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1.
Disney MD  Testa SM  Turner DH 《Biochemistry》2000,39(23):6991-7000
Pneumocystis carinii is a mammalian pathogen that contains a self-splicing group I intron in its large subunit rRNA precursor. We report the binding of methylphosphonate/DNA chimeras and neutral methylphosphonate oligonucleotides to a ribozyme that is a truncated form of the intron. At 15 mM Mg(2+), the nuclease-resistant all-methylphosphonate hexamer, d(AmTmGmAmCm)rU, with a sequence that mimics the 3' end of the precursor's 5' exon, binds with a dissociation constant of 272 nM. The hexamer's dissociation constant for binding by base-pairing alone to the ribozyme's binding site sequence is 8.3 mM. Thus there is a 30 000-fold binding enhancement by tertiary interactions (BETI), which is close to the 60 000-fold enhancement previously observed with the all-ribo hexamer, r(AUGACU). Evidently, backbone charge and 2' hydroxyl groups are not required for BETI. At 3-15 mM Mg(2+), the all-methylphosphonate and DNA oligonucleotides trans-splice to a truncated form of the rRNA precursor, but do not compete with cis-splicing when pG is present. These results suggest that uncharged or partially charged backbones may be used to design therapeutics to target RNAs through binding enhancement by tertiary interactions and suicide inhibition strategies.  相似文献   

2.
Candida albicans is one of many infectious pathogens that are evolving resistance to current treatments. RNAs provide a large class of targets for new therapeutics for fighting these organisms. One strategy for targeting RNAs uses short oligonucleotides that exhibit binding enhancement by tertiary interactions in addition to Watson-Crick pairing. A potential RNA target in C. albicans is the self-splicing group I intron in the LSU rRNA precursor. The recognition elements that align the 5' exon splice site for a ribozyme derived from this precursor are complex [Disney, M. D., Haidaris, C. G., and Turner, D. H. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 6507-6519]. These recognition elements have been used to guide design of hexanucleotide mimics of the 5' exon that have backbones modified for nuclease stability. These hexanucleotides bind as much as 100000-fold more tightly to a ribozyme derived from the intron than to a hexanucleotide mimic of the intron's internal guide sequence, r(GGAGGC). Several of these oligonucleotides inhibit precursor self-splicing via a suicide inhibition mechanism. The most promising suicide inhibitor is the ribophosphoramidate rn(GCCUC)rU, which forms more trans-spliced than cis-spliced product at oligonucleotide concentrations of >100 nM at 1 mM Mg(2+). The results indicate that short oligonucleotides modified for nuclease stability can target catalytic RNAs when the elements of tertiary interactions are complex.  相似文献   

3.
Testa SM  Disney MD  Turner DH  Kierzek R 《Biochemistry》1999,38(50):16655-16662
Antisense compounds are designed to optimize selective hybridization of an exogenous oligonucleotide to a cellular target. Typically, Watson-Crick base pairing between the antisense compound and target provides the key recognition element. Uridine (U), however, not only stably base pairs with adenosine (A) but also with guanosine (G), thus reducing specificity. Studies of duplex formation by oligonucleotides with either an internal or a terminal 2- or 4-thiouridine (s(2)U or s(4)U) show that s(2)U can increase the stability of base pairing with A more than with G, while s(4)U can increase the stability of base pairing with G more than with A. The latter may be useful when binding can be enhanced by tertiary interactions with a s(4)U-G pair. To test the effects of s(2)U and s(4)U substitutions on tertiary interactions, binding to a group I intron ribozyme from mouse-derived Pneumocystis carinii was measured for the hexamers, r(AUGACU), r(AUGACs(2)U), and r(AUGACs(4)U), which mimic the 3' end of the 5' exon. The results suggest that at least one of the carbonyl groups of the 3' terminal U of r(AUGACU) is involved in tertiary interactions with the catalytic core of the ribozyme and/or thio groups change the orientation of a terminal U-G base pair. Thus thio substitutions may affect tertiary interactions. Studies of trans-splicing of 5' exon mimics to a truncated rRNA precursor, however, indicate that thio substitutions have negligible effects on overall reactivity. Therefore, modified bases can enhance the specificity of base pairing while retaining other activities and, thus, increase the specificity of antisense compounds targeting cellular RNA.  相似文献   

