Abstract
Transformation, the uptake of DNA directly from the environment, is a
major driver of gene flow in microbial populations. In bacteria, DNA
uptake requires a nuclease that processes dsDNA to ssDNA, which is
subsequently transferred into the cell and incorporated into the genome.
However, the process of DNA uptake in archaea is still unknown.
Previously, we cataloged genes essential to natural transformation in
Methanococcus maripaludis, but few homologs of bacterial
transformation-associated genes were identified. Here, we characterize
one gene, MMJJ_16440 (named here as ecnA) to be a membrane-bound
nuclease. We show that EcnA is Ca 2+-activated,
present on the cell surface, and essential for transformation. While
EcnA is capable of degrading several forms of DNA, the highest activity
was observed with ssDNA as a substrate. Activity was also observed with
circular dsDNA, suggesting that EcnA is an endonuclease. This is the
first biochemical characterization of a transformation-associated
protein in a member of the archaeal domain and suggests that both
archaeal and bacterial transformation initiate in an analogous fashion.