Site-specific recombination typically occurs only between DNA sequences that have co-evolved with a natural recombinase enzyme to optimize sequence recognition, catalytic efficiency, and regulation. Here, we show that the sequence recognition and the catalysis functions of a recombinase can be specified by unrelated protein domains. We describe chimeric recombinases with a catalytic domain from an activated multiple mutant of the bacterial enzyme Tn3 resolvase, fused to a DNA recognition domain from the mouse transcription factor Zif268. These proteins catalyze efficient recombination specifically at synthetic target sites recognized by two Zif268 domains. Our results demonstrate the functional autonomy of the resolvase catalytic domain and open the way to creating ''custom-built'' recombinases that act at chosen natural target sequences.
Zinc-finger recombinases (ZFRs) are chimaeric proteins comprising a serine recombinase catalytic domain linked to a zinc-finger DNA binding domain. ZFRs can be tailored to promote site-specific recombination at diverse ‘Z-sites’, which each comprise a central core sequence flanked by zinc-finger domain-binding motifs. Here, we show that purified ZFRs catalyse efficient high-specificity reciprocal recombination between pairs of Z-sites in vitro. No off-site activity was detected. Under different reaction conditions, ZFRs can catalyse Z-site-specific double-strand DNA cleavage. ZFR recombination activity in Escherichia coli and in vitro is highly dependent on the length of the Z-site core sequence. We show that this length effect is manifested at reaction steps prior to formation of recombinants (binding, synapsis and DNA cleavage). The design of the ZFR protein itself is also a crucial variable affecting activity. A ZFR with a very short (2 amino acids) peptide linkage between the catalytic and zinc-finger domains has high activity in vitro, whereas a ZFR with a very long linker was less recombination-proficient and less sensitive to variations in Z-site length. We discuss the causes of these phenomena, and their implications for practical applications of ZFRs.
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