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1.
In this study we examine for the first time the roles of the various domains of human RNase H1 by site-directed mutagenesis. The carboxyl terminus of human RNase H1 is highly conserved with Escherichia coli RNase H1 and contains the amino acid residues of the putative catalytic site and basic substrate-binding domain of the E. coli RNase enzyme. The amino terminus of human RNase H1 contains a structure consistent with a double-strand RNA (dsRNA) binding motif that is separated from the conserved E. coli RNase H1 region by a 62-amino acid sequence. These studies showed that although the conserved amino acid residues of the putative catalytic site and basic substrate-binding domain are required for RNase H activity, deletion of either the catalytic site or the basic substrate-binding domain did not ablate binding to the heteroduplex substrate. Deletion of the region between the dsRNA-binding domain and the conserved E. coli RNase H1 domain resulted in a significant loss in the RNase H activity. Furthermore, the binding affinity of this deletion mutant for the heteroduplex substrate was approximately 2-fold tighter than the wild-type enzyme suggesting that this central 62-amino acid region does not contribute to the binding affinity of the enzyme for the substrate. The dsRNA-binding domain was not required for RNase H activity, as the dsRNA-deletion mutants exhibited catalytic rates approximately 2-fold faster than the rate observed for wild-type enzyme. Comparison of the dissociation constant of human RNase H1 and the dsRNA-deletion mutant for the heteroduplex substrate indicates that the deletion of this region resulted in a 5-fold loss in binding affinity. Finally, comparison of the cleavage patterns exhibited by the mutant proteins with the cleavage pattern for the wild-type enzyme indicates that the dsRNA-binding domain is responsible for the observed strong positional preference for cleavage exhibited by human RNase H1.  相似文献   

2.
J H Shim  S J Benkovic 《Biochemistry》1999,38(31):10024-10031
Site-directed mutagenesis followed by studies of the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters of the mutants has been used to probe the role of the active site residues and loops in catalysis by glycinamide ribonucleotide transformylase (EC 2.1.2.2). The analysis of the mutants of the strictly conserved active site residues, His108 and Asp144, revealed that His108 acts in a salt bridge with Asp144 as a general acid catalyst with a pK(a) value of 9.7. Asp144 also plays a key role in the preparation of the active site geometry for catalysis. The rate-limiting step in the pH range of 6-10 appears to be the catalytic steps involving tetrahedral intermediates, supported by the observation of a pL (L being H or D)-independent solvent deuterium isotope effect of 2. The ionization of the amino group of glycinamide ribonucleotide both as a free and as a bound form dominates the kinetic behavior at low pH. The analysis of a mutation, H121Q, within the loop spanning amino acids 111-131 suggests the closure of the loop is involved in the binding of the substrate. The kinetic behavior parallels pH effects revealed by a series of X-ray crystallographic structures of the apoenzyme and inhibitor-bound enzyme [Su, Y., Yamashita, M. M., Greasley, S. E. , Mullen, C. A., Shim, J. H., Jennings, P. A., Benkovic, S. J., and Wilson, I. A. (1998) J. Mol. Biol. 281, 485-499], permitting a more exact formulation of the probable catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

3.
Ribonuclease H: from discovery to 3D structure   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
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6.
Papadopoulos T  Kelly JA  Bauer K 《Biochemistry》2001,40(31):9347-9355
Thyrotropin-releasing hormone-degrading ectoenzyme (TRH-DE) is a TRH-specific peptidase which catalyzes the inactivation of the peptidergic signal substance TRH. As indicated by sequence alignment, TRH-DE and the other members of the M1 family of aminopeptidases have a distinct set of conserved amino acid residues in common. By replacing amino acid residues that are putatively involved in catalysis, we could demonstrate that the enzymatic activities of the mutants E408D, E442D, E464Q, E464D, Y528F, H507R, and H507F are dramatically decreased, essentially due to the changes of V(max). The mutant enzymes E408Q and E442Q are inactive, whereas the specific enzymatic activity of the mutants R488Q, R488A, and Y554F are similar to that of the wild-type enzyme. These data strongly suggest that E408, E442, Y528, and H507 are involved in the catalytic process of TRH-DE while E464 presumably represents the third zinc-coordinating residue and may be equivalent to E166 in thermolysin. In contrast, amino acid residues R488 and Y554 seem not to be involved in the catalytic mechanism of TRH-DE.  相似文献   

