EMD-15218

Single-particle
4.4 Å
EMD-15218 Deposition: 20/06/2022
Map released: 19/04/2023
Last modified: 29/11/2023
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links

EMD-15218

Medium resolution cryo-EM density map of Tn4430 TnpA transposase from Tn3 family in apo state

EMD-15218

Single-particle
4.4 Å
EMD-15218 Deposition: 20/06/2022
Map released: 19/04/2023
Last modified: 29/11/2023
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links
Sample Organism: Bacillus thuringiensis
Sample: TnpA transposase in apo state.

Deposition Authors: Shkumatov AV , Liu Y , Efremov RG
AFM-based force spectroscopy unravels stepwise formation of the DNA transposition complex in the widespread Tn3 family mobile genetic elements.
Fernandez M, Shkumatov AV , Liu Y , Stulemeijer C, Derclaye S, Efremov RG , Hallet B , Alsteens D
(2023) Nucleic Acids Res , 51 , 4929 - 4941
PUBMED: 37026471
DOI: doi:10.1093/nar/gkad241
ISSN: 1362-4962
ASTM: NARHAD
Abstract:
Transposon Tn4430 belongs to a widespread family of bacterial transposons, the Tn3 family, which plays a prevalent role in the dissemination of antibiotic resistance among pathogens. Despite recent data on the structural architecture of the transposition complex, the molecular mechanisms underlying the replicative transposition of these elements are still poorly understood. Here, we use force-distance curve-based atomic force microscopy to probe the binding of the TnpA transposase of Tn4430 to DNA molecules containing one or two transposon ends and to extract the thermodynamic and kinetic parameters of transposition complex assembly. Comparing wild-type TnpA with previously isolated deregulated TnpA mutants supports a stepwise pathway for transposition complex formation and activation during which TnpA first binds as a dimer to a single transposon end and then undergoes a structural transition that enables it to bind the second end cooperatively and to become activated for transposition catalysis, the latter step occurring at a much faster rate for the TnpA mutants. Our study thus provides an unprecedented approach to probe the dynamic of a complex DNA processing machinery at the single-particle level.