Feng Wang, Haijiang Xu, Chendi Zhang, Jialin Xue, Zhuang Li
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The short Argonaute-based bacterial defense system, SPARDA (Short Prokaryotic Argonaute and DNase/RNase-APAZ), utilizes guide RNA to target invading complementary DNA and exhibits collateral nuclease activity, leading to cell death or dormancy. However, its detailed mechanisms remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the SPARDA system from Novosphingopyxis baekryungensis (NbaSPARDA) and discovered an unexpected filament configuration upon target DNA binding, which strongly correlated with collateral nuclease activity. Filament formation and nuclease activation require a guide–target heteroduplex of sufficient length with perfect complementarity at the central region. A series of cryo-EM structures of NbaSPARDA complexes, loaded with guide RNA, target DNA of varying lengths, and substrate ssDNA, were determined at ~3.0 Å resolution. Structural analyses indicated that guide RNA binding induces dimerization of the NbaSPARDA complex, while target DNA engagement disrupts this dimerization. Further propagation of the guide–target heteroduplex triggers filament formation through a checkpoint mechanism. The NbaSPARDA filament consists of a backbone formed by interlocking short Argonaute proteins, with an inner layer composed of DREN nuclease domains. Filament formation leads to tetramerization of the monomeric DREN nuclease domain, activating its collateral nuclease activity against environmental nucleic acids — a feature leveraged for molecular diagnostics. For bacteria heterologously expressing the NbaSPARDA system, defense against invading bacteriophages and plasmids relies on filament formation. Collectively, these findings illustrate the detailed working mechanism of the NbaSPARDA complex and highlight the importance of its filament formation in host defense.
期刊介绍:
Cell Research (CR) is an international journal published by Springer Nature in partnership with the Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). It focuses on publishing original research articles and reviews in various areas of life sciences, particularly those related to molecular and cell biology. The journal covers a broad range of topics including cell growth, differentiation, and apoptosis; signal transduction; stem cell biology and development; chromatin, epigenetics, and transcription; RNA biology; structural and molecular biology; cancer biology and metabolism; immunity and molecular pathogenesis; molecular and cellular neuroscience; plant molecular and cell biology; and omics, system biology, and synthetic biology. CR is recognized as China's best international journal in life sciences and is part of Springer Nature's prestigious family of Molecular Cell Biology journals.