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1.
Divalent metal ions are required for splicing of group I introns, but their role in maintaining the structure of the active site is still under investigation. Ribonuclease and hydroxyl radical footprinting of a small group I intron from Azoarcus pre-tRNA(Ile) showed that tertiary interactions between helical domains are stable in a variety of cations. Only Mg(2+), however, induced a conformational change in the intron core that correlates with self-splicing activity. Three metal ion binding sites in the catalytic core were identified by Tb(III)-dependent cleavage. Two of these are near bound substrates in a three-dimensional model of the ribozyme. A third metal ion site is near an A minor motif in P3. In the pre-tRNA, Tb(3+) cleavage was redirected to the 5' and 3' splice sites, consistent with metal-dependent activation of splice site phosphodiesters. The results show that many counterions induce global folding, but organization of the group I active site is specifically linked to Mg(2+) binding at a few sites.  相似文献   

2.
The function of group II introns depends on positively charged divalent metal ions that stabilize the ribozyme structure and may be directly involved in catalysis. We investigated Mn2+- and Zn2+-induced site-specific RNA cleavage to identify metal ions that fit into binding pockets within the structurally conserved bI1 group II intron domains (DI-DVI), which might fulfill essential roles in intron function. Ten cleavage sites were identified in DI, two sites in DIII and two in DVI. All cleavage sites are located in the center or close to single-stranded and flexible RNA structures. Strand scissions mediated by Mn2+/Zn2+ are competed for by Mg2+, indicating the existence of Mg2+ binding pockets in physical proximity to the observed Mn2+-/Zn2+-induced cleavage positions. To distinguish between metal ions with a role in structure stabilization and those that play a more specific and critical role in the catalytic process of intron splicing, we combined structural and functional assays, comparing wild-type precursor and multiple splicing-deficient mutants. We identified six regions with binding pockets for Mg2+ ions presumably playing an important role in bI1 structure stabilization. Remarkably, assays with DI deletions and branch point mutants revealed the existence of one Mg2+ binding pocket near the branching A, which is involved in first-step catalysis. This pocket formation depends on precise interaction between the branching nucleotide and the 5' splice site, but does not require exon-binding site 1/intron binding site 1 interaction. This Mg2+ ion might support the correct placing of the branching A into the 'first-step active site'.  相似文献   

3.
Lead cleavage sites in the core structure of group I intron-RNA.   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Self-splicing of group I introns requires divalent metal ions to promote catalysis as well as for the correct folding of the RNA. Lead cleavage has been used to probe the intron RNA for divalent metal ion binding sites. In the conserved core of the intron, only two sites of Pb2+ cleavage have been detected, which are located close to the substrate binding sites in the junction J8/7 and at the bulged nucleotide in the P7 stem. Both lead cleavages can be inhibited by high concentrations of Mg2+ and Mn2+ ions, suggesting that they displace Pb2+ ions from the binding sites. The RNA is protected from lead cleavage by 2'-deoxyGTP, a competitive inhibitor of splicing. The two major lead induced cleavages are both located in the conserved core of the intron and at phosphates, which had independently been demonstrated to interact with magnesium ions and to be essential for splicing. Thus, we suggest that the conditions required for lead cleavage occur mainly at those sites, where divalent ions bind that are functionally involved in catalysis. We propose lead cleavage analysis of functional RNA to be a useful tool for mapping functional magnesium ion binding sites.  相似文献   

4.
The upstream site of cleavage of all group I self-splicing introns is identified by an absolutely conserved U.G base pair. Although a wobble C.A pair can substitute the U.G pair, all other combinations of nucleotides at this position abolish splicing, suggesting that it is an unusual RNA structure, rather than sequence, that is recognized by the catalytic intron core. RNA enzymes are metalloenzymes, and divalent metal ion binding may be an important requirement for splice site recognition and catalysis. The paramagnetic broadening of NMR resonances upon manganese binding at specific sites was used to probe the interaction between divalent metal ions and an oligonucleotide model of a group I intron ribozyme substrate. Unlike previous studies in which only imino proton resonances were monitored, we have used isotopically labelled RNA and a set of complete spectral assignments to identify the location of the divalent metal binding site with much greater detail than previously possible. Two independent metal binding sites were identified for this oligonucleotide. A first metal binding site is located in the major groove of the three consecutive G.C base pairs at the end of double helical stem. A second site is found in the major groove of the RNA double helix in the vicinity of the U.G base pair. These results suggest that metal ion coordination (or a metal bridge) and tertiary interactions identified biochemically, may be used by group I intron ribozymes for substrate recognition.  相似文献   

