Altered stoichiometry<i>Escherichia coli</i>Cascade complexes with shortened CRISPR RNA spacers are capable of interference and primed adaptation

Konstantin Kuznedelov(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Vladimir Mekler(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Sofia Lemak(University of Toronto), Monika Tokmina‐Lukaszewska(Montana State University), Kirill A. Datsenko(Purdue University West Lafayette), Ishita Jain(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Ekaterina Savitskaya(Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology), John Mallon(Johns Hopkins University), Sergey Shmakov(National Center for Biotechnology Information), Brian Bothner(Montana State University), Scott Bailey(Johns Hopkins University), Alexander F. Yakunin(University of Toronto), Konstantin Severinov(Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University), Ekaterina Semenova(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey)
Nucleic Acids Research
October 3, 2016
Cited by 45Open Access
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Abstract

The Escherichia coli type I-E CRISPR-Cas system Cascade effector is a multisubunit complex that binds CRISPR RNA (crRNA). Through its 32-nucleotide spacer sequence, Cascade-bound crRNA recognizes protospacers in foreign DNA, causing its destruction during CRISPR interference or acquisition of additional spacers in CRISPR array during primed CRISPR adaptation. Within Cascade, the crRNA spacer interacts with a hexamer of Cas7 subunits. We show that crRNAs with a spacer length reduced to 14 nucleotides cause primed adaptation, while crRNAs with spacer lengths of more than 20 nucleotides cause both primed adaptation and target interference in vivo Shortened crRNAs assemble into altered-stoichiometry Cascade effector complexes containing less than the normal amount of Cas7 subunits. The results show that Cascade assembly is driven by crRNA and suggest that multisubunit type I CRISPR effectors may have evolved from much simpler ancestral complexes.


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