4.
Disney MD  Haidaris CG  Turner DH 《Biochemistry》2001,40(21):6507-6519
A group I intron precursor and ribozyme were cloned from the large subunit rRNA of the human pathogen Candida albicans. Both the precursor and ribozyme are functional as determined from in vitro assays. Comparisons of dissociation constants for oligonucleotide binding to the ribozyme and to a hexanucleotide mimic of its internal guide sequence lead to a model for recognition of the 5' exon substrate by this intron. In particular, tertiary contacts with the P1 helix that help align the splice site include three 2'-hydroxyl groups, a G.U pair that occurs at the intron's splice junction, and a G.A pair. The free energy contribution that each interaction contributes to tertiary binding is determined. When the G.A pair is replaced with a G-C pair, tertiary interactions to 5' exon mimic 2'-hydroxyl groups are significantly weakened. When the G.A pair is replaced with a G.U pair, tertiary interactions are retained and binding is 10-fold tighter. These results expand our knowledge of substrate recognition by group I introns, and also provide a basis for rational design of oligonucleotide-based therapeutics for targeting group I introns by binding enhancement by tertiary interactions and suicide inhibition strategies.  相似文献   

5.
Determination of quantitative thermodynamic and kinetic frameworks for ribozymes derived from the Azoarcus group I intron and comparisons to their well-studied analogs from the Tetrahymena group I intron reveal similarities and differences between these RNAs. The guanosine (G) substrate binds to the Azoarcus and Tetrahymena ribozymes with similar equilibrium binding constants and similar very slow association rate constants. These and additional literature observations support a model in which the free ribozyme is not conformationally competent to bind G and in which the probability of assuming the binding-competent state is determined by tertiary interactions of peripheral elements. As proposed previously, the slow binding of guanosine may play a role in the specificity of group I intron self-splicing, and slow binding may be used analogously in other biological processes. The internal equilibrium between ribozyme-bound substrates and products is similar for these ribozymes, but the Azoarcus ribozyme does not display the coupling in the binding of substrates that is observed with the Tetrahymena ribozyme, suggesting that local preorganization of the active site and rearrangements within the active site upon substrate binding are different for these ribozymes. Our results also confirm the much greater tertiary binding energy of the 5′-splice site analog with the Azoarcus ribozyme, binding energy that presumably compensates for the fewer base-pairing interactions to allow the 5′-exon intermediate in self splicing to remain bound subsequent to 5′-exon cleavage and prior to exon ligation. Most generally, these frameworks provide a foundation for design and interpretation of experiments investigating fundamental properties of these and other structured RNAs.  相似文献   

6.
Dotson PP  Sinha J  Testa SM 《The FEBS journal》2008,275(12):3110-3122
Group I introns catalyze the self-splicing reaction, and their derived ribozymes are frequently used as model systems for the study of RNA folding and catalysis, as well as for the development of non-native catalytic reactions. Utilizing a group I intron-derived ribozyme from Pneumocystis carinii, we previously reported a non-native reaction termed trans excision-splicing (TES). In this reaction, an internal segment of RNA is excised from an RNA substrate, resulting in the covalent reattachment of the flanking regions. TES proceeds through two consecutive phosphotransesterification reactions, which are similar to the reaction steps of self-splicing. One key difference is that TES utilizes the 3'-terminal guanosine of the ribozyme as the first-step nucleophile, whereas self-splicing utilizes an exogenous guanosine. To further aid in our understanding of ribozyme reactions, a kinetic framework for the first reaction step (substrate cleavage) was established. The results demonstrate that the substrate binds to the ribozyme at a rate expected for simple helix formation. In addition, the rate constant for the first step of the TES reaction is more than one order of magnitude lower than the analogous step in self-splicing. Results also suggest that a conformational change, likely similar to that in self-splicing, exists between the two reaction steps of TES. Finally, multiple turnover is curtailed because dissociation of the cleavage product is slower than the rate of chemistry.  相似文献   