5.
Group II introns are catalytic RNA molecules that require divalent metal ions for folding, substrate binding, and chemical catalysis. Metal ion binding sites in the group II core have now been elucidated by monitoring the site-specific RNA hydrolysis patterns of bound ions such as Tb(3+) and Mg(2+). Major sites are localized near active site elements such as domain 5 and its surrounding tertiary interaction partners. Numerous sites are also observed at intron substructures that are involved in binding and potentially activating the splice sites. These results highlight the locations of specific metal ions that are likely to play a role in ribozyme catalysis.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Aqualysin I has at least two Ca2+-binding sites that have different affinities for Ca2+. The binding of various metal ions to aqualysin I was studied using 23Na- and 139La-NMR spectrometry. Evidence is presented that Ca2+, La3+, and Na+ bind to the low-affinity Ca2+-binding site of aqualysin I, but Mg2+ does not. Our results confirm that binding of metals at the low-affinity Ca2+-binding site is essential for thermostabilization, since the addition of Mg2+ did not result in thermostabilization. La3+ was found to bind to both the low-affinity Ca2+-binding site and an additional metal ion-binding site that can also be involved in the thermostabilization of aqualysin I.  相似文献   

8.
C A Grosshans  T R Cech 《Biochemistry》1989,28(17):6888-6894
A shortened form of the self-splicing intervening sequence RNA of Tetrahymena thermophila acts as an enzyme, catalyzing sequence-specific cleavage of RNA substrates. We have now examined the metal ion requirements of this reaction. Mg2+ and Mn2+ are the only metal ions that by themselves give RNA enzyme activity. Atomic absorption spectroscopy indicates that Zn, Cu, Co, and Fe are not present in amounts equimolar to the RNA enzyme and when added to reaction mixtures do not facilitate cleavage. Thus, these ions can be eliminated as cofactors for the reaction. While Ca2+ has no activity by itself, it alleviates a portion of the Mg2+ requirement; 1 mM Ca2+ reduces the Mg2+ optimum from 2 to 1 mM. These results, combined with studies of the reactivity of mixtures of metal ions, lead us to postulate that two classes of metal ion binding sites are required for catalysis. Class 1 sites have more activity with Mn2+ than with Mg2+, with the other divalent ions and Na+ and K+ having no activity. It is not known if ions located at class 1 sites have specific structural roles or are directly involved in active-site chemistry. Class 2 sites, which are presumably structural, have an order of preference Mg2+ greater than or equal to Ca2+ greater than Mn2+ and Ca2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Ba2+, with Zn2+, Cu2+, Co2+, Na+, and K+ giving no detectable activity over the concentration range tested.  相似文献   

