Type III restriction enzymes cleave DNA by long-range interaction between sites in both head-to-head and tail-to-tail inverted repeat

III型限制性内切酶通过反向重复序列中头对头和尾对尾位点之间的长程相互作用切割DNA。

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Abstract

Cleavage of viral DNA by the bacterial Type III Restriction-Modification enzymes requires the ATP-dependent long-range communication between a distant pair of DNA recognition sequences. The classical view is that Type III endonuclease activity is only activated by a pair of asymmetric sites in a specific head-to-head inverted repeat. Based on this assumption and due to the presence of helicase domains in Type III enzymes, various motor-driven DNA translocation models for communication have been suggested. Using both single-molecule and ensemble assays we demonstrate that Type III enzymes can also cleave DNA with sites in tail-to-tail repeat with high efficiency. The ability to distinguish both inverted repeat substrates from direct repeat substrates in a manner independent of DNA topology or accessory proteins can only be reconciled with an alternative sliding mode of communication.

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