7.
P7 is highly conserved in Group I self-splicing intron ribozymes. This region is known to coordinate metal ions and bind a cofactor guanosine required for the self-splicing. To further investigate the fundamental role of the corresponding region in the Tetrahymena ribozyme, we attempted to identify minimal requirements for the base-paired region excluding the guanosine binding site. We discovered that a variety of sequences are eligible and its derivatives possessing extra nucleotide(s) can still conduct the first step of splicing, indicating that no particular base-pairing is essential in this region for conducting the reaction in vitro. The results provide two hypotheses for the fundamental role of this region: (i) if the region contains element(s) that are strictly required in the catalysis, they are not necessarily tightly fixed in the ribozyme and (ii) if not, its fundamental role may simply be to coordinate neighboring regions that are directly involved in the catalysis.  相似文献   

8.
The anti-cancer drug cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) (cis-DDP) reacted with Tetrahymena self-splicing rRNA ribozyme, causing loss of self-splicing activity and formation of a number of platinated RNA species. The formation of one distinct platinated product, migrating at an apparent size of 2400 nt, was closely associated with ribozyme inactivation. This platinated RNA was resistant to T1 ribonuclease digestion, suggesting the presence of inter-strand Pt cross-links. The reaction rate of cis-DDP with the ribozyme followed first order kinetics and showed a saturation effect with increasing cis-DDP concentration, characteristic of an affinity-label type of interaction rather than bimolecular collision. The apparent KI for binding of cis-DDP to the ribozyme was 62 microM. Ribozyme treated with urea was not inactivated by cis-DDP, indicating that the native structure of the RNA is required for reaction with cis-DDP. Mg++, which binds to the ribozyme and causes conformational changes in the molecule, protected the ribozyme from inactivation by cis-DDP and also prevented the formation of platinated RNA. These results suggest that binding of cis-DDP to sites formed by certain secondary or tertiary structural elements of the RNA enhance the rate and the specificity of reaction of the reagent with the ribozyme.  相似文献   

9.
A hairpin loop and an oligonucleotide bound to the loop form one-half of the pseudoknot structure. We have designed an allosteric hammerhead ribozyme, which is activated by the introduction of this motif by using a short complementary oligonucleotide as a cofactor. Stem II of the hammerhead ribozyme was substituted with a non-self-complementary loop sequence (loop II) to abolish the cleavage activity. The new ribozyme had almost no cleavage activity of the target RNA. However, it exhibited the cleavage activity in the presence of a cofactor oligoribonucleotide, which is complementary to loop II of the ribozyme. The activity is assumed to be derived from the formation of a pseudo-stem structure between the cofactor oligonucleotide and loop II. The structure including the loop may be similar to the pseudo-half-knot structure. The activation efficiencies of the cofactor oligonucleotides were decreased as the lengths of the oligonucleotides increased, and the ribozyme with a longer loop II was more active than that with a short loop II. Oligoribonucleotides with 3'-dangling purine bases served as efficient cofactors of the ribozyme, and a 2'-O-methyloligonucleotide enhanced the cleavage activity of the ribozyme most efficiently, by as much as about 750-fold as compared with that in the absence of the oligonucleotide. Cofactor oligonucleotides with a cytidine base at the 3'-end also activated a ribozyme with the G10.1.G11.1 mutation, which eliminates the cleavage activity in the wild-type. The binding sites of the oligonucleotide were identified by photo-crosslinking experiments and were found to be the predicted sites in the loop. This is the first report of a design aimed at positively controlling the activity of ribozymes by employing a structural motif. This method can be applied to control the activities of other functional RNAs with hairpin loops.  相似文献   

