Tn3 resolvase promotes site-specific recombination between two res sites, each of which has three resolvase dimer-binding sites. Catalysis of DNA-strand cleavage and rejoining occurs at binding site I, but binding sites II and III are required for recombination. We used an in vivo screen to detect resolvase mutants that were active on res sites with binding sites II and III deleted (that is, only site I remaining). Mutations of amino acids Asp102 (D102) or Met103 (M103) were sufficient to permit catalysis of recombination between site I and a full res, but not between two copies of site I. A double mutant resolvase, with a D102Y mutation and an additional activating mutation at Glu124 (E124Q), recombined substrates containing only two copies of site I, in vivo and in vitro. In these novel site Iϫsite I reactions, product topology is no longer restricted to the normal simple catenane, indicating synapsis by random collision. Furthermore, the mutants have lost the normal specificity for directly repeated sites and supercoiled substrates; that is, they promote recombination between pairs of res sites in linear molecules, or in inverted repeat in a supercoiled molecule, or in separate molecules.
SummaryCatalysis of DNA recombination by Tn 3 resolvase is conditional on prior formation of a synapse, comprising 12 resolvase subunits and two recombination sites ( res ). Each res binds a resolvase dimer at site I, where strand exchange takes place, and additional dimers at two adjacent 'accessory' binding sites II and III. 'Hyperactive' resolvase mutants, that catalyse strand exchange at site I without accessory sites, were selected in E. coli . Some single mutants can resolve a res ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ site I plasmid (that is, with one res and one site I), but two or more activating mutations are necessary for efficient resolution of a site I ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ site I plasmid. Site I ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ site I resolution by hyperactive mutants can be further stimulated by mutations at the crystallographic 2-3 ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ interface that abolish activity of wild-type resolvase. Activating mutations may allow regulatory mechanisms of the wild-type system to be bypassed, by stabilizing or destabilizing interfaces within and between subunits in the synapse. The positions and characteristics of the mutations support a mechanism for strand exchange by serine recombinases in which the DNA is on the outside of a recombinase tetramer, and the tertiary/quaternary structure of the tetramer is reconfigured.
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