We have determined multiple cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of the Type IIB restriction-modification enzyme BsaXI. Such enzymes cleave DNA on both sides of their recognition sequence and share features of Types I, II, and III restriction systems. BsaXI forms a heterotrimeric (RM)2S assemblage in the presence and absence of bound DNA. Two unique structural motifs-a multi-helical "knob" and a long antiparallel double-helical "paddle"-are involved in DNA binding and cleavage. Binding of the DNA target triggers a large conformational change from an 'open' to 'closed' configuration, resulting in a mixture of two different conformations with respect to the positioning of the S subunit and its target recognition domains on the enzyme's bipartite DNA target site. Structure-guided mutagenesis studies implicated two clusters of residues in the RM subunit as being critical for DNA cleavage, both are located proximal to a DNA cleavage site. One corresponds to a canonical PD-(D/E)xK endonuclease site in the N-terminal endonuclease domain, while the other corresponds to residues clustered within the paddle motif (near to the C-terminal end of the RM subunit). This analysis facilitates a comparison of three potential mechanisms by which such enzymes cleave DNA on each side of the bound target.
© The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.