Abstract

Type II restriction endonuclease Mva1269I recognizes an asymmetric DNA sequence 5'-GAATGCN / -3'/5'-NG / CATTC-3' and cuts top and bottom DNA strands at positions, indicated by the "/" symbol. Most restriction endonucleases require dimerization to cleave both strands of DNA. We found that Mva1269I is a monomer both in solution and upon binding of cognate DNA. Protein fold-recognition analysis revealed that Mva1269I comprises two "PD-(D/E)XK" domains. The N-terminal domain is related to the 5'-GAATTC-3'-specific restriction endonuclease EcoRI, whereas the C-terminal one resembles the nonspecific nuclease domain of restriction endonuclease FokI. Inactivation of the C-terminal catalytic site transformed Mva1269I into a very active bottom strand-nicking enzyme, whereas mutants in the N-terminal domain nicked the top strand, but only at elevated enzyme concentrations. We found that the cleavage of the bottom strand is a prerequisite for the cleavage of the top strand. We suggest that Mva1269I evolved the ability to recognize and to cleave its asymmetrical target by a fusion of an EcoRI-like domain, which incises the bottom strand within the target, and a FokI-like domain that completes the cleavage within the nonspecific region outside the target sequence. Our results have implications for the molecular evolution of restriction endonucleases, as well as for perspectives of engineering new restriction and nicking enzymes with asymmetric target sites.

Highlights

  • Very similar DNA sequences may display similarity at the amino acid level (4)

  • Due to spatial constraints provided by the proximity of the DNA target sequence and the position where the cleavage occurs, it seems doubtful that the FokI-like DNA recognition and cleavage mechanism is applicable to these short-distance REases

  • Our experiments indicate that Mva1269I is a monomeric enzyme possessing two active sites responsible for the sequential cleavage of each DNA strand, which has evolved by fusion of a sequence-specific nuclease domain, similar to EcoRI, to a nonspecific nuclease domain, similar to FokI

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Summary

Introduction

Very similar DNA sequences may display similarity at the amino acid level (4). Recent bioinformatics analyses suggested that REases belong to at least three other folds, GIY-YIG, HNH, and PLD (5–7). Our experiments indicate that Mva1269I is a monomeric enzyme possessing two active sites responsible for the sequential cleavage of each DNA strand, which has evolved by fusion of a sequence-specific nuclease domain, similar to EcoRI, to a nonspecific nuclease domain, similar to FokI.

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