10.
Xiao M  Li T  Yuan X  Shang Y  Wang F  Chen S  Zhang Y 《Nucleic acids research》2005,33(14):4602-4611
The presence of non-conserved peripheral elements in all naturally occurring group I introns underline their importance in ensuring the natural intron function. Recently, we reported that some peripheral elements are conserved in group I introns of IE subgroup. Using self-splicing activity as a readout, our initial screening revealed that one such conserved peripheral elements, P2.1, is mainly required to fold the catalytically active structure of the Candida ribozyme, an IE intron. Unexpectedly, the essential function of P2.1 resides in a sequence-conserved short stem of P2.1 but not in a long-range interaction associated with the loop of P2.1 that stabilizes the ribozyme structure. The P2.1 stem is indispensable in folding the compact ribozyme core, most probably by forming a triple helical interaction with two core helices, P3 and P6. Surprisingly, although the ribozyme lacking the P2.1 stem renders a loosely folded core and the loss of self-splicing activity requires two consecutive transesterifications, the mutant ribozyme efficiently catalyzes the first transesterification reaction. These results suggest that the intron self-splicing demands much more ordered structure than does one independent transesterification, highlighting that the universally present peripheral elements achieve their functional importance by enabling the highly ordered structure through diverse tertiary interactions.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
D Herschlag  T R Cech 《Biochemistry》1990,29(44):10159-10171
A ribozyme derived from the intervening sequence (IVS) of the Tetrahymena preribosomal RNA catalyzes a site-specific endonuclease reaction: G2CCCUCUA5 + G in equilibrium with G2CCCUCU + GA5 (G = guanosine). This reaction is analogous to the first step in self-splicing of the pre-rRNA, with the product G2CCCUCU analogous to the 5'-exon. The following mechanistic conclusions have been derived from pre-steady-state and steady-state kinetic measurements at 50 degrees C and neutral pH in the presence of 10 mM Mg2+. The value of kcat/Km = 9 x 10(7) M-1 min-1 for the oligonucleotide substrate with saturating G represents rate-limiting binding. This rate constant for binding is of the order expected for formation of a RNA.RNA duplex between oligonucleotides. (Phylogenetic and mutational analyses have shown that this substrate is recognized by base pairing to a complementary sequence within the IVS). The value of kcat = 0.1 min-1 represents rate-limiting dissociation of the 5'-exon analogue, G2CCCUCU. The product GA5 dissociates first from the ribozyme because of this slow off-rate for G2CCCUCU. The similar binding of the product, G2CCCUCU, and the substrate, G2CCCUCUA5, to the 5'-exon binding site of the ribozyme, with Kd = 1-2 nM, shows that the pA5 portion of the substrate makes no net contribution to binding. Both the substrate and product bind approximately 10(4)-fold (6 kcal/mol) stronger than expected from base pairing with the 5'-exon binding site. Thus, tertiary interactions are involved in binding. Binding of G2CCCUCU and binding of G are independent. These and other data suggest that binding of the oligonucleotide substrate, G2CCCUCUA5, and binding of G are essentially random and independent. The rate constant for reaction of the ternary complex is calculated to be kc approximately equal to 350 min-1, a rate constant that is not reflected in the steady-state rate parameters with saturating G. The simplest interpretation is adopted, in which kc represents the rate of the chemical step. A site-specific endonuclease reaction catalyzed by the Tetrahymena ribozyme in the absence of G was observed; the rate of the chemical step with solvent replacing guanosine, kc(-G) = 0.7 min-1, is approximately 500-fold slower than that with saturating guanosine. The value of kcat/Km = 6 x 10(7) M-1 min-1 for this hydrolysis reaction is only slightly smaller than that with saturating guanosine, because the binding of the oligonucleotide substrate is predominantly rate-limiting in both cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Karbstein K  Lee J  Herschlag D 《Biochemistry》2007,46(16):4861-4875
Several ribozyme constructs have been used to dissect aspects of the group I self-splicing reaction. The Tetrahymena L-21 ScaI ribozyme, the best studied of these intron analogues, catalyzes a reaction analogous to the first step of self-splicing, in which a 5'-splice site analogue (S) and guanosine (G) are converted into a 5'-exon analogue (P) and GA. This ribozyme preserves the active site but lacks a short 5'-terminal segment (called the IGS extension herein) that forms dynamic helices, called the P1 extension and P10 helix. The P1 extension forms at the 5'-splice site in the first step of self-splicing, and P10 forms at the 3'-splice site in the second step of self-splicing. To dissect the contributions from the IGS extension and the helices it forms, we have investigated the effects of each of these elements at each reaction step. These experiments were performed with the L-16 ScaI ribozyme, which retains the IGS extension, and with 5'- and 3'-splice site analogues that differ in their ability to form the helices. The presence of the IGS extension strengthens binding of P by 40-fold, even when no new base pairs are formed. This large effect was especially surprising, as binding of S is essentially unaffected for S analogues that do not form additional base pairs with the IGS extension. Analysis of a U.U pair immediately 3' to the cleavage site suggests that a previously identified deleterious effect from a dangling U residue on the L-21 ScaI ribozyme arises from a fortuitous active site interaction and has implications for RNA tertiary structure specificity. Comparisons of the affinities of 5'-splice site analogues that form only a subset of base pairs reveal that inclusion of the conserved G.U base pair at the cleavage site of group I introns destabilizes the P1 extension >100-fold relative to the stability of a helix with all Watson-Crick base pairs. Previous structural data with model duplexes and the recent intron structures suggest that this effect can be attributed to partial unstacking of the P1 extension at the G.U step. These results suggest a previously unrecognized role of the G.U wobble pair in self-splicing: breaking cooperativity in base pair formation between P1 and the P1 extensions. This effect may facilitate replacement of the P1 extension with P10 after the first chemical step of self-splicing and release of the ligated exons after the second step of self-splicing.  相似文献   

