Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
1kbu;
DSSR-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- hydrolase, ligase-DNA
- Method
- X-ray (2.2 Å)
- Summary
- Cre recombinase bound to a loxp holliday junction
- Reference
-
Martin SS, Pulido E, Chu VC, Lechner TS, Baldwin EP
(2002): "The Order
of Strand Exchanges in Cre-LoxP Recombination and its
Basis Suggested by the Crystal Structure of a Cre-LoxP
Holliday Junction Complex." J.Mol.Biol.,
319, 107-127. doi: 10.1016/S0022-2836(02)00246-2.
- Abstract
- Cre recombinase uses two pairs of sequential cleavage
and religation reactions to exchange homologous DNA strands
between 34 base-pair (bp) LoxP recognition sequences. In
the oligomeric recombination complex, a switch between
"cleaving" and "non-cleaving" subunit conformations
regulates the number, order, and regio-specificity of the
strand exchanges. However, the particular sequence of
events has been in question. From analysis of strand
composition of the Holliday junction (HJ) intermediate, we
determined that Cre initiates recombination of LoxP by
cleaving the upper strand on the left arm. Cre preferred to
react with the left arm of a LoxP suicide substrate, but at
a similar rate to the right arm, indicating that the first
strand to be exchanged is selected prior to cleavage. We
propose that during complex assembly the cleaving subunit
preferentially associates with the LoxP left arm, directing
the first strand exchange to that side. In addition, this
biased assembly would enforce productive orientation of
LoxP sites in the recombination synapses. A novel Cre-HJ
complex structure in which LoxP was oriented with the left
arm bound by the cleaving Cre subunit suggested a physical
basis for the strand exchange order. Lys86 and Lys201
interact with the left arm scissile adenine base
differently than in structures that have a scissile
guanine. These interactions are associated with positioning
the 198-208 loop, a structural component of the
conformational switch, in a configuration that is specific
to the cleaving conformation. Our results suggest that
strand exchange order and site alignment are regulated by
an "induced fit" mechanism in which the cleaving
conformation is selectively stabilized through protein-DNA
interactions with the scissile base on the strand that is
cleaved first.