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. 2002 Mar 29;277(13):11284-91.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.M111119200. Epub 2002 Jan 22.

Mutational analysis of the base flipping event found in Tn5 transposition

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Free article

Mutational analysis of the base flipping event found in Tn5 transposition

Brandon Ason et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

This work identifies novel structure-function relationships between Tn5 transposase (Tnp) and its DNA recognition sequence. The Tn5 Tnp-DNA co-crystal structure revealed the protein-DNA contacts of the post-cleavage complex (Davies, D. R., Goryshin, I. Y., Reznikoff, W. S., and Rayment, I. (2000) Science 289, 77-85). One of the most striking features of this complex is the rotation of thymine 2 (T2) away from the DNA helix and into a pocket within the Tnp. This interaction appears similar to the "base flipping" phenomenon found in many DNA repair enzymes such as T4 endonuclease V and uracil DNA glycosylase (Roberts, R. J., and Cheng, X. (1998) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 67, 181-198). To study the biochemical significance of this phenomenon, we mutated the Tnp residues proposed to be involved in stabilizing this interaction and removed the T2 nucleotide to examine which steps in the transposition reaction require T2-Tnp interactions. From this work, we have determined that stacking interactions between T2 and Tnp are critical for efficient transposition in vitro. In addition, our results suggested that T2-Tnp interactions facilitate hairpin formation and hairpin resolution primarily through base stacking and that T2 plays a role in the alignment of the transposon DNA for strand transfer.

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