DNA and Chromosomes
Structural Basis for the Inverted Repeat Preferences of mariner Transposases*Inverted Repeat Preferences of mariner Transposons

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The inverted repeat (IR) sequences delimiting the left and right ends of many naturally active mariner DNA transposons are non-identical and have different affinities for their transposase. We have compared the preferences of two active mariner transposases, Mos1 and Mboumar-9, for their imperfect transposon IRs in each step of transposition: DNA binding, DNA cleavage, and DNA strand transfer. A 3.1 Å resolution crystal structure of the Mos1 paired-end complex containing the pre-cleaved left IR sequences reveals the molecular basis for the reduced affinity of the Mos1 transposase DNA-binding domain for the left IR as compared with the right IR. For both Mos1 and Mboumar-9, in vitro DNA transposition is most efficient when the preferred IR sequence is present at both transposon ends. We find that this is due to the higher efficiency of cleavage and strand transfer of the preferred transposon end. We show that the efficiency of Mboumar-9 transposition is improved almost 4-fold by changing the 3′ base of the preferred Mboumar-9 IR from guanine to adenine. This preference for adenine at the reactive 3′ end for both Mos1 and Mboumar-9 may be a general feature of mariner transposition.

Background: Transposases orchestrate movement of DNA transposons around and between genomes.

Results: Structural and biochemical approaches are combined to dissect the DNA preferences of two mariner transposases in each step of transposition.

Conclusion: Two active mariner transposases preferentially associate with and process one of their transposon ends.

Significance: The efficiency of mariner DNA transposition can be improved by optimizing transposon end sequences.

DNA recombination
DNA-protein interaction
molecular genetics
nucleic acid enzymology
phosphoryl transfer
structural biology
X-ray crystallography
DNA transposition

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The atomic coordinates and structure factors (code 4R79) have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank (http://wwpdb.org/).

*

This work was supported by Wellcome Trust Grant 085176/Z/08/Z (to J. M. R.) and a Darwin Trust of Edinburgh Ph.D. Scholarship (to M. T.).