14.
Johnson AK  Sinha J  Testa SM 《Biochemistry》2005,44(31):10702-10710
A group I intron-derived ribozyme from Pneumocystis carinii has been previously shown to bind an exogenous RNA substrate, splice out an internal segment, and then ligate the two ends back together (the trans excision-splicing reaction). We demonstrate that this same ribozyme can perform a trans insertion-splicing (TIS) reaction, where the ribozyme binds two exogenous RNA substrates and inserts one directly into the other. Reactions were optimized for both yield and rate, with optimum reactions carried out in 10 mM MgCl(2) for 2 h. Reaction products are stable, with no visible loss at extended times. The ribozyme recognizes the two substrates primarily through base pairing and requires an omegaG on the ribozyme and an omegaG on the sequence being inserted. We give evidence that the reaction mechanism is not the reverse of the trans excision-splicing reaction, but is composed of three steps, with intermediates attached to the ribozyme. Surprisingly, the internal guide sequence of the ribozyme is utilized to sequentially bind both substrates, forming independent P1 helices. This is an indication that ribozymes with essentially the native intron sequence can catalyze reactions significantly more dynamic and complex than self-splicing. The implications of group I intron-derived ribozymes being able to catalyze this unique reaction, and via this mechanism, are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Karbstein K  Carroll KS  Herschlag D 《Biochemistry》2002,41(37):11171-11183
The Tetrahymena L-21 ScaI ribozyme derived from the self-splicing group I intron catalyzes a reversible reaction analogous to the first step of self-splicing: CCCUCUA (S) + [UC]G right harpoon over left harpoon CCCUCU (P) + [UC]GA. To relate our understanding of the ribozyme to the self-splicing reaction and to further the mechanistic dissection of the ribozyme reaction, we have established a quantitative kinetic and thermodynamic framework for the forward and reverse reaction of the L-21 ScaI ribozyme under identical conditions. Examination of the framework shows that binding of products is cooperative with binding enhanced 5-fold, as was observed previously for binding of the substrates. Further, binding of UCGA is 12-fold weaker than binding of the unphosphorylated UCG, analogous to the 20-fold weaker binding of phosphorylated S relative to P; the molecular interactions underlying the stronger binding of UCG were traced to the 3'-hydroxyl group of UCG. The symmetrical effects on binding of substrates and products result in the equilibrium between ribozyme-bound species, K(int), that is essentially unperturbed from the solution equilibrium, K(ext) (K(int) = [E.P.UCGA]/[E.S.UCG] = 4.6 and K(ext) = [P][UCGA]/[S][UCG] = 1.9). Last, we show that the pK(a) values of the nucleophiles in the forward and reverse reactions are >/=10. This observation suggests that metal ion activation of the nucleophile and stabilization of the leaving group can only account for a portion of the rate enhancement of this ribozyme. These and prior results suggest that the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme, analogous to protein enzymes, uses multiple catalytic strategies to achieve its large rate enhancement.  相似文献   

