DNA Motifs and an Accessory CRISPR Factor Determine Cas1 Binding and Integration Activity in Sulfolobus islandicus

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Documents

  • Fulltext

    Final published version, 2.32 MB, PDF document

  • Tao Liu
  • Ying Xu
  • Xiaojie Wang
  • Qing Ye
  • Zhenzhen Liu
  • Zhufeng Zhang
  • Jilin Liu
  • Yudong Yang
  • Peng, Xu
  • Nan Peng

CRISPR-Cas systems empower prokaryotes with adaptive immunity against invasive mobile genetic elements. At the first step of CRISPR immunity adaptation, short DNA fragments from the invaders are integrated into CRISPR arrays at the leader-proximal end. To date, the mechanism of recognition of the leader-proximal end remains largely unknown. Here, in the Sulfolobus islandicus subtype I-A system, we show that mutations destroying the proximal region reduce CRISPR adaptation in vivo. We identify that a stem-loop structure is present on the leader-proximal end, and we demonstrate that Cas1 preferentially binds the stem-loop structure in vitro. Moreover, we demonstrate that the integrase activity of Cas1 is modulated by interacting with a CRISPR-associated factor Csa3a. When translocated to the CRISPR array, the Csa3a-Cas1 complex is separated by Csa3a binding to the leader-distal motif and Cas1 binding to the leader-proximal end. Mutation at the leader-distal motif reduces CRISPR adaptation efficiency, further confirming the in vivo function of leader-distal motif. Together, our results suggest a general model for binding of Cas1 protein to a leader motif and modulation of integrase activity by an accessory factor.

Original languageEnglish
Article number10178
JournalInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
Volume23
Issue number17
Number of pages15
ISSN1661-6596
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

    Research areas

  • accessory factor, Cas1 integrase, CRISPR adaptation, DNA motifs, leader

ID: 320001469