Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://biore.bio.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/372
Title: Avoidance of trinucleotide corresponding to consensus protospacer adjacent motif controls the efficiency of prespacer selection during primed adaptation
Authors: Musharova, Olga
Vyhovskyi, Danylo
Medvedeva, Sofia
Guzina, Jelena 
Zhitnyuk, Yulia
Đorđević, Marko 
Severinov, Konstantin
Savitskaya, Ekaterina
Keywords: CRISPR spacers;CRISPR-cas;Naïve adaptation;Primed adaptation
Issue Date: 1-Nov-2018
Rank: M21a
Journal: mBio
Abstract: 
© 2018 Musharova et al. CRISPR DNA arrays of unique spacers separated by identical repeats ensure prokaryotic immunity through specific targeting of foreign nucleic acids complementary to spacers. New spacers are acquired into a CRISPR array in a process of CRISPR adaptation. Selection of foreign DNA fragments to be integrated into CRISPR arrays relies on PAM (protospacer adjacent motif) recognition, as only those spacers will be functional against invaders. However, acquisition of different PAM-associated spacers proceeds with markedly different efficiency from the same DNA. Here, we used a combination of bioinformatics and experimental approaches to understand factors affecting the efficiency of acquisition of spacers by the Escherichia coli type I-E CRISPR-Cas system, for which two modes of CRISPR adaptation have been described: naive and primed. We found that during primed adaptation, efficiency of spacer acquisition is strongly negatively affected by the presence of an AAG trinucle-otide—a consensus PAM—within the sequence being selected. No such trend is observed during naive adaptation. The results are consistent with a unidirectional spacer selection process during primed adaptation and provide a specific signature for identification of spacers acquired through primed adaptation in natural populations. IMPORTANCE Adaptive immunity of prokaryotes depends on acquisition of foreign DNA fragments into CRISPR arrays as spacers followed by destruction of foreign DNA by CRISPR interference machinery. Different fragments are acquired into CRISPR arrays with widely different efficiencies, but the factors responsible are not known. We analyzed the frequency of spacers acquired during primed adaptation in an E. coli CRISPR array and found that AAG motif was depleted from highly acquired spacers. AAG is also a consensus protospacer adjacent motif (PAM) that must be present upstream from the target of the CRISPR spacer for its efficient destruction by the interference machinery. These results are important because they provide new information on the mechanism of primed spacer acquisition. They add to other previous evidence in the field that pointed out to a “directionality” in the capture of new spacers. Our data strongly suggest that the recognition of an AAG PAM by the interference machinery components prior to spacer capture occludes downstream AAG sequences, thus preventing their recognition by the adaptation machinery.
URI: https://biore.bio.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/372
ISSN: 2161-2129
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.02169-18
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