This is an alpha-helical lobe domain found in Cas9 proteins. Cas9 enzymes adopt a bilobed architecture composed of a nuclease lobe containing juxtaposed RuvC and HNH nuclease domains and a variable alpha-helical lobe likely to be involved in nucleic ...
This is an alpha-helical lobe domain found in Cas9 proteins. Cas9 enzymes adopt a bilobed architecture composed of a nuclease lobe containing juxtaposed RuvC and HNH nuclease domains and a variable alpha-helical lobe likely to be involved in nucleic acid binding. Amino acid residues located in both the nuclease and alpha-helical lobe clefts are highly conserved within type II-A Cas9 proteins [1].
This is beta-hairpin domain found in Cas9 proteins from Actinobacteria. The beta-hairpin domain is not conserved in all type II-C Cas9 proteins. The beta-hairpin in Cas 9 from Streptococcus pyogenes blocks the HNH domain active site [1].
Topo homolgy domain in CRISPR-associated endonuclease Cas9
This is the Topo-homology domain found in Cas9 proteins from Actinobacteria. This domain bears structural similarity to a domain found in topoisomerase II [1].
Cas9 proteins are abundant across the bacterial kingdom, but vary widely in both sequence and size. All known Cas9 enzymes contain an HNH domain that cleaves the DNA strand complementary to the guide RNA sequence (target strand), and a RuvC nuclease ...
Cas9 proteins are abundant across the bacterial kingdom, but vary widely in both sequence and size. All known Cas9 enzymes contain an HNH domain that cleaves the DNA strand complementary to the guide RNA sequence (target strand), and a RuvC nuclease domain required for cleaving the noncomplementary strand (non-target strand), yielding double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs). The crystal structures of type II-A and II-C Cas9 proteins highlight the features in Cas9 enzymes that support their function as RNA-guided endonucleases. Cas9 enzymes adopt a bilobed architecture composed of a nuclease lobe containing juxtaposed RuvC and HNH nuclease domains and a variable alpha-helical lobe likely to be involved in nucleic acid binding. The RuvC domain forms the structural core of the nuclease lobe, a six-stranded beta sheet surrounded by four alpha helices, with all three conserved subdomains (I, II, III) contributing catalytic residues to the active site [1].