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CRISPR



CRISPR (Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats) are direct repeats found in the DNA of many bacteria and archaea. The name is an acronym for clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats. These repeats range in size from 24 to 48 base pairs. They usually show some dyad symmetry but are not truly palindromic. The repeats are separated by spacers of similar length. Spacers are usually unique in a genome. Some spacer sequences match sequences in phage genomes; it was proposed, and more recently demonstrated, that these spacers can be derived from phage and subsequently help protect the cell from infection. The CRISPR repeat array evolves rapidly. Different strains of the same species of bacterium often can be differentiated according to differences in the spacers in their CRISPR arrays, a technique called spoligotyping.

Sets of genes have been described recently that are found only in genomes that contain CRISPR repeats, and almost always near the repeats themselves. Such CRISPR-associated genes are called cas. More than forty different Cas protein families have been described. The most important of these is Cas1, which is present in almost every CRISPR/Cas system. Particular combinations of cas genes are found together regularly, along with characteristic subclasses of CRISPR repeat and corresponding subfamilies of the Cas1 family. These combinations appear to represent distinct CRISPR/Cas subtypes; several different subtypes may occur in a single genome. The sporadic distribution of each CRISPR/cas subtype suggests that these elements undergo numerous horizontal gene transfer events during microbial evolution.

The mechanism of action of CRISPR systems is unknown, but may represent a prokaryotic analog of eukaryotic RNA interference systems.

Web sites

http://crispr.u-psud.fr/Server/CRISPRfinder.php
http://crispr.u-psud.fr/crispr/

References

  1. ^ Haft DH, Selengut J, Mongodin EF, Nelson KE (2005). "A guild of 45 CRISPR-associated (Cas) protein families and multiple CRISPR/Cas subtypes exist in prokaryotic genomes". PLoS Comput Biol. 1 (6): e60. PMID 16292354.
  2. ^ Makarova KS, Grishin NV, Shabalina SA, Wolf YI, Koonin EV (2006). "A putative RNA-interference-based immune system in prokaryotes: computational analysis of the predicted enzymatic machinery, functional analogies with eukaryotic RNAi, and hypothetical mechanisms of action". Biol Direct. 1: 7. PMID 16545108.
  3. ^ Barrangou R, Fremaux C, Deveau H, Richards M, Boyaval P, Moineau S, Romero DA, Horvath P. (2007). "CRISPR provides acquired resistance against viruses in prokaryotes.". Science 315 (5819): 1709. PMID 17379808.
  1. ^ Pourcel C, Salvignol G, Vergnaud G (2005). "CCRISPR elements in Yersinia pestis acquire new repeats by preferential uptake of bacteriophage DNA, and provide additional tools for evolutionary studies.". Microbiology 151: 653. PMID 15758212.
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "CRISPR". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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