AI Article Synopsis

  • Bacteria and phages are locked in a survival battle, leading to the evolution of bacterial defence systems like CRISPR-Cas, which helps bacteria fend off viral infections.
  • Researchers discovered the first proteins (anti-CRISPRs) produced by phages that inhibit CRISPR-Cas through different mechanisms.
  • Two of these anti-CRISPR proteins block the CRISPR-Cas complex's DNA-binding activity, while a third converts the system into a transcriptional repressor, indicating a unique modulation of CRISPR-Cas functions.

Article Abstract

The battle for survival between bacteria and the viruses that infect them (phages) has led to the evolution of many bacterial defence systems and phage-encoded antagonists of these systems. Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) and the CRISPR-associated (cas) genes comprise an adaptive immune system that is one of the most widespread means by which bacteria defend themselves against phages. We identified the first examples of proteins produced by phages that inhibit a CRISPR-Cas system. Here we performed biochemical and in vivo investigations of three of these anti-CRISPR proteins, and show that each inhibits CRISPR-Cas activity through a distinct mechanism. Two block the DNA-binding activity of the CRISPR-Cas complex, yet do this by interacting with different protein subunits, and using steric or non-steric modes of inhibition. The third anti-CRISPR protein operates by binding to the Cas3 helicase-nuclease and preventing its recruitment to the DNA-bound CRISPR-Cas complex. In vivo, this anti-CRISPR can convert the CRISPR-Cas system into a transcriptional repressor, providing the first example-to our knowledge-of modulation of CRISPR-Cas activity by a protein interactor. The diverse sequences and mechanisms of action of these anti-CRISPR proteins imply an independent evolution, and foreshadow the existence of other means by which proteins may alter CRISPR-Cas function.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4935067PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature15254DOI Listing

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