Article
- The EMBO Journal (2002) 21, 4172 - 4182
- doi:10.1093/emboj/cdf403
Subject Category:
A target specificity switch in IS911 transposition: the role of the OrfA protein
C. Loot1, C. Turlan1, P. Rousseau1, B. Ton-Hoang1 and M. Chandler1
- Laboratoire de Microbiologie et Génétique Moléculaire, CNRS UMR5100, 118 Rte de Narbonne, F-31062 Toulouse Cedex, France
Correspondence to:
M. Chandler, E-mail: mike@ibcg.biotoul.fr
Received 19 April 2002; Accepted 11 June 2002; Revised 10 June 2002
Abstract
The role played by insertion sequence IS911 proteins, OrfA and OrfAB, in the choice of a target for insertion was studied. IS911 transposition occurs in several steps: synapsis of the two transposon ends (IRR and IRL); formation of a figure-of-eight intermediate where both ends are joined by a single-strand bridge; resolution into a circular form carrying an IRR–IRL junction; and insertion into a DNA target. In vivo, with OrfAB alone, an IS911-based transposon integrated with high probability next to an IS911 end located on the target plasmid. OrfA greatly reduced the proportion of these events. This was confirmed in vitro using a transposon with a preformed IRR–IRL junction to examine the final insertion step. Addition of OrfA resulted in a large increase in insertion frequency and greatly increased the proportion of non-targeted insertions. The intermolecular reaction leading to targeted insertion may resemble the intramolecular reaction involving figure-of-eight molecules, which leads to the formation of circles. OrfA could, therefore, be considered as a molecular switch modulating the site-specific recombination activity of OrfAB and facilitating dispersion of the insertion sequence (IS) to 'non-homologous' target sites.
Keywords:
- insertion sequence,
- insertion specificity,
- intermolecular transposition,
- synaptic complex,
- transposition switch



