active site which is a triad of acidic residues 7 The DDE motif is said to coordinate divalent metal ions most often magnesium and manganese which are important in the catalytic reaction 7 Because transposase is incredibly inactive the DDE region is mutated so that the transposase becomes hyperactive and catalyzes the movement of the transposon 7 The glutamate is transformed into an aspartate and the two aspartates into glutamates 7 Through this mutation the study of Tn5 becomes possible but some steps in the catalytic process are lost as a result 3 There are several steps which catalyze the movement of the transposon including Tnp binding synapsis the creation of a synaptic complex cleavage target capture and strand transfer Transposase then binds to the DNA strand and creates a clamp over the transposon end of the DNA and inserts into the active site Once the transposase binds to the transposon it produces a synaptic complex in which two transposases are bound in a cis trans relationship with the transposon 3 In cleavage the magnesium ions activate oxygen from water molecules and expose them to nucleophilic attack 6 This allows the water molecules to nick the 3 strands on both ends and create a hairpin formation which separates the transposon from the donor DNA 3 Next the transposase moves the transposon to a suitable location Not much is known about the target capture although there is a sequence bias which has not yet been determined 3 After target capture the transposase attacks the target DNA nine base pairs apart resulting in the integration of the transposon into the target DNA 3 As mentioned before due to the mutations of the DDE some steps of the process are lost for example when this experiment is performed in vitro and SDS heat treatment denatures the transposase However it is still uncertain what happens to the transposase in vivo 3 The study of transposase Tn5 is of general importance because of its similarities to HIV 1 and other retroviral diseases By studying Tn5 much can also be discovered about other transposases and their activities 3 Tn5 is utilized in genome sequencing by using the Tn5 to append sequencing adaptors and fragment the DNA in a single enzymatic reaction in 2010 8 reducing the time and input requirements over traditional next generation sequencing library preparation The Tn5 based strategy can simplify the library preparation protocol significantly and can even can be incorporated into the direct colony PCR for large numbers of bacterial isolates with no obvious coverage bias 8 The main disadvantages are less control of fragmented size compared to enzymatic fragmentation and mechanical fragmentation and a bias toward high G C content 8 This means of library preparation is also used in the ATAC seq technique Sleeping Beauty transposase EditThe Sleeping Beauty SB transposase is the recombinase that drives the Sleeping Beauty transposon system 9 SB transposase belongs to the DD E D family of transposases which in turn belong to a large superfamily of polynucleotidyl transferases that includes RNase H RuvC Holliday resolvase RAG proteins and retroviral integrases 10 11 The SB system is used primarily in vertebrate animals for gene transfer 12 including gene therapy 13 14 and gene discovery 15 16 The engineered SB100X is an enzyme that directs the high levels of transposon integration 17 18 Tn7 transposon EditThe Tn7 transposon is a mobile genetic element found in many prokaryotes such as Escherichia coli E coli and was first discovered as a DNA sequence in bacterial chromosomes and naturally occurring plasmids that encoded resistance to the antibiotics trimethoprim and streptomycin 19 20 Specifically classified as a transposable element transposon the sequence can duplicate and move itself within a genome by utilizing a self encoded recombinase enzyme called a transposase resulting in effects such as creating or reversing mutations and changing genome size The Tn7 transposon has developed two mechanisms to promote its propagation among prokaryotes 21 Like many other bacterial transposons Tn7 transposes at low frequency and inserts into many different sites with little to no site selectivity Through this first pathway Tn7 is preferentially directed into conjugable plasmids which