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Proteolytic cleavage of Gram-positive β recombinase is required for crystallization

Authors :
Petra Jekow
Winfried Hinrichs
Juan C. Alonso
Peter Orth
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier

Abstract

Beta recombinase, a DNA resolvase-invertase, catalyzes in the presence of a chromatin-associated protein such as Hbsu, DNA resolution or DNA inversion on supercoiled substrates containing two directly or inversely oriented target (six) sites. Single crystals of the beta recombinase from plasmid pSM19035 were obtained using the vapor diffusion technique with ammonium phosphate as the precipitating agent. The crystals diffracted X-rays to a maximum resolution of 2.5A. Due to proteolytic degradation during the crystallization experiment, the crystals contain only the N-terminal catalytic domain of beta recombinase corresponding to about 60% of the molecular mass of the initially assayed native protein. The proteolytic removal of the C-terminal DNA-binding domain demonstrated that protein modification can be essential to provide material suitable for X-ray analysis.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scopus-Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c1dd5e65209fd29c94edd1765e4771e8