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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
D Herschlag 《Biochemistry》1992,31(5):1386-1399
J1/2 of the Tetrahymena ribozyme, a sequence of three A residues, connects the RNA-binding site to the catalytic core. Addition or deletion of bases from J1/2 improves turnover and substrate specificity in the site-specific endonuclease reaction catalyzed by this ribozyme: G2CCCUCUA5 (S) + G in-equilibrium G2CCCUCU (P) + GA5. These paradoxical enhancements are caused by decreased affinity of the ribozyme for S and P [Young, B., Herschlag, D., & Cech, T.R. (1991) Cell 67, 1007]. An additional property of these mutant ribozymes, decreased fidelity of RNA cleavage, is now analyzed. (Fidelity is the ability to cleave at the correct phosphodiester bond within a particular RNA substrate.) Introduction of deoxy residues to give "chimeric" ribo/deoxyribooligonucleotides changes the positions of incorrect cleavage. Previous work indicated that S is bound to the ribozyme by both base pairing and teritary interactions involving 2'-hydroxyl groups of S. The data herein strongly suggest that the P1 duplex, which consists of S base-paired with the 5' exon binding site of the ribozyme, can dock into tertiary interactions in different registers; different 2'-hydroxyl groups of S plug into tertiary contacts with the ribozyme in the different registers. It is concluded that the mutations decrease fidelity by increasing the probability of docking out of register relative to docking in the normal register, thereby giving cleavage at different positions along S. These data also show that the contribution of J1/2 to the teritiary interactions is indirect, not direct. Thus, a structural role of the nonconserved J1/2 is indicated: this sequence positions S to optimize tertiary binding interactions and to ensure cleavage at the phosphodiester bond corresponding to the 5' splice site. Substitution of sulfur for the nonbridging pro-RP oxygen atom at the normal cleavage site has no effect on (kcat/Km)S but decreases the fraction of cleavage at the normal site in reactions catalyzed by the -3A mutant ribozyme, which has all three A residues of J1/2 removed. Thus, the ribozyme chooses where to cleave S after rate-limiting binding of S, indicating that docking can change after binding and suggesting that the ribozyme could act processively. Indeed, it is shown that the +2A ribozyme cleaves at one position along an RNA substrate and then, before releasing that RNA product, cleaves it again.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The 3' splice site of group I introns is defined, in part, by base pairs between the intron core and residues just upstream of the splice site, referred to as P9.0. We have studied the specificity imparted by P9.0 using the well-characterized L-21 Scal ribozyme from Tetrahymena by adding residues to the 5' end of the guanosine (G) that functions as a nucleophile in the oligonucleotide cleavage reaction: CCCUCUA5 (S) + NNG <--> CCCUCU + NNGA5. UCG, predicted to form two base pairs in P9.0, reacts with a (kcat/KM) value approximately 10-fold greater than G, consistent with previous results. Altering the bases that form P9.0 in both the trinucleotide G analog and the ribozyme affects the specificity in the manner predicted for base-pairing. Strikingly, oligonucleotides incapable of forming P9.0 react approximately 10-fold more slowly than G, for which the mispaired residues are simply absent. The observed specificity is consistent with a model in which the P9.0 site is sterically restricted such that an energetic penalty, not present for G, must be overcome by G analogs with 5' extensions. Shortening S to include only one residue 3' of the cleavage site (CCCUCUA) eliminates this penalty and uniformly enhances the reactions of matched and mismatched oligonucleotides relative to guanosine. These results suggest that the 3' portion of S occupies the P9.0 site, sterically interfering with binding of G analogs with 5' extensions. Similar steric effects may more generally allow structured RNAs to avoid formation of incorrect contacts, thereby helping to avoid kinetic traps during folding and enhancing cooperative formation of the correct structure.  相似文献   