17.
The L-21 ScaI ribozyme derived from the intervening sequence of Tetrahymena thermophila pre-rRNA catalyzes a guanosine-dependent endonuclease reaction that is analogous to the first step in self-splicing of this intervening sequence. We now describe pre-steady-state kinetic experiments, with sulfur substituting for the pro-RP (nonbridging) phosphoryl oxygen atom at the site of cleavage, that test aspects of a kinetic model proposed for the ribozyme reaction (Herschlag, D., & Cech, T. R. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 10159-10171). Thio substitution does not affect the reaction with subsaturating oligonucleotide substrate and saturating guanosine ((kcat/Km)S), consistent with the previous finding that binding of the oligonucleotide substrate limits this rate constant. In contrast, there is a significant decrease in the rate of single-turnover reactions of ribozyme-bound (i.e., saturating) oligonucleotide substrate upon thio substitution, with decreases of 2.3-fold for the reaction with guanosine ((kcat/Km)G) and 7-fold for hydrolysis [i.e., with solvent replacing guanosine; kc(-G)]. These "thio effects" are consistent with rate-limiting chemistry, as shown by comparison with model reactions. Nonenzymatic nucleophilic substitution reactions of the phosphate diester, methyl 2,4-dinitrophenyl phosphate monoanion, are slowed 4-11-fold by thio substitution for reactions with hydroxide ion, formate ion, fluoride ion, pyridine, and nicotinamide. In addition, we have confirmed that thio substitution has no effect on the nonenzymatic alkaline cleavage of RNA (Burgers, P. M. J., & Eckstein, F. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 592-596). Considering the strong preference of Mg2+ for binding to oxygen rather than sulfur, the modest thio effect on the chemical step of the ribozyme-catalyzed reaction and the absence of a thio effect on the equilibrium constant for binding of the oligonucleotide substrate suggest that the pro-RP oxygen atom is not coordinated to Mg2+ in the E.S complex or in the transition state. General implications of thio effects in enzymatic reactions of phosphate diesters are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
High-throughput screening assays have been developed to rapidly identify small molecule inhibitors targeting catalytic group I introns. Biochemical reactions catalyzed by a self-splicing group I intron derived from Pneumocystis carinii or from bacteriophage T4 have been investigated. In vitro biochemical assays amenable to high-throughput screening have been established. Small molecules that inhibit the functions of group I introns have been identified. These inhibitors should be useful in better understanding ribozyme catalysis or in therapeutic intervention of group I intron-containing microorganisms.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Phylogenetic comparisons and site-directed mutagenesis indicate that group I introns are composed of a catalytic core that is universally conserved and peripheral elements that are conserved only within intron subclasses. Despite this low overall conservation, peripheral elements are essential for efficient splicing of their parent introns. We have undertaken an in-depth structure-function analysis to investigate the role of one of these elements, P5abc, using the well-characterized ribozyme derived from the Tetrahymena group I intron. Structural comparisons using solution-based free radical cleavage revealed that a ribozyme lacking P5abc (E(DeltaP5abc)) and E(DeltaP5abc) with P5abc added in trans (E(DeltaP5abc).P5abc) adopt a similar global tertiary structure at Mg(2+) concentrations greater than 20 mM [Doherty, E. A., et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 2982-90]. However, free E(DeltaP5abc) is greatly compromised in overall oligonucleotide cleavage activity, even at Mg(2+) concentrations as high as 100 mM. Further characterization of E(DeltaP5abc) via DMS modification revealed local structural differences at several positions in the conserved core that cluster around the substrate binding sites. Kinetic and thermodynamic dissection of individual reaction steps identified defects in binding of both substrates to E(DeltaP5abc), with > or =25-fold weaker binding of a guanosine nucleophile and > or =350-fold weaker docking of the oligonucleotide substrate into its tertiary interactions with the ribozyme core. These defects in binding of the substrates account for essentially all of the 10(4)-fold decrease in overall activity of the deletion mutant. Together, the structural and functional observations suggest that the P5abc peripheral element not only provides stability but also positions active site residues through indirect interactions, thereby preferentially stabilizing the active ribozyme structure relative to alternative less active states. This is consistent with the view that peripheral elements engage in a network of mutually reinforcing interactions that together ensure cooperative folding of the ribozyme to its active structure.  相似文献   

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