7.
Shin E  Go H  Yeom JH  Won M  Bae J  Han SH  Han K  Lee Y  Ha NC  Moore CJ  Sohlberg B  Cohen SN  Lee K 《Genetics》2008,179(4):1871-1879
RNase E is an essential Escherichia coli endoribonuclease that plays a major role in the decay and processing of a large fraction of RNAs in the cell. To better understand the molecular mechanisms of RNase E action, we performed a genetic screen for amino acid substitutions in the catalytic domain of the protein (N-Rne) that knock down the ability of RNase E to support survival of E. coli. Comparative phylogenetic analysis of RNase E homologs shows that wild-type residues at these mutated positions are nearly invariably conserved. Cells conditionally expressing these N-Rne mutants in the absence of wild-type RNase E show a decrease in copy number of plasmids regulated by the RNase E substrate RNA I, and accumulation of 5S ribosomal RNA, M1 RNA, and tRNA(Asn) precursors, as has been found in Rne-depleted cells, suggesting that the inability of these mutants to support cellular growth results from loss of ribonucleolytic activity. Purified mutant proteins containing an amino acid substitution in the DNase I subdomain, which is spatially distant from the catalytic site posited from crystallographic studies, showed defective binding to an RNase E substrate, p23 RNA, but still retained RNA cleavage activity-implicating a previously unidentified structural motif in the DNase I subdomain in the binding of RNase E to targeted RNA molecules, demonstrating the role of the DNase I domain in RNase E activity.  相似文献   

8.
Ribonuclease E (RNase E) is a multifunctional endoribonuclease that has been evolutionarily conserved in both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. X-ray crystallography and biochemical studies have concluded that the Escherichia coli RNase E protein functions as a homotetramer formed by Zn linkage of dimers within a region extending from amino acid residues 416 through 529 of the 116-kDa protein. Using fragments of RNase E proteins from E. coli and Haemophilus influenzae, we show here that RNase E derivatives that are as short as 395 amino acid residues and that lack the Zn-link region shown previously to be essential for tetramer formation (i.e. amino acid residues 400-415) are catalytically active enzymes that retain the 5' to 3' scanning ability and cleavage site specificity characteristic of full-length RNase E and that also confer colony forming ability on rne null mutant bacteria. Further truncation leads to loss of these properties. Our results, which identify a minimal catalytically active RNase E sequence, indicate that contrary to current models, a tetrameric quaternary structure is not required for RNase E to carry out its core enzymatic functions.  相似文献   

9.
The native Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase, E.C. 2.1.3.2) provides a classic allosteric model for the feedback inhibition of a biosynthetic pathway by its end products. Both E. coli and Erwinia herbicola possess ATCase holoenzymes which are dodecameric (2(c3):3(r2)) with 311 amino acid residues per catalytic monomer and 153 and 154 amino acid residues per regulatory (r) monomer, respectively. While the quaternary structures of the two enzymes are identical, the primary amino acid sequences have diverged by 14 % in the catalytic polypeptide and 20 % in the regulatory polypeptide. The amino acids proposed to be directly involved in the active site and nucleotide binding site are strictly conserved between the two enzymes; nonetheless, the two enzymes differ in their catalytic and regulatory characteristics. The E. coli enzyme has sigmoidal substrate binding with activation by ATP, and inhibition by CTP, while the E. herbicola enzyme has apparent first order kinetics at low substrate concentrations in the absence of allosteric ligands, no ATP activation and only slight CTP inhibition. In an apparently important and highly conserved characteristic, CTP and UTP impose strong synergistic inhibition on both enzymes. The co-operative binding of aspartate in the E. coli enzyme is correlated with a T-to-R conformational transition which appears to be greatly reduced in the E. herbicola enzyme, although the addition of inhibitory heterotropic ligands (CTP or CTP+UTP) re-establishes co-operative saturation kinetics. Hybrid holoenzymes assembled in vivo with catalytic subunits from E. herbicola and regulatory subunits from E. coli mimick the allosteric response of the native E. coli holoenzyme and exhibit ATP activation. The reverse hybrid, regulatory subunits from E. herbicola and catalytic subunits from E. coli, exhibited no response to ATP. The conserved structure and diverged functional characteristics of the E. herbicola enzyme provides an opportunity for a new evaluation of the common paradigm involving allosteric control of ATCase.  相似文献   

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