5.
An exonuclease-deficient mutant of T7 DNA polymerase was constructed and utilized in a series of kinetic studies on misincorporation and next correct dNTP incorporation. By using a synthetic oligonucleotide template-primer system for which the kinetic pathway for correct incorporation has been solved [Patel, S.S., Wong, I., & Johnson, K. A. (1991) Biochemistry (first of three papers in this issue)], the kinetic parameters for the incorporation of the incorrect triphosphates dATP, dCTP, and dGTP were determined, giving, respectively, kcat/Km values of 91, 23, and 4.3 M-1 s-1 and a discrimination in the polymerization step of 10(5)-10(6). The rates of misincorporation in all cases were linearly dependent on substrate concentration up to 4 mM, beyond which severe inhibition was observed. Competition of correct incorporation versus dCTP revealed an estimated Ki of approximately 6-8 mM, suggesting a corresponding kcat of 0.14s-1. Moderate elemental effects of 19-, 17-, and 34-fold reduction in rates were measured by substituting the alpha-thiotriphosphate analogues for dATP, dCTP, and dGTP, respectively, indicating that the chemistry step is partially rate-limiting. The absence of a burst of incorporation during the first turnover places the rate-limiting step at a triphosphate binding induced conformational change before chemistry. In contrast, the incorporation of the next correct triphosphate, dCTP, on a mismatched DNA substrate was saturable with a Km of 87 microM for dCTP, 4-fold higher than the Kd for the correct incorporation on duplex DNA, and a kcat of 0.025 s-1. A larger elemental effect of 60, however, suggests a rate-limiting chemistry step. The rate of pyrophosphorolysis on a mismatched 3'-end is undetectable, indicating that pyrophosphorolysis does not play a proofreading role in replication. These results show convincingly that the T7 DNA polymerase discriminates against the incorrect triphosphate by an induced-fit conformational change and that, following misincorporation, the enzyme then selects against the resultant mismatched DNA by a slow, rate-limiting chemistry step, thereby allowing sufficient time for the release of the mismatched DNA from the polymerase active site to be followed by exonucleolytic error correction.  相似文献   

6.
We have constructed a ribozyme containing 144 nucleotides of Neurospora VS RNA that can catalyze the cleavage of a separate RNA in a true enzymatic manner (Km approximately 0.13 microM, kcat approximately 0.7/min). Comparison of the rates of cis- and trans-cleavage, as well as the lack of effect of pH on the rate of cleavage, suggest that a rate-limiting step, possibly a conformational change, occurs prior to cleavage. The minimum contiguous substrate sequence required for cleavage consists of one nucleotide upstream and 19 nucleotides downstream of the cleavage site. Unlike most other ribozymes which interact with long single-stranded regions of their substrates, the minimal substrate for the VS ribozyme consists mostly of a stable stem-loop, which would appear to preclude its recognition simply via extensive Watson-Crick base pairing.  相似文献   

7.
Single-atom substrate modifications have revealed an intricate network of transition state interactions in the Tetrahymena ribozyme reaction. So far, these studies have targeted virtually every oxygen atom near the reaction center, except one, the 5'-bridging oxygen atom of the scissile phosphate. To address whether interactions with this atom play any role in catalysis, we used a new type of DNA substrate in which the 5'-oxygen is replaced with a methylene (-CH2-) unit. Under (kcat/Km)S conditions, the methylene phosphonate monoester substrate dCCCUCUT(mp)TA4 (where mp indicates the position of the phosphonate linkage) unexpectedly reacts approximately 10(3)-fold faster than the analogous control substrates lacking the -CH2- modification. Experiments with DNA-RNA chimeric substrates reveal that the -CH2- modification enhances docking of the substrates into the catalytic core of the ribozyme by approximately 10-fold and stimulates the chemical cleavage by approximately 10(2)-fold. The docking effect apparently arises from the ability of the -CH2- unit to suppress inherently deleterious effects caused by the thymidine residue that immediately follows the cleavage site. To analyze the -O- to -CH2- modification in the absence of this thymidine residue, we prepared oligonucleotide substrates containing methyl phosphate or ethyl phosphonate at the reaction center, thereby eliminating the 3'-terminal TA4 nucleotidyl group. In this context, the -O- to -CH2-modification has no effect on docking but retains the approximately 10(2)-fold effect on the chemical step. To investigate further the stimulatory influence on the chemical step, we measured the "intrinsic" effect of the -O- to -CH2- modification in nonenzymatic reactions with nucleophiles. We found that in solution, the -CH2- modification stimulates chemical reactivity of the phosphorus center by <5-fold, substantially lower in magnitude than the stimulatory effect in the catalytic core of the ribozyme. The greater stimulatory effect of the -CH2- modification in the active site compared to in solution may arise from fortuitous changes in molecular geometry that allow the ribozyme to accommodate the phosphonate transition state better than the natural phosphodiester transition state. As the -CH2- unit lacks lone pair electrons, its effectiveness in the ribozyme reaction suggests that the 5'-oxygen of the scissile phosphate plays no role in catalysis via hydrogen bonding or metal ion coordination. Finally, we show by analysis of physical organic data that such interactions in general provide little catalytic advantage to RNA and protein phosphoryl transferases because the 5'-oxygen undergoes only a small buildup of negative charge during the reaction. In addition to its mechanistic significance for the Tetrahymena ribozyme reaction and phosphoryl transfer reactions in general, this work suggests that phosphonate monoesters may provide a novel molecular tool for determining whether the chemical step limits the rate of an enzymatic reaction. As methylene phosphonate monoesters react modestly faster than phosphate diesters in model reactions, a similarly modest stimulatory effect on an enzymatic reaction upon -CH2- substitution would suggest rate-limiting chemistry.  相似文献   

