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Probing the molecular determinants of Ty1 retrotransposon restriction specificity in yeast.

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-10-23, 10:11 authored by Sean L Beckwith, Matthew A Cottee, J Adam Hannon-Hatfield, Abigail C Newman, Emma C Walker, Justin R Romero, Jonathan P Stoye, Ian A Taylor, David J Garfinkel
The evolutionary history of retrotransposons and their hosts shapes the dynamics of transposition and restriction. The Pseudoviridae of yeast includes multiple Ty1 LTR-retrotransposon subfamilies. Saccharomyces cerevisiae prevents uncontrolled retrotransposition of Ty1 subfamilies using distinct mechanisms: canonical Ty1 is inhibited by a self-encoded restriction factor, p22/p18, whereas Ty1' is inhibited by an endogenized restriction factor, Drt2. The minimal inhibitory fragment of both restriction factors (p18m and Drt2m) is a conserved C-terminal capsid domain. Here, we use biophysical and genetic approaches to demonstrate that p18m and Drt2m are highly specific to their subfamilies. Although the crystal structures of p18m and Drt2m are similar, three divergent residues found in a conserved hydrophobic interface direct restriction specificity. By mutating these three residues, we re-target each restriction factor to the opposite transposon. Our work highlights how a common lattice-poisoning mechanism of restriction evolved from independent evolutionary trajectories in closely related retrotransposon subfamilies. These data raise the possibility that similar capsid-capsid interactions may exist in other transposons/viruses and that highly specific inhibitors could be engineered to target capsid interfaces.

Funding

Cancer Research UK (Grant ID: CC2029) Medical Research Council (Grant ID: CC2029) Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: CC2029) NIH (Grant ID: R01GM124216) NIH (Grant ID: R01GM156837) NIH (Grant ID: F32GM139247) Crick (Grant ID: 10162, Grant title: Stoye FC001162) Crick (Grant ID: CC2029, Grant title: Taylor CC2029)

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