Sleeping Beauty transposase structure allows rational design of hyperactive variants for genetic engineering

Franka Voigt(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Lisa Wiedemann(Paul Ehrlich Institut), Cecilia Zuliani(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Irma Querques(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Attila Sebe(Paul Ehrlich Institut), Lajos Mátés(Max Delbrück Center), Zsuzsanna Izsvák(Max Delbrück Center), Zoltán Ivics(Paul Ehrlich Institut), O. Barábas(European Molecular Biology Laboratory)
Nature Communications
March 30, 2016
Cited by 61Open Access
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Abstract

Sleeping Beauty (SB) is a prominent Tc1/mariner superfamily DNA transposon that provides a popular genome engineering tool in a broad range of organisms. It is mobilized by a transposase enzyme that catalyses DNA cleavage and integration at short specific sequences at the transposon ends. To facilitate SB's applications, here we determine the crystal structure of the transposase catalytic domain and use it to model the SB transposase/transposon end/target DNA complex. Together with biochemical and cell-based transposition assays, our structure reveals mechanistic insights into SB transposition and rationalizes previous hyperactive transposase mutations. Moreover, our data enables us to design two additional hyperactive transposase variants. Our work provides a useful resource and proof-of-concept for structure-based engineering of tailored SB transposases.


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