8.
Porcine liver DNA polymerase gamma was shown previously to copurify with an associated 3' to 5' exonuclease activity (Kunkel, T. A., and Mosbaugh, D. W. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 988-995). The 3' to 5' exonuclease has now been characterized, and like the DNA polymerase activity, it has an absolute requirement for a divalent metal cation (Mg2+ or Mn2+), a relatively high NaCl and KCl optimum (150-200 mM), and an alkaline pH optimum between 7 and 10. The exonuclease has a 7.5-fold preference for single-stranded over double-stranded DNA, but it cannot excise 3'-terminal dideoxy-NMP residues from either substrate. Excision of 3'-terminally mismatched nucleotides was preferred approximately 5-fold over matched 3' termini, and the hydrolysis product from both was a deoxyribonucleoside 5'-monophosphate. The kinetics of 3'-terminal excision were measured at a single site on M13mp2 DNA for each of the 16 possible matched and mismatched primer.template combinations. As defined by the substrate specificity constant (Vmax/Km), each of the 12 mismatched substrates was preferred over the four matched substrates (A.T, T.A, C.G, G.C). Furthermore, the exonuclease could efficiently excise internally mismatched nucleotides up to 4 residues from the 3' end. DNA polymerase gamma was not found to possess detectable DNA primase, endonuclease, 5' to 3' exonuclease, RNase, or RNase H activities. The DNA polymerase and exonuclease activities exhibited dissimilar rates of heat inactivation and sensitivity to N-ethylmaleimide. After nondenaturing activity gel electrophoresis, the DNA polymerase and 3' to 5' exonuclease activities were partially resolved and detected in situ as separate species. A similar analysis on a denaturing activity gel identified catalytic polypeptides with molecular weights of 127,000, 60,000, and 32,000 which possessed only DNA polymerase gamma activity. Collectively, these results suggest that the polymerase and exonuclease activities reside in separate polypeptides, which could be derived from separate gene products or from proteolysis of a single gene product.  相似文献   

9.
The exchange of 18O between H2O and long-chain free fatty acids is catalyzed by pancreatic carboxylester lipase (EC 1.1.1.13). For palmitic, oleic, and arachidonic acid in aqueous suspension and for 13,16-cis,cis-docosadienoic acid (DA) in monomolecular films, carboxyl oxygens were completely exchanged with water oxygens of the bulk aqueous phase. With enzyme at either substrate or catalytic concentrations in the argon-buffer interface, the exchange of DA oxygens obeyed a random sequential mechanism, i.e., 18O,18O-DA in equilibrium with 18O,16O-DA in equilibrium with 16O,16O-DA. This indicates that the dissociation of the enzyme-DA complex is much faster than the rate-limiting step in the overall exchange reaction. Kinetic analysis of 18O exchange showed a first-order dependence on surface enzyme and DA concentrations, i.e., the reaction was limited by the acylation rate. The values of kcat/Km, 0.118 cm2 pmol-1 s-1, for the exchange reaction was comparable to that for methyl oleate hydrolysis and 5-fold higher than that for cholesteryl oleate hydrolysis in monolayers [Bhat, S., & Brockman, H. L. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 1547]. Thus, fatty acids are good "substrates" for carboxylester lipase. With substrate levels of carboxylester lipase in the interfacial phase, the acylation rate constant kcat/Km was 200-fold lower than that obtained with catalytic levels of enzyme. This suggests a possible restriction of substrate diffusion in the protein-covered substrate monolayer.  相似文献   

10.
A J Zaug  C A Grosshans  T R Cech 《Biochemistry》1988,27(25):8924-8931
A shortened form of the self-splicing intervening sequence RNA of Tetrahymena acts as a sequence-specific endoribonuclease. Specificity of cleavage is determined by Watson-Crick base pairing between the active site of the RNA enzyme (ribozyme) and its RNA substrate [Zaug, A. J., Been, M. D., & Cech, T. R. (1986) Nature (London) 324, 429-433]. Surprisingly, single-base changes in the substrate RNA 3 nucleotides preceding the cleavage site, giving a mismatched substrate-ribozyme complex, enhance the rate of cleavage. Mismatched substrates show up to a 100-fold increase in kcat and, in some cases, in kcat/Km. A mismatch introduced by changing a nucleotide in the active site of the ribozyme has a similar effect. Addition of 2.5 M urea or 3.8 M formamide or decreasing the divalent metal ion concentration from 10 to 2 mM reverses the substrate specificity, allowing the ribozyme to discriminate against the mismatched substrate. The effect of urea is to decrease kcat and kcat/Km for cleavage of the mismatched substrate; Km is not significantly affected at 0-2.5 M urea. Thus, progressive destabilization of ribozyme-substrate pairing by mismatches or by addition of a denaturant such as urea first increases the rate of cleavage to an optimum value and then decreases the rate.  相似文献   

