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Non-contact positions impose site selectivity on Cre recombinase
Author(s) -
Andreas Rüfer
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkf399
Subject(s) - biology , recombinase , cre recombinase , recombination , flp frt recombination , dna shuffling , dna , mutant , mutagenesis , genetics , base pair , microbiology and biotechnology , site directed mutagenesis , cre lox recombination , in vitro recombination , directed evolution , gene , genetic recombination , transgene , peptide sequence , molecular cloning , genetically modified mouse
A first step in Cre-mediated site-specific DNA recombination is binding to the two 13 bp repeats of the 34 bp site loxP. Several nucleotides within loxP do not directly contact the bound enzyme, yet mutation at two of these base pairs, at positions 11 and 12 in each repeat, results in a 100 000-fold reduction in recombination. To understand better how Cre selects DNA sequences for recombination, we combined DNA shuffling mutagenesis and a forward selection strategy to obtain Cre mutants that recombine at 100% efficiency a mutant loxK2 site carrying these dinucleotide changes. The role of the several mutations found in these Cre isolates was analyzed both in vivo and biochemically with purified enzymes. A single mutation at E262 accounts for most but not all of the enhanced activity at loxK2. Secondary mutations act in one or more of three ways: enhancement of loxK2 binding, accelerated synthesis of Cre in vivo or faster DNA recombination at the alternative spacer region present in loxK2. Systematic analysis of all 20 natural amino acids at position E262 shows that the naturally occurring glutamate residue at this position provides the optimal balance of efficiency of recombination at loxP and maximal discrimination against loxK2.

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