Genome Integrity 2 Flashcards
Mobile Species
What are the two major groups of transposable elements?
DNA-only intermediates and RNA intermediates
What are the different types of transposable elements that go through RNA intermediates?
LTR elements and non-LTR elements
What are the two types of DNA-only transposons?
Cut and paste elements and replicative nick and paste elements
Three major bacterial DNA transposon superfamilies?
IS4 (Tn5, Tn10), Mu, Tn3/gamma delta
What elements do transposases act on in DNA-only transposons?
IS elements
Mechanism: Cut and Paste Transposition
1) transposase bind and pairs both ends of IS elements
2) transposase cuts out entire IS element and exposes 3’ OH at each end of element
3) 3’ OH of IS element can attack target DNA phosphodiester backbone in a sequential fashion
4) Gap repair fills in ssDNA
How does transposase catalyze DNA breakage?
Catalyzes DNA breakage in trans. One protomer of transposase binds the DNA, but the other protomer facilitates cleavage of the DNA to expose 3’ OH.
Mechanism: Replicative Nick and Paste Transposition
1) MuA transposase makes nick at 3’ ends of Mu
2) 3’ OH of Mu attacks target DNA at staggered positions
3) Mu gets replicated starting from flanking target DNA
4) Mu gets replicated and two copies of Mu link donor and target DNA
5) Resolvase will split 2 plasmids between res sites in TE (homologous recombination)
What are the two types of LTR elements?
Retroviruses and retrotransposons
What are the differences between the two types of LTR elements?
Retroviruses can bud out. Retrotransposons lack packaging proteins, so they immediately go through cDNA intermediate. In the end, they all integrate back into the genome.
How do LTR elements integrate into the genome?
Similar mechanism to DNA-only transposons. Reverse transcription to cDNA creates 3’ OH on each side. These 3’ OH’s facilitate transposon DNA insertion.
How are DNA-only transposases and retroviral integrases related?
Have structural similarities in their catalytic site. Spatially clustered DDD or DDE binds Mg2+. This is essential for transposition
What are the two types of non-LTR retrotransposons?
LINE (long interspersed elements) and SINE (short interspersed elements)
Mechanism: Non-LTR transposition
1) LINE element gets transcribed into LINE RNA (with Poly A tail)
2) LINE endonuclease makes nick at target site (usually AT track)
3) Poly A tail of LINE can pair with nicked target site (T’s)
4) Reverse Transcriptase uses LINE as a template to synthesize DNA
5) SOMETHING nicks the second target site and DNA synthesis is completed using second strand as template
6) have to replace RNA with DNA and fill in single stranded gaps
Function: RME Complex
Reverse transcriptase, Maturase, Endonuclease which are encoded by group II mobile introns. Facilitates transposition of these introns.