can be replicated and distributed between bacteria However Tn7 is unique in that it also transposes at high frequency into a single specific site in bacterial chromosomes called attTn7 22 This specific sequence is an essential and highly conserved gene found in many strains of bacteria However the recombination is not deleterious to the host bacterium as Tn7 actually transposes downstream of the gene after recognizing it resulting in a safe way to propagate the transposon without killing the host This highly evolved and sophisticated target site selection pathway suggests this pathway evolved to promote coexistence between the transposon and it host as well as Tn7 s successful transmission into future generations of bacterium 21 The Tn7 transposon is 14 kb long and codes for five enzymes 21 The ends of the DNA sequence consists of two segments that the Tn7 transposase interacts with during recombination The left segment Tn7 L is 150 bp long and the right sequence Tn7 R is 90 bp long Both ends of the transposon contain a series of 22 bp binding sites that the Tn7 transposase recognizes and binds to Within the transposon are five discrete genes encoding for proteins that make up the transposition machinery In addition the transposon contains an integron a DNA segment containing several cassettes of genes encoding for antibiotic resistance 21 The Tn7 transposon codes for five proteins TnsA TnsB TnsC TnsD and TnsE 21 TnsA and TnsB interact together to form the Tn7 transposase enzyme TnsAB The enzyme specifically recognizes and binds to the ends of the DNA sequence of the transposon and excises it by introducing double stranded DNA breaks to each end The excised sequence is then inserted to another target DNA site Much like other characterized transposons the mechanism for Tn7 transposition involves cleavage of the 3 ends from the donating DNA by the TnsA protein of the TnsAB transposase However Tn7 is also uniquely cleaved near the 5 ends about 5 bp from the 5 end towards the Tn7 transposon by the TnsB protein of TnsAB After the insertion of the transposon into the target DNA site the 3 ends are covalently linked to the target DNA but the 5 bp gaps are still present at the 5 ends As a result repair of these gaps leads to a further 5 bp duplication at the target site The TnsC protein interacts with the transposase enzyme and the target DNA to promote the excision and insertion processes The ability of TnsC to activate the transposase depends on its interaction with a target DNA along with its appropriate targeting protein TnsD or TnsE The TnsD and TnsE proteins are alternative target selectors that are also DNA binding activators that promote excision and insertion of Tn7 Their ability to interact with a particular target DNA is key to the target site selection of Tn7 The proteins TnsA TnsB and TnsC thus form the core machinery of Tn7 TnsA and TnsB interact together to form the transposase while TnsC functions as a regulator of the transposase s activity communicating between the transposase and TnsD and TnsE When the TnsE protein interacts with the TnsABC core machinery Tn7 preferentially directs insertions into conjugable plasmids When the TnsD protein interacts with TnsABC Tn7 preferentially directs insertions downstream into a single essential and highly conserved site in the bacterial chromosome This site attTn7 is specifically recognized by TnsD 21 References Edit Heffron F McCarthy BJ Ohtsubo H Ohtsubo E December 1979 DNA sequence analysis of the transposon Tn3 three genes and three sites involved in transposition of Tn3 Cell 18 4 1153 63 doi 10 1016 0092 8674 79 90228 9 PMID 391406 a b c Goodsell D December 2006 Transposase Molecule of the Month Protein Data Bank a b c d e f g h i j k l Reznikoff WS March 2003 Tn5 as a model for understanding DNA transposition Molecular Microbiology 47 5 1199 206 doi 10 1046 j 1365 2958 2003 03382 x PMID 12603728 Aziz R K M Breitbart and R A Edwards 2010 Transposases are the most abundant most ubiquitous genes in nature Nucleic Acids Research 38 13 4207 4217 Aziz RK Breitbart M Edwards RA July 2010 Transposases are the most abundant most ubiquitous genes in nature Nucleic Acids Research 38 13 4207 17 doi 10 1093 nar gkq140 PMC 2910039 PMID 20215432 McDowall J Transposase