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 | Departmental Seminar: Dr. Luciano Marraffini |
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Event Date: 11.4.2013
Day: Monday
Time: 12:00 pm
Location: 700 Fairchild
Event Type: Departmental
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DR. LUCIANO MARRAFFINI
Assistant Professor
Head of the Laboratory of Bacteriology
The Rockefeller University
Title: “Tolerance during CRISPR-Cas immunity: domesticating the virus”
Abstract
CRISPR-Cas loci of bacteria and archaea provide adaptive
immunity against viruses that infect these organisms (phages). CRISPR loci
consist in an array of short repetitive sequences (~ 30 bp) separated by
equally short "spacer" sequences of viral origin that are acquired upon viral
infection. Spacer sequences are transcribed into small antisense RNAs that
guide CRISPR-associated (Cas) nucleases to the phage genome for its
destruction. Temperate phages usually carry beneficial genes for the host (even
essential in certain conditions) that are incorporated into the bacterial
genome after the integration of the viral DNA, or lysogeny. Therefore these
phages can be considered commensals and their destruction by CRISPR immunity
can be detrimental for the cell fitness. Here we investigated whether this
immune system can tolerate commensal viruses. We found that, at least in
staphylococci, Cas-mediated cleavage requires transcription of the target DNA.
As most of the viral genes are silenced upon lysogeny, this requirement facilitates
the tolerance of the lysogen. Tolerance, however, is contingent to the "good
behavior" of the phage. When the lysogen initiates a lytic cycle, of lethal
consequences for the host, its genome is transcribed and thus becomes a target
for Cas nucleases. Therefore the staphylococcal CRISPR-Cas immune system
possesses a tolerance mechanism that allows the cell to "domesticate" its
viruses: maintaining them when they provide beneficial traits, but destroy them
if they become harmful.
Host: Dr. Lars Dietrich |