11.
12.
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   

13.
The use of deoxyribonucleotide substitution in RNA (mixed RNA/DNA polymers) permits an evaluation of the role of 2'-hydroxyl groups in ribozyme catalysis. Specific deoxyribonucleotide substitution at G9 and A13 of the ribozyme decreases the catalytic activity (kcat) of the ribozyme by factors of 14 and 20, respectively. The reduction of the reaction rate concomitant with the absence of these 2'-OHs or the 2'-OH of the substrate U7 position can be partially compensated by increasing the Mg2+ concentration above 10 mM. The KMg of the all-RNA ribozyme is 5.3 mM, and the lack of either of the three influential 2'-OHs increases this value by a factor of approximately 3. These and other reaction constants for the ribozyme and the deoxy-substituted analogues have been determined by assuming a three-step mechanism. The data presented here provide the basis for the formulation of a molecular model of ribozyme activity.  相似文献   

14.
The TaqI restriction endonuclease recognizes and cleaves the duplex DNA sequence T decreases CGA. Steady state kinetic analysis with a small oligodeoxyribonucleotide substrate showed that the enzyme obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics (Km = 53 nM, kcat = 1.3 min-1 at 50 degrees C and Km = 0.5 nM, kcat = 2.9 min-1 at 60 degrees C). At 0 degree C, the enzyme was completely inactive, while at 15 degrees C, turnover produced nicked substrate as the major product in excess of enzyme indicating dissociation between nicking events. Above 37 degrees C, both strands in the duplex were cleaved prior to dissociation. In contrast to the tight, temperature-dependent binding of substrate, binding of the Mg2+ cofactor was weak (Kd = 2.5 mM) and the same at either 50 degrees C or 60 degrees C. Single-turnover experiments using oligonucleotide substrate showed that hydrolysis of duplex DNA occurred via two independent nicking events, each with a first order rate constant (kst) of 5.8 min-1 at 60 degrees C and 3.5 min-1 at 50 degrees C. The pH dependence of Km (pKa = 9) and kst (pKa = 7) suggests Lys/Arg and His, respectively, as possible amino acids influencing these constants. Moreover, although kst increased significantly with pH, kcat did not, indicating that at least two steps can be rate-controlling in the reaction pathway. Binding of protein to canonical DNA in the presence of Mg2+ at 0 degree C or in the absence of Mg2+ at 50 degrees C was weak (Kd = 2.5 microM or 5,000-fold weaker than the optimal measured Km) and equal to the binding of noncanonical DNA as judged by retention on nitrocellulose. Similar results were seen in gel retardation assays. These results suggest that both Mg2+ and high temperature are required to attain the correct protein conformation to form the tight complex seen in the steady state analysis. In the accompanying paper (Zebala, J. A., Choi, J., Trainor, G. L., and Barany, F. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 8106-8116), we report how these kinetic constants are altered using substrate analogues and propose a model of functional groups involved in TaqI endonuclease recognition.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of the arginine-specific reagents phenylglyoxal and butanedione on the activity of neutral endopeptidase 24.11 ("enkephalinase") was determined. Inactivation of the enzyme by butanedione is completely protected by methionine-enkephalin, but only partially protected by methionine-enkephalinamide. In contrast, phenylglyoxal inactivation of the enzyme exhibits saturation kinetics with a Kd of 20 mM. The enzyme is only partially protected against phenylglyoxal inactivation by both methionine-enkephalin and its amide, indicating that phenylglyoxal reacts at two sites. Reaction of the enzyme with phenylglyoxal in the presence of saturating methionine-enkephalin involves the direct reaction of the reagent with the enzyme-substrate complex. Enzyme treated with butanedione or with phenylglyoxal (at site 1) exhibits a 3-5 decrease in substrate binding with little change in kcat. In contrast, reaction with phenylglyoxal in the presence of saturating methionine-enkephalin shows little change in substrate binding but a 4-fold decrease in kcat. Enzyme inactivation involves the incorporation of approximately 1 mol of phenylglyoxal/enzyme subunit in the absence of methionine-enkephalin and approximately 2.5 mol of phenylglyoxal/enzyme subunit in the presence of saturating methionine-enkephalin. These results suggest that an arginine residue on the enzyme is involved in substrate binding.  相似文献   

