Bourniquel Aude A, Bickle Thomas A
Department of Molecular Microbiology, Biozentrum, University of Basel, Klingelbergstrasse 50-70, Switzerland.
Biochimie. 2002 Nov;84(11):1047-59. doi: 10.1016/s0300-9084(02)00020-2.
Survival is assuredly the prime directive for all living organisms either as individuals or as a species. One of the main challenges encountered by bacterial populations is the danger of bacteriophage attacks, since infection of a single bacterium may rapidly propagate, decimating the entire population. In order to protect themselves against this acute threat, bacteria have developed an array of defence mechanisms, which range from preventing the infection itself via interference with bacteriophage adsorption to the cell surface and prevention of phage DNA injection, to degradation of the injected phage DNA. This last defence mechanism is catalysed by the bacterial restriction-modification (R-M) systems, and in particular, by nucleoside 5'-triphosphate (NTP)-dependent restriction enzymes, e.g. type I and type III R-M systems or the modification-dependent endonucleases. Type I and type III restriction systems have dual properties. They may either act as methylases and protect the host's own DNA against restriction by methylating specific residues, or they catalyse ATP-dependent endonuclease activity so that invading foreign DNA lacking the host-specific methylation is degraded. These defence mechanism systems are further complemented by the presence of methylation-dependent, GTP-dependent endonucleases, that restricts specifically methylated DNA. Although all three types of endonucleases are structurally very different, they share a common functional mechanism. They recognise and bind to specific DNA sequences but do not cleave DNA within those target sites. They belong to the general class of DNA motor proteins, which use the free energy associated with nucleoside 5'-triphosphate hydrolysis to translocate DNA so that the subsequent DNA cleavage event occurs at a distance from the endonuclease recognition site. Moreover, DNA cleavage appears to be a random process triggered upon stalling of the DNA translocation process and requiring dimerisation of the bound endonucleases for a concerted break of both DNA strands. In this review, we present a detailed description and analysis of the functional mechanism of the three known NTP-dependent restriction systems: type I and type III restriction-modification enzymes, as well as the methylation-dependent McrBC endonuclease.
生存无疑是所有生物个体或物种的首要指令。细菌群体面临的主要挑战之一是噬菌体攻击的危险,因为单个细菌被感染后可能迅速传播,使整个群体遭到灭顶之灾。为了抵御这种严重威胁,细菌已发展出一系列防御机制,从通过干扰噬菌体吸附到细胞表面来防止感染本身,到防止噬菌体DNA注入,再到降解注入的噬菌体DNA。最后一种防御机制由细菌限制修饰(R-M)系统催化,特别是由核苷5'-三磷酸(NTP)依赖性限制酶催化,例如I型和III型R-M系统或修饰依赖性内切核酸酶。I型和III型限制系统具有双重特性。它们既可以作为甲基化酶,通过甲基化特定残基来保护宿主自身的DNA不被限制,也可以催化ATP依赖性内切核酸酶活性,从而降解缺乏宿主特异性甲基化的入侵外源DNA。这些防御机制系统还因存在甲基化依赖性、GTP依赖性内切核酸酶而得到进一步补充,这些酶专门限制甲基化的DNA。尽管这三种类型的内切核酸酶在结构上差异很大,但它们具有共同的功能机制。它们识别并结合特定的DNA序列,但不在这些靶位点内切割DNA。它们属于DNA运动蛋白的一般类别,利用与核苷5'-三磷酸水解相关的自由能来转运DNA,以便随后的DNA切割事件在远离内切核酸酶识别位点的位置发生。此外,DNA切割似乎是一个随机过程,在DNA转运过程停滞时触发,并且需要结合的内切核酸酶二聚化才能使两条DNA链同时断裂。在本综述中,我们详细描述和分析了三种已知的NTP依赖性限制系统的功能机制:I型和III型限制修饰酶,以及甲基化依赖性McrBC内切核酸酶。