InterPro a b Lovell S Goryshin IY Reznikoff WR Rayment I April 2002 Two metal active site binding of a Tn5 transposase synaptic complex Nature Structural Biology 9 4 278 81 doi 10 1038 nsb778 PMID 11896402 S2CID 9721663 a b c d Peterson G Reznikoff W January 2003 Tn5 transposase active site mutations suggest position of donor backbone DNA in synaptic complex The Journal of Biological Chemistry 278 3 1904 9 doi 10 1074 jbc M208968200 PMID 12424243 a b c Adey Andrew December 2010 Rapid low input low bias construction of shotgun fragment libraries by high density in vitro transposition Genome Biology 11 12 R119 doi 10 1186 gb 2010 11 12 r119 PMC 3046479 PMID 21143862 Ivics Z Hackett P B Plasterk R A Izsvak Z 1997 Molecular reconstruction of Sleeping Beauty a Tc1 like transposon from fish and its transposition in human cells Cell 91 4 501 510 doi 10 1016 s0092 8674 00 80436 5 PMID 9390559 Craig NL October 1995 Unity in transposition reactions Science 270 5234 253 4 Bibcode 1995Sci 270 253C doi 10 1126 science 270 5234 253 PMID 7569973 S2CID 29930180 Nesmelova IV Hackett PB September 2010 DDE transposases Structural similarity and diversity Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews 62 12 1187 95 doi 10 1016 j addr 2010 06 006 PMC 2991504 PMID 20615441 Ivics Z Izsvak Z January 2005 A whole lotta jumpin goin on new transposon tools for vertebrate functional genomics Trends in Genetics 21 1 8 11 doi 10 1016 j tig 2004 11 008 PMID 15680506 Izsvak Z Hackett PB Cooper LJ Ivics Z September 2010 Translating Sleeping Beauty transposition into cellular therapies victories and challenges BioEssays 32 9 756 67 doi 10 1002 bies 201000027 PMC 3971908 PMID 20652893 Aronovich E L McIvor R S and Hackett P B 2011 The Sleeping Beauty transposon system A non viral vector for gene therapy Hum Mol Genet in press Aronovich EL McIvor RS Hackett PB April 2011 The Sleeping Beauty transposon system a non viral vector for gene therapy Human Molecular Genetics 20 R1 R14 20 doi 10 1093 hmg ddr140 PMC 3095056 PMID 21459777 Carlson CM Largaespada DA July 2005 Insertional mutagenesis in mice new perspectives and tools Nature Reviews Genetics 6 7 568 80 doi 10 1038 nrg1638 PMID 15995698 S2CID 3194633 Copeland NG Jenkins NA October 2010 Harnessing transposons for cancer gene discovery Nature Reviews Cancer 10 10 696 706 doi 10 1038 nrc2916 PMID 20844553 S2CID 6910577 Mates L Chuah MK Belay E Jerchow B Manoj N Acosta Sanchez A et al June 2009 Molecular evolution of a novel hyperactive Sleeping Beauty transposase enables robust stable gene transfer in vertebrates Nature Genetics 41 6 753 61 doi 10 1038 ng 343 PMID 19412179 S2CID 27373372 Grabundzija I Irgang M Mates L Belay E Matrai J Gogol Doring A Kawakami K Chen W Ruiz P Chuah MK VandenDriessche T Izsvak Z Ivics Z June 2010 Comparative analysis of transposable element vector systems in human cells Molecular Therapy 18 6 1200 9 doi 10 1038 mt 2010 47 PMC 2889740 PMID 20372108 Barth PT Datta N Hedges RW Grinter NJ March 1976 Transposition of a DNA sequence encoding trimethoprim and streptomycin resistances from R483 to other replicons Journal of Bacteriology 125 3 800 810 doi 10 1128 JB 125 3 800 810 1976 PMC 236152 PMID 767328 Barth PT Datta N Sep 1977 Two Naturally Occurring Transposons Indistinguishable from Tn7 Journal of General Microbiology 102 1 129 134 doi 10 1099 00221287 102 1 129 PMID 915473 a b c d e f Peters J Craig NL Nov 2001 Tn7 smarter than we thought Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 2 11 806 814 doi 10 1038 35099006 PMID 11715047 S2CID 34733892 Gringauz E Orle KA Waddell CS Craig NL Jun 1988 Recognition of Escherichia coli attTn7 by transposon Tn7 lack of specific sequence requirements at the point of Tn7 insertion Journal of Bacteriology 170 6 2832 2840 doi 10 1128 jb 170 6 2832 2840 1988 PMC 211210 PMID 2836374 External links EditTransposases at the US National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings MeSH Overview of all the structural information available in the PDB for UniProt Q46731 Transposase for transposon Tn5 at the PDBe KB Portal Biology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Transposase amp oldid 1121505984, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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