2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2007.12.035
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The Nucleoid Binding Protein H-NS Acts as an Anti-Channeling Factor to Favor Intermolecular Tn10 Transposition and Dissemination

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Cited by 18 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…In the equivalent reactions supplemented with H-NS, target-site channeling was reduced as evidenced by the reduction in the level of UKIC and an increase in the level of transposition products indicative of unconstrained target-site interactions, including intermolecular transposition events. Importantly, the antichanneling effect of H-NS was blocked by increasing the amount of IHF added to reactions, which is consistent with H-NS and IHF competing for binding sites within Tsomes (39). More generally, the capacity of H-NS to act as an antichanneling factor would be expected to increase the frequency of productive transposition events in the Tn10 system; this is consistent with the observation that the frequency of Tn10 transposition was reduced in strains of E. coli containing either an hns disruption or specific loss of function hns alleles, such as P116S (34).…”
Section: H-ns May Function In a Postexcision Capacity In Tn10 Transposupporting
confidence: 63%
“…In the equivalent reactions supplemented with H-NS, target-site channeling was reduced as evidenced by the reduction in the level of UKIC and an increase in the level of transposition products indicative of unconstrained target-site interactions, including intermolecular transposition events. Importantly, the antichanneling effect of H-NS was blocked by increasing the amount of IHF added to reactions, which is consistent with H-NS and IHF competing for binding sites within Tsomes (39). More generally, the capacity of H-NS to act as an antichanneling factor would be expected to increase the frequency of productive transposition events in the Tn10 system; this is consistent with the observation that the frequency of Tn10 transposition was reduced in strains of E. coli containing either an hns disruption or specific loss of function hns alleles, such as P116S (34).…”
Section: H-ns May Function In a Postexcision Capacity In Tn10 Transposupporting
confidence: 63%
“…This suicidal transposition event is called autointegration, self-integration or intramolecular transposition, and is well characterized in prokaryotes [14][16]. The best-understood example in bacteria is Tn 10 transposition, in which regulation of transposition is a delicate interplay between the transposon and host-encoded factors [17][19]. These host factors, namely IHF (integration host factor), HU (heat unstable nucleoid protein) and H-NS (nucleoid structuring protein) are among the most important regulatory factors in E. coli .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These host factors interact with specific sites near the transposon end and may help to initiate the reaction, or modulate the outcome, such as the choice of integration target site (Sewitz et al 2003;Crellin et al 2004;Liu et al 2005). In other cases, host factors such as the eukaryotic HMG and bacterial HU and H-NS proteins, may target distorted DNA structures near the transposon end (Chalmers et al 1998;Zayed et al 2003;Wardle et al 2005;Singh et al 2008;Whitfield et al 2009). These distortions probably arise from the skewed base composition and the repetition of simple sequence motifs at or near transposon ends.…”
Section: Internal Sequencesmentioning
confidence: 99%