JBC Invitrogen Ultrasensitive Cytokine Assays

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Originally published In Press as doi:10.1074/jbc.M110341200 on December 27, 2001

J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 277, Issue 10, 7694-7702, March 8, 2002
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DNA Recognition Sites Activate MuA Transposase to Perform Transposition of Non-Mu DNA*

Ilana Goldhaber-GordonDagger , Tanya L. WilliamsDagger §, and Tania A. BakerDagger ||

From the Dagger  Department of Biology and  Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139

Mu transposition occurs within a large protein-DNA complex called a transpososome. This stable complex includes four subunits of MuA transposase, each contacting a 22-base pair recognition site located near an end of the transposon DNA. These MuA recognition sites are critical for assembling the transpososome. Here we report that when concentrations of Mu DNA are limited, the MuA recognition sites permit assembly of transpososomes in which non-Mu DNA substitutes for some of the Mu sequences. These "hybrid" transpososomes are stable to competitor DNA, actively transpose the non-Mu DNA, and produce transposition products that had been previously observed but not explained. The strongest activator of non-Mu transposition is a DNA fragment containing two MuA recognition sites and no cleavage site, but a shorter fragment with just one recognition site is sufficient. Based on our results, we propose that MuA recognition sites drive assembly of functional transpososomes in two complementary ways. Multiple recognition sites help physically position MuA subunits in the transpososome plus each individual site allosterically activates transposase.


* This work was supported by United States Public Health Service Grant GM499224 from the National Institutes of Health.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

§ Recipient of a National Science Foundation graduate fellowship.

|| Employee of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. To whom correspondence should be addressed: Howard Hughes Medical Inst., Massachusetts Inst. of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave., 68-523 Cambridge, MA 02139. E-mail: tabaker@mit.edu.


Copyright © 2002 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.


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