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Latest revision as of 12:51, 5 December 2022
The casposases
More recently, TE related to CRISPRs, Casposons have been identified[1] and a reassement of their ends has led to the identification of an 14-15 bp target duplication [2]. Moreover, the purified Cas1 enzyme encoded by these ancestral transposons has been demonstrated to catalyse strand transfer of a pre-cleaved transposon in vitro but does not appear to promote transposon strand cleavage in this assay[3]. Cas1 "casposases" use similar chemistry to that used by the CRISPR Cas1-Cas2 complex but with opposite substrate specificities since CRISPR Cas1-Cas2 integrates "random" sequences into a specific site in the CRISPR locus whereas casposases integrate a specific site (the casposon ends) into random target sequences (Fig.24.1).
Fig.24.1. Organization of the
Aciduliprofundum boonei casposon. The casposon is shown as an unfilled box. Black filled arrow-heads represent the terminal inverted repeats (TIR); green arrows, the target site duplication (TSD); the genes are as follows: type B DNA polymerase (red box); HNH endonuclease (green); transcriptional regulator with HTH domain (pink); hypothetical protein with HTH domain (orange); cas1 (dark blue) with a c-terminal HTH (light blue); N6-methyltransferase (yellow). From Hickman and Dyda (2015). Non-CRISPR-associated cas1 form two distinct clades. One contains three distinct casposon families (1, 2, and 3) which share features with eukaryotic Polinton/Maverick eukaryotic transposons labeled ‘self-synthesizing’ since they include B family DNA polymerase genes. Members of the three families differ in gene content and evolutionary provenance of the DNA polymerases (protein-primed or RNA-primed).
Bibliography
- ↑
- ↑
Hickman AB, Dyda F . CRISPR-Cas immunity and mobile DNA: a new superfamily of DNA transposons encoding a Cas1 endonuclease. - Mob DNA: 2014, 5;23 [PubMed:25180049]
[DOI]
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General Information | Overview, IS History, What Is an IS?, ISfinder and the Growing Number of IS, IS Identification, IS Distribution, Major Groups are Defined by the Type of Transposase They Use, Fuzzy Borders, tIS - IS and relatives with passenger genes, IS derivatives of Tn3 family transposons, IS related to Integrative Conjugative Elements (ICEs), IS91 and ISCR, Non-autonomous IS derivatives, Relationship Between IS and Eukaryotic TE, Impact of IS on Genome Evolution - The Importance of Time Scale, Target Choice, Influence of transposition mechanisms on genome impact, IS and Gene Expression, IS Organization, Control of transposition activity, Transposase expression and activity, Reaction mechanisms, The casposases |
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Insertion Sequences | IS1 family, IS1595 family, IS3 family, IS481 family, IS1202 family, IS4 and related families, IS5 and related IS1182 families, IS6 family, IS21 family, IS30 family, IS66 family, IS110 family, IS256 family, IS630 family, IS982 family, IS1380 family, ISAs1 family, ISL3 family, ISAzo13 family, IS607 family, IS91-ISCR families, IS200-IS605 family |
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Transposable Elements | |
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