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Homing Endonucleases and Horizontal Gene Transfer in Bacteria and BacteriophagesNord, David January 2007 (has links)
<p>Homing endonuclease genes (HEGs) are selfish genetic elements that mediate their own super-Mendelian inheritance. This is mediated by the homing endonuclease cleavage of a HEG<sup>- </sup>allele followed by recombination-repair with a HEG<sup>+</sup> allele.</p><p>The majority of the HEGs are encoded in intervening sequences (IVSs). The insertion of the IVS interrupts the endonuclease recognition site, making the genome with the IVS resistant to further cleavage by homing endonucleases with specificity for that particular sequence, but susceptible for homing endonucleases with a target not affected by the IVS insert. In 39 studied strains of the <i>Bacillus cereus</i> group, 28 IVSs were found in the <i>nrdIEF</i> operon. Phylogenetic studies of these sequences showed a scattered distribution of the IVSs, indicating a frequent horizontal gene transfer and that there might be competition between the different IVSs in the <i>nrdIEF</i> operon in the <i>Bacillaceae</i> family. One novel group I intron was shown to encode a functional homing endonuclease with a GIY-(X)<sub>8</sub>-YIG motif, expanding the family motif to GIY-(X)<sub>8</sub>-<sub>11</sub>-YIG. Interestingly, by studying the known insertion sites for IVSs in the ribonuclotide reductase genes, we show that the majority of the insertions are at conserved motifs, indicating that conservation is important for IVS survival.</p><p>Most freestanding HEGs in bacteriophage T4 cleave both HEG<sup>+</sup> and HEG<sup>-</sup> alleles, possibly providing a competitive advantage for the host organism when two phages infect the same bacterium. Two novel freestanding HEGs replace two putative HEGs in T4 in some T-even-like phages. The characterisation of these HEGs showed that both cleave double stranded DNA. SegH was shown to promote homing of its gene. Hef showed no homing, possibly due to general exclusion of other phages. The <i>mobE</i> putative HEG was shown to be homing proficient and showed strong general DNA degradation when expressed in <i>Escherichia coli.</i></p>
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Homing Endonucleases and Horizontal Gene Transfer in Bacteria and BacteriophagesNord, David January 2007 (has links)
Homing endonuclease genes (HEGs) are selfish genetic elements that mediate their own super-Mendelian inheritance. This is mediated by the homing endonuclease cleavage of a HEG- allele followed by recombination-repair with a HEG+ allele. The majority of the HEGs are encoded in intervening sequences (IVSs). The insertion of the IVS interrupts the endonuclease recognition site, making the genome with the IVS resistant to further cleavage by homing endonucleases with specificity for that particular sequence, but susceptible for homing endonucleases with a target not affected by the IVS insert. In 39 studied strains of the Bacillus cereus group, 28 IVSs were found in the nrdIEF operon. Phylogenetic studies of these sequences showed a scattered distribution of the IVSs, indicating a frequent horizontal gene transfer and that there might be competition between the different IVSs in the nrdIEF operon in the Bacillaceae family. One novel group I intron was shown to encode a functional homing endonuclease with a GIY-(X)8-YIG motif, expanding the family motif to GIY-(X)8-11-YIG. Interestingly, by studying the known insertion sites for IVSs in the ribonuclotide reductase genes, we show that the majority of the insertions are at conserved motifs, indicating that conservation is important for IVS survival. Most freestanding HEGs in bacteriophage T4 cleave both HEG+ and HEG- alleles, possibly providing a competitive advantage for the host organism when two phages infect the same bacterium. Two novel freestanding HEGs replace two putative HEGs in T4 in some T-even-like phages. The characterisation of these HEGs showed that both cleave double stranded DNA. SegH was shown to promote homing of its gene. Hef showed no homing, possibly due to general exclusion of other phages. The mobE putative HEG was shown to be homing proficient and showed strong general DNA degradation when expressed in Escherichia coli.
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