9.
Kuo TC  Odom OW  Herrin DL 《The FEBS journal》2006,273(12):2631-2644
Group I intron ribozymes require cations for folding and catalysis, and the current literature indicates that a number of cations can promote folding, but only Mg2+ and Mn2+ support both processes. However, some group I introns are active only with Mg2+, e.g. three of the five group I introns in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. We have investigated one of these ribozymes, an intron from the 23S LSU rRNA gene of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Cr.LSU), by determining if the inhibition by Mn2+ involves catalysis, folding, or both. Kinetic analysis of guanosine-dependent cleavage by a Cr.LSU ribozyme, 23S.5 Delta Gb, that lacks the 3' exon and intron-terminal G shows that Mn2+ does not affect guanosine binding or catalysis, but instead promotes misfolding of the ribozyme. Surprisingly, ribozyme misfolding induced by Mn2+ is highly cooperative, with a Hill coefficient larger than that of native folding induced by Mg2+. At lower Mn2+ concentrations, metal inhibition is largely alleviated by the guanosine cosubstrate (GMP). The concentration dependence of guanosine cosubstrate-induced folding suggests that it functions by interacting with the G binding site, perhaps by displacing an inhibitory Mn2+. Because of these and other properties of Cr.LSU, the tertiary structure of the intron from 23S.5 Delta Gb was examined using Fe2+-EDTA cleavage. The ground-state structure shows evidence of an unusually open ribozyme core: the catalytic P3-P7 domain and the nucleotides that connect it to the P4-P5-P6 domain are exposed to solvent. The implications of this structure for the in vitro and in vivo properties of this intron ribozyme are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Ribosomes are multifunctional RNP complexes whose catalytic activities absolutely depend on divalent metal ions. It is assumed that structurally and functionally important metal ions are coordinated to highly ordered RNA structures that form metal ion binding pockets. One potent tool to identify the structural surroundings of high-affinity metal ion binding pockets is metal ion-induced cleavage of RNA. Exposure of ribosomes to divalent metal ions, such as Pb2+, Mg2+, Mn2+, and Ca2+, resulted in site-specific cleavage of rRNAs. Sites of strand scission catalyzed by different cations accumulate at distinct positions, indicating the existence of general metal ion binding centers in the highly folded rRNAs in close proximity to the cleavage sites. Two of the most efficient cleavage sites are located in the 5' domain of both 23S and 16S rRNA, regions that are known to self-fold even in the absence of ribosomal proteins. Some of the efficient cleavage sites were mapped to the peptidyl transferase center located in the large ribosomal subunit. Furthermore, one of these cleavages was clearly diminished upon AcPhe-tRNA binding to the P site, but was not affected by uncharged tRNA. This provides evidence for a close physical proximity of a metal ion to the amino acid moiety of charged tRNAs. Interestingly, comparison of the metal ion cleavage pattern of eubacterial 70S with that of human 80S ribosomes showed that certain cleavage sites are evolutionarily highly conserved, thus demonstrating an identical location of a nearby metal ion. This suggests that cations, bound to evolutionarily constrained binding sites, are reasonable candidates for being of structural or functional importance.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The binding of Mg(2+)/Mn(2+) to acceptor stem microhelices as minimal models for precursor-tRNA(Gly) is demonstrated by NMR spectroscopy. From the evaluation of COSY and NOESY spectra, binding sites for Mg(2+)/Mn(2+) can be inferred. In particular, one binding site exists near the ribose moiety of nucleotide -1 at the position of cleavage by RNase P. From comparison with a variant possessing a deoxynucleotide at this position, it is concluded that the 2'-OH group of this nucleotide is indispensable for coordinating the divalent metal ion. Hence, this catalytically important metal ion is "pre-bound" to the precursor-tRNA before complexation with RNase P.  相似文献   

14.
Several species within the amoeboflagellate genus Naegleria harbor an optional ORF containing group I introns in their nuclear small subunit ribosomal DNA. The different ORFs encode homing endonucleases with 65 to 95% identity at the amino-acid level. I-NjaI, I-NanI and I-NitI, from introns in Naegleria jamiesoni, N. andersoni and N. italica, respectively, were analyzed in more detail and found to be isoschizomeric endonucleases that recognize and cleave an approximal 19-bp partially symmetrical sequence, creating a pentanucleotide 3' overhang upon cleavage. The optimal conditions for cleavage activity with respect to temperature, pH, salt and divalent metal ions were investigated. The optimal cleavage temperature for all three endonucleases was found to be 37 degrees C and the activity was dependent on the concentration of NaCl with an optimum at 200 mM. Divalent metal ions, primarily Mg2+, are essential for Naegleria endonuclease activity. Whereas both Mn2+ and Ca2+ could substitute for Mg2+, but with a slower cleavage rate, Zn2+ was unable to support cleavage. Interestingly, the pH dependence of DNA cleavage was found to vary significantly between the I-NitI and I-NjaI/I-NanI endonucleases with optimal pH values at 6.5 and 9, respectively. Site-directed mutagenesis of conserved I-NjaI residues strongly supports the hypothesis that Naegleria homing endonucleases share a similar zinc-binding structure and active site with the His-Cys box homing endonuclease I-PpoI.  相似文献   

