Archaeal tyrosine recombinases

Archive ouverte

Badel, Catherine | da Cunha, Violette | Oberto, J.

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley-Blackwell -

International audience. ABSTRACT The integration of mobile genetic elements into their host chromosome influences the immediate fate of cellular organisms and gradually shapes their evolution. Site-specific recombinases catalyzing this integration have been extensively characterized both in bacteria and eukarya. More recently, a number of reports provided the in-depth characterization of archaeal tyrosine recombinases and highlighted new particular features not observed in the other two domains. In addition to being active in extreme environments, archaeal integrases catalyze reactions beyond site-specific recombination. Some of these integrases can catalyze low-sequence specificity recombination reactions with the same outcome as homologous recombination events generating deep rearrangements of their host genome. A large proportion of archaeal integrases are termed suicidal due to the presence of a specific recombination target within their own gene. The paradoxical maintenance of integrases that disrupt their gene upon integration implies novel mechanisms for their evolution. In this review, we assess the diversity of the archaeal tyrosine recombinases using a phylogenomic analysis based on an exhaustive similarity network. We outline the biochemical, ecological and evolutionary properties of these enzymes in the context of the families we identified and emphasize similarities and differences between archaeal recombinases and their bacterial and eukaryal counterparts.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Pervasive Suicidal Integrases in Deep-Sea Archaea

Archive ouverte | Badel, Catherine | CCSD

International audience. Mobile genetic elements (MGEs) often encode integrases which catalyze the site-specific insertion of their genetic information into the host genome and the reverse reaction of excision. Hyper...

The global distribution and evolutionary history of the pT26‐2 archaeal plasmid family

Archive ouverte | Badel, Catherine | CCSD

International audience. Although plasmids play an important role in biological evolution, the number of plasmid families well characterized in terms of geographical distribution and evolution remains limited, especi...

BAGET 2.0: an updated web tool for the effortless retrieval of prokaryotic gene context and sequence

Archive ouverte | Hepp, Benjamin | CCSD

International audience. Abstract Motivation The retrieval of a single gene sequence and context from completely sequenced bacterial and archaeal genomes constitutes an intimidating task for the wet bench biologist. ...

Chargement des enrichissements...