Diversity in the serine recombinases
Open Access
- 25 April 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Microbiology
- Vol. 44 (2) , 299-307
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2958.2002.02891.x
Abstract
Summary: Most site‐specific recombinases fall into one of two families, based on evolutionary and mechanistic relatedness. These are the tyrosine recombinases orλintegrase family and the serine recombinases or resolvase/invertase family. The tyrosine recombinases are structurally diverse and functionally versatile and include integrases, resolvases, invertases and transposases. Recent studies have revealed that the serine recombinase family is equally versatile and members have a variety of structural forms. The archetypal resolvase/invertases are highly regulated, only affect resolution or inversion and they have an N‐terminal catalytic domain and a C‐terminal DNA binding domain. Phage‐encoded serine recombinases (e.g.φC31 integrase) cause integration and excision with strictly controlled directionality, and have an N‐terminal catalytic domain but much longer C‐terminal domains compared with the resolvase/invertases. This high molecular weight group also contains transposases (e.g. TnpX from Tn4451). Other transposases, which belong to a third structurally different group, are similar in size to the resolvase/invertases but have the DNA binding domain N‐terminal to the catalytic domain (e.g. IS607transposase). These three structural groups represented by the resolvase/invertases, the large serine recombinases and relatives of IS607transposase correlate with three major groupings seen in a phylogeny of the catalytic domains. These observations indicate that the serine recombinases are modular and that fusion of the catalytic domain to unrelated sequences has generated structural and functional diversity.Keywords
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