15.
Li SJ 《Biopolymers》2006,81(2):74-80
Metal binding to lysozyme has received wide interest. In particular, it is interesting that Ni2+, Mn2+, Co2+, and Yb3+ chloride salts induce an increase in the solubility of the tetragonal form in crystals of hen egg white lysozyme at high salt concentration, but that Mg2+ and Ca2+ chloride salts do not. To investigate the interactions of the di- and trivalent metal ions with the active site of lysozyme and compare the effects of the di- and trivalent metal ions on molecular conformation of lysozyme based on the structural analysis, the crystal structures of hen egg white lysozyme grown at pH 4.6, in the presence of 0.5 M MgCl2, CaCl2, NiCl2, MnCl2, CoCl2, and YbCl3, have been determined by X-ray crystallography at 1.58 A resolution. The crystals grown in these salts have an identical space group, P4(3)2(1)2. The molecules show no conformational changes, irrespective of the salts used. Ni2+ and Co2+ binding to the Odelta atom of Asp52 in the active site at 1.98 and 2.02 A, respectively, and Yb3+ binding to both the Odelta atom of Asp52 and the Odelta1 atom of Asn46 at 2.25 A have been identified. The binding sites of Mn2+, Mg2+, and Ca2+ have not been found from different Fourier electron density maps. The Ni2+ and Co2+ ions bind to the Odelta atom of Asp52 at almost the same position, while the Yb3+ ion takes a different position from the Ni2+ and Co2+ ions. On the other hand, the anion Cl-, interacting with the Oeta atom of Tyr23 at a site of about 2.90 A, has also been determined for each crystal.  相似文献   

16.
The gene encoding the Neurospora mitochondrial large rRNA contains a single group I intron of 2.3 kilobases that is not self-splicing in vitro. We showed previously that the splicing of this intron in vivo and in vitro is dependent on the Neurospora cyt-18 protein, mitochondrial tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase. In the present work, we carried out further structural analysis of the intron and constructed mutant derivatives of it in order to identify features that are either required for splicing or prevent it from self-splicing. Previous studies showed that the intron contains a large hairpin structure near the 5' splice site. By mapping RNase III cleavage sites, we identified this hairpin structure as an extended P2 stem. We construct a mini-intron of 388 nucleotides by deleting the 426-amino acid intron open reading frame, most of the 5' intron hairpin, and all of L8. This mini-intron shows the same protein-dependent splicing as the full length intron, but is still not self-splicing. Further deletions, which remove all of P2 or all or part of P4, P6, P7, or P9, inactivate splicing, suggesting that an intact group I intron core structure is required. Strengthening the P1, P10, or P9.0 pairings did not enable the mini-intron to self-splice. Our findings indicate that the inability of the mitochondrial large rRNA intron to self-splice reflects deficiency of a structure or activity required for cleavage at the 5' splice site, either in the intron core itself or in the interaction between the core and the P1 stem.  相似文献   

17.
Horton NC  Perona JJ 《Biochemistry》2004,43(22):6841-6857
Four crystal structures of EcoRV endonuclease mutants K92A and K38A provide new insight into the mechanism of DNA bending and the structural basis for metal-dependent phosphodiester bond cleavage. The removal of a key active site positive charge in the uncleaved K92A-DNA-M(2+) substrate complex results in binding of a sodium ion in the position of the amine nitrogen, suggesting a key role for a positive charge at this position in stabilizing the sharp DNA bend prior to cleavage. By contrast, two structures of K38A cocrystallized with DNA and Mn(2+) ions in different lattice environments reveal cleaved product complexes featuring a common, novel conformation of the scissile phosphate group as compared to all previous EcoRV structures. In these structures, the released 5'-phosphate and 3'-OH groups remain in close juxtaposition with each other and with two Mn(2+) ions that bridge the conserved active site carboxylates. The scissile phosphates are found midway between their positions in the prereactive substrate and postreactive product complexes of the wild-type enzyme. Mn(2+) ions occupy two of the three sites previously described in the prereactive complexes and are plausibly positioned to generate the nucleophilic hydroxide ion, to compensate for the incipient additional negative charge in the transition state, and to ionize a second water for protonation of the 3'-oxyanion. Reconciliation of these findings with earlier X-ray and fluorescence studies suggests a novel mechanism in which a single initially bound metal ion in a third distinct site undergoes a shift in position together with movement of the scissile phosphate deeper into the active site cleft. This reconfigures the local environment to permit binding of the second metal ion followed by movement toward the pentacovalent transition state. The new mechanism suggested here embodies key features of previously proposed two- and three-metal catalytic models, and offers a view of the stereochemical pathway that integrates much of the copious structural and functional data that are available from exhaustive studies in many laboratories.  相似文献   

