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Evolution of a phage RuvC endonuclease for resolution of both Holliday and branched DNA junctions

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Evolution of a phage RuvC endonuclease for resolution of both Holliday and branched DNA junctions. / Curtis, Fiona; Reed, Patricia; Sharples, Gary.
In: Molecular Microbiology, Vol. 55, No. 5, 03.2005, p. 1332-1345.

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Curtis F, Reed P, Sharples G. Evolution of a phage RuvC endonuclease for resolution of both Holliday and branched DNA junctions. Molecular Microbiology. 2005 Mar;55(5):1332-1345. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2004.04476.x

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Curtis, Fiona ; Reed, Patricia ; Sharples, Gary. / Evolution of a phage RuvC endonuclease for resolution of both Holliday and branched DNA junctions. In: Molecular Microbiology. 2005 ; Vol. 55, No. 5. pp. 1332-1345.

Bibtex

@article{cc2029b3985b4fcc91f023885b094ec2,
title = "Evolution of a phage RuvC endonuclease for resolution of both Holliday and branched DNA junctions",
abstract = "Resolution of Holliday junction recombination intermediates in most Gram-negative bacteria is accomplished by the RuvC endonuclease acting in concert with the RuvAB branch migration machinery. Gram-positive species, however, lack RuvC, with the exception of distantly related orthologues from bacteriophages infecting Lactococci and Streptococci. We have purified one of these proteins, 67RuvC, from Lactococcus lactis phage bIL67 and demonstrated that it functions as a Holliday structure resolvase. Differences in the sequence selectivity of resolution between 67RuvC and Escherichia coli RuvC were noted, although both enzymes prefer to cleave 3' of thymidine residues. However, unlike its cellular counterpart, 67RuvC readily binds and cleaves a variety of branched DNA substrates in addition to Holliday junctions. Plasmids expressing 67RuvC induce chromosomal breaks, probably as a consequence of replication fork cleavage, and cannot be recovered from recombination-defective E. coli strains. Despite these deleterious effects, 67RuvC constructs suppress the UV light sensitivity of ruvA, ruvAB and ruvABC mutant strains confirming that the phage protein mediates Holliday junction resolution in vivo. The characterization of 67RuvC offers a unique insight into how a Holliday junction-specific resolvase can evolve into a debranching endonuclease tailored to the requirements of phage recombination.",
author = "Fiona Curtis and Patricia Reed and Gary Sharples",
year = "2005",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1111/j.1365-2958.2004.04476.x",
language = "English",
volume = "55",
pages = "1332--1345",
journal = "Molecular Microbiology",
issn = "0950-382X",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Evolution of a phage RuvC endonuclease for resolution of both Holliday and branched DNA junctions

AU - Curtis, Fiona

AU - Reed, Patricia

AU - Sharples, Gary

PY - 2005/3

Y1 - 2005/3

N2 - Resolution of Holliday junction recombination intermediates in most Gram-negative bacteria is accomplished by the RuvC endonuclease acting in concert with the RuvAB branch migration machinery. Gram-positive species, however, lack RuvC, with the exception of distantly related orthologues from bacteriophages infecting Lactococci and Streptococci. We have purified one of these proteins, 67RuvC, from Lactococcus lactis phage bIL67 and demonstrated that it functions as a Holliday structure resolvase. Differences in the sequence selectivity of resolution between 67RuvC and Escherichia coli RuvC were noted, although both enzymes prefer to cleave 3' of thymidine residues. However, unlike its cellular counterpart, 67RuvC readily binds and cleaves a variety of branched DNA substrates in addition to Holliday junctions. Plasmids expressing 67RuvC induce chromosomal breaks, probably as a consequence of replication fork cleavage, and cannot be recovered from recombination-defective E. coli strains. Despite these deleterious effects, 67RuvC constructs suppress the UV light sensitivity of ruvA, ruvAB and ruvABC mutant strains confirming that the phage protein mediates Holliday junction resolution in vivo. The characterization of 67RuvC offers a unique insight into how a Holliday junction-specific resolvase can evolve into a debranching endonuclease tailored to the requirements of phage recombination.

AB - Resolution of Holliday junction recombination intermediates in most Gram-negative bacteria is accomplished by the RuvC endonuclease acting in concert with the RuvAB branch migration machinery. Gram-positive species, however, lack RuvC, with the exception of distantly related orthologues from bacteriophages infecting Lactococci and Streptococci. We have purified one of these proteins, 67RuvC, from Lactococcus lactis phage bIL67 and demonstrated that it functions as a Holliday structure resolvase. Differences in the sequence selectivity of resolution between 67RuvC and Escherichia coli RuvC were noted, although both enzymes prefer to cleave 3' of thymidine residues. However, unlike its cellular counterpart, 67RuvC readily binds and cleaves a variety of branched DNA substrates in addition to Holliday junctions. Plasmids expressing 67RuvC induce chromosomal breaks, probably as a consequence of replication fork cleavage, and cannot be recovered from recombination-defective E. coli strains. Despite these deleterious effects, 67RuvC constructs suppress the UV light sensitivity of ruvA, ruvAB and ruvABC mutant strains confirming that the phage protein mediates Holliday junction resolution in vivo. The characterization of 67RuvC offers a unique insight into how a Holliday junction-specific resolvase can evolve into a debranching endonuclease tailored to the requirements of phage recombination.

U2 - 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2004.04476.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2004.04476.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 55

SP - 1332

EP - 1345

JO - Molecular Microbiology

JF - Molecular Microbiology

SN - 0950-382X

IS - 5

ER -