Abstract

CRISPR-Cas systems provide bacteria with adaptive immunity against viruses. During spacer adaptation, the Cas1-Cas2 complex selects fragments of foreign DNA, called prespacers, and integrates them into CRISPR arrays in an orientation that provides functional immunity. Cas4 is involved in both the trimming of prespacers and the cleavage of protospacer adjacent motif (PAM) in several type I CRISPR-Cas systems, but how the prespacers are processed in systems lacking Cas4, such as the type I-E and I-F systems, is not understood. In Escherichia coli, which has a type I-E system, Cas1-Cas2 preferentially selects prespacers with 3' overhangs via specific recognition of a PAM, but how these prespacers are integrated in a functional orientation in the absence of Cas4 is not known. Using a biochemical approach with purified proteins, as well as integration, prespacer protection, sequencing, and quantitative PCR assays, we show here that the bacterial 3'-5' exonucleases DnaQ and ExoT can trim long 3' overhangs of prespacers and promote integration in the correct orientation. We found that trimming by these exonucleases results in an asymmetric intermediate, because Cas1-Cas2 protects the PAM sequence, which helps to define spacer orientation. Our findings implicate the E. coli host 3'-5' exonucleases DnaQ and ExoT in spacer adaptation and reveal a mechanism by which spacer orientation is defined in E. coli.

Highlights

  • CRISPR-Cas systems provide bacteria with adaptive immunity against viruses

  • Given that most biochemical studies of spacer adaptation in the type I-E CRISPR system of E. coli have been conducted using the preprocessed prespacer, we wanted to investigate whether Cas1-Cas2 could integrate an unprocessed prespacer, consisting of a 23-bp duplex flanked by two 15-nt 3Ј overhangs

  • The type I-E CRISPR system of Streptococcus thermophilus contains a Cas2 that is fused to a DnaQ-like domain

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Summary

Edited by Patrick Sung

The Cas1-Cas complex selects fragments of foreign DNA, called prespacers, and integrates them into CRISPR arrays in an orientation that provides functional immunity. In Escherichia coli, which has a type I-E system, Cas1-Cas preferentially selects prespacers with 3؅ overhangs via specific recognition of a PAM, but how these prespacers are integrated in a functional orientation in the absence of Cas is not known. Using a biochemical approach, we show that two host 3Ј–5Ј exonucleases, DnaQ and ExoT, can trim unprocessed prespacers for Cas1-Cas to integrate into a CRISPR array. DNA protection experiments reveal that these exonucleases differentially trim the non-PAM and PAM strands of an unprocessed prespacer bound by Cas1-Cas2 The result of this differential protection is an asymmetric intermediate that is directed to integrate in the correct orientation. Our findings demonstrate how host 3Ј–5Ј exonucleases process prespacers and define spacer orientation in E. coli

DnaQ and ExoT recover integration of unprocessed prespacers
Discussion
Protein purification
DNA preparation
Integration assays
Quantitative PCR amplification of integration products
Sequencing sample preparation
Sequencing analysis
Full Text
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