18.
We report the first X-ray diffraction on gramicidin in its membrane-active form by using uniformly aligned multilayer samples of membranes containing gramicidin and ions (T1+, K+, Ba2+, Mg2+ or without ions). From the difference electron density profiles, we found a pair of symmetrically located ion-binding sites for T1- at 9.6 (+/- 0.3) A and for Ba2+ at 13.0 (+/- 0.2) A from the midpoint of the gramicidin channel. The location of Ba(2+)-binding sites is near the ends of the channel, consistent with the experimental observation that divalent cations do not permeate but block the channel. The location of T1(+)-binding sites is somewhat of a surprise. It was generally thought that monovalent cations bind to the first turn of the helix from the mouth of the channel. (It is now generally accepted that the gramicidin channel is a cylindrical pore formed by two monomers, each a single-stranded beta 6.3 helix and hydrogen-bonded head-to-head at their N termini.) But our experiment shows that the T1(+)-binding site is either near the bottom of or below the first helix turn.  相似文献   

19.
Dai P  Wang Y  Ye R  Chen L  Huang L 《Journal of bacteriology》2003,185(18):5500-5507
We report the production, purification, and characterization of a type IA DNA topoisomerase, previously designated topoisomerase I, from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus. The protein was capable of relaxing negatively supercoiled DNA at 75 degrees C in the presence of Mg2+. Mutation of the putative active site Tyr318 to Phe318 led to the inactivation of the protein. The S. solfataricus enzyme cleaved oligonucleotides in a sequence-specific fashion. The cleavage occurred only in the presence of a divalent cation, preferably Mg2+. The cofactor requirement of the enzyme was partially satisfied by Cu2+, Co2+, Mn2+, Ca2+, or Ni2+. It appears that the enzyme is active with a broader spectrum of metal cofactors in DNA cleavage than in DNA relaxation (Mg2+ and Ca2+). The enzyme-catalyzed oligonucleotide cleavage required at least 7 bases upstream and 2 bases downstream of the cleavage site. Analysis of cleavage by the S. solfataricus enzyme on a set of oligonucleotides revealed a consensus cleavage sequence of the enzyme: 5'-G(A/T)CA(T)AG(T)G(A)X / XX-3'. This sequence bears more resemblance to the preferred cleavage sites of topoisomerases III than to those of topoisomerases I. Based on these data and sequence analysis, we designate the enzyme S. solfataricus topoisomerase III.  相似文献   

20.
Prior studies of the metal ion dependence of the self-cleavage reaction of the HDV genomic ribozyme led to a mechanistic framework in which the ribozyme can self-cleave by multiple Mg2+ ion-independent and -dependent channels [Nakano et al. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 12022]. In particular, channel 2 involves cleavage in the presence of a structural Mg2+ ion without participation of a catalytic divalent metal ion, while channel 3 involves both structural and catalytic Mg2+ ions. In the present study, experiments were performed to probe the nature of the various divalent ion sites and any specificity for Mg2+. A series of alkaline earth metal ions was tested for the ability to catalyze self-cleavage of the ribozyme under conditions that favor either channel 2 or channel 3. Under conditions that populate primarily channel 3, nearly identical K(d)s were obtained for Mg2+, Ca2+, Ba2+, and Sr2+, with a slight discrimination against Ca2+. In contrast, under conditions that populate primarily channel 2, tighter binding was observed as ion size decreases. Moreover, [Co(NH3)6]3+ was found to be a strong competitive inhibitor of Mg2+ for channel 3 but not for channel 2. The thermal unfolding of the cleaved ribozyme was also examined, and two transitions were found. Urea-dependent studies gave m-values that allowed the lower temperature transition to be assigned to tertiary structure unfolding. The effects of high concentrations of Na+ on the melting temperature for RNA unfolding and the reaction rate revealed ion binding to the folded RNA, with significant competition of Na+ (Hill coefficient of 1.5-1.7) for a structural Mg2+ ion and an unusually high intrinsic affinity of the structural ion for the RNA. Taken together, these data support the existence of two different classes of metal ion sites on the ribozyme: a structural site that is inner sphere with a major electrostatic component and a preference for Mg2+, and a weak catalytic site that is outer sphere with little preference for a particular divalent ion.  相似文献   

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