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Tetramerization and RNA-guided filament assembly control Schlafen-Argonaute antiphage defense

Preprint Created on 30 May 2026 bioRxiv

Two deeply conserved protein families, Argonaute (Ago) and Schlafen (SLFN), play defense roles in diverse prokaryotes and eukaryotes, including humans. Here, we identify a monophyletic group of proteins broadly distributed across bacteria and archaea that fuse a SLFN domain with an Ago core and a GHKL-family ATPase. Using SLFN-pAgo from Runella zeae as a model, we show that these proteins protect bacterial cells against bacteriophages by employing the Ago core as a guide-dependent sensor and the SLFN domain as a nuclease effector to induce abortive infection via tRNAs cleavage. Structural and biochemical analyses reveal that ATP binding by the GHKL domain drives tetramerization of SLFN-pAgo, reconstituting the canonical SLFN nuclease architecture found in mammalian proteins. Prior to target detection, non-canonical guide RNA binding induces the formation of long helical filaments, locking the SLFN domains in an inactive configuration. Guide-dependent recognition of complementary target DNA triggers massive structural rearrangements leading to filament disassembly and the induction of SLFN nuclease activity. Together, our findings uncover a new antiphage system that employs reversible guide- and ATP-mediated oligomerization to strictly regulate cooperation between an Ago sensor and a SLFN RNAse effector.

Kuzmenko, A., Radford, K., Oguienko, A., Lisitskaya, L., Gelfenbein, D., Chou, T.-F., Kulbachinskiy, A., Aravin, A. A.

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