16.
Xia Z  Azurmendi HF  Mildvan AS 《Biochemistry》2005,44(46):15334-15344
The MutT pyrophosphohydrolase, in the presence of Mg2+, catalyzes the hydrolysis of nucleoside triphosphates by nucleophilic substitution at Pbeta, to yield the nucleotide and PP(i). The best substrate for MutT is the mutagenic 8-oxo-dGTP, on the basis of its Km being 540-fold lower than that of dGTP. Product inhibition studies have led to a proposed uni-bi-iso kinetic mechanism, in which PP(i) dissociates first from the enzyme-product complex (k3), followed by NMP (k4), leaving a product-binding form of the enzyme (F) which converts to the substrate-binding form (E) in a partially rate-limiting step (k5) [Saraswat, V., et al. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 15566-15577]. Single- and multiple-turnover kinetic studies of the hydrolysis of dGTP and 8-oxo-dGTP and global fitting of the data to this mechanism have yielded all of the nine rate constants. Consistent with an "iso" mechanism, single-turnover studies with dGTP and 8-oxo-dGTP hydrolysis showed slow apparent second-order rate constants for substrate binding similar to their kcat/Km values, but well below the diffusion limit (approximately 10(9) M(-1) s(-1)): k(on)app = 7.2 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1) for dGTP and k(on)app = 2.8 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1) for 8-oxo-dGTP. These low k(on)app values are fitted by assuming a slow iso step (k5 = 12.1 s(-1)) followed by fast rate constants for substrate binding: k1 = 1.9 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) for dGTP and k1 = 0.75 x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1) for 8-oxo-dGTP (the latter near the diffusion limit). With dGTP as the substrate, replacing Mg2+ with Mn2+ does not change k1, consistent with the formation of a second-sphere MutT-M2+-(H2O)-dGTP complex, but slows the iso step (k5) 5.8-fold, and its reverse (k(-5)) 25-fold, suggesting that the iso step involves a change in metal coordination, likely the dissociation of Glu-53 from the enzyme-bound metal so that it can function as the general base. Multiple-turnover studies with dGTP and 8-oxo-dGTP show bursts of product formation, indicating partially rate-limiting steps following the chemical step (k2). With dGTP, the slow steps are the chemical step (k2 = 10.7 s(-1)) and the iso step (k5 = 12.1 s(-1)). With 8-oxo-dGTP, the slow steps are the release of the 8-oxo-dGMP product (k4 = 3.9 s(-1)) and the iso step (k5 = 12.1 s(-1)), while the chemical step is fast (k2 = 32.3 s(-1)). The transient kinetic studies are generally consistent with the steady state kcat and Km values. Comparison of rate constants and free energy diagrams indicate that 8-oxo-dGTP, at low concentrations, is a better substrate than dGTP because it binds to MutT 395-fold faster, dissociates 46-fold slower, and has a 3.0-fold faster chemical step. The true dissociation constants (KD) of the substrates from the E-form of MutT, which can now be obtained from k(-1)/k1, are 3.5 nM for 8-oxo-dGTP and 62 microM for dGTP, indicating that 8-oxo-dGTP binds 1.8 x 10(4)-fold tighter than dGTP, corresponding to a 5.8 kcal/mol lower free energy of binding.  相似文献   

17.
Hammerhead ribozymes cleave RNA substrates containing the UX sequence, where X = U, C or A, embedded within sequences which are complementary to the hybridising 'arms' of the ribozyme. In this study we have replaced the RNA in the hybridising arms of the ribozyme with DNA, and the resulting ribozyme is many times more active than its precursor. In turnover-kinetics experiments with a 13-mer RNA substrate, the kcat/Km ratios are 10 and 150 microM-1min-1 for the RNA- and DNA-armed ribozymes, respectively. The effect is due mainly to differences in kcat. In independent experiments where the cleavage step is rate-limiting, the DNA-armed ribozyme cleaves the substrate with a rate constant more than 3 times greater than the all-RNA ribozyme. DNA substrates containing a ribocytidine at the cleavage site have been shown to be cleaved less efficiently than their all-RNA analogues; again however, the DNA-armed ribozyme is more effective than the all-RNA ribozyme against such DNA substrates. These results demonstrate that there are no 2'-hydroxyl groups in the arms of the ribozyme that are required for cleavage; and that the structure of the complex formed by the DNA-armed ribozyme with its substrate is more favourable for cleavage than that formed by the all-RNA ribozyme and its substrate.  相似文献   

18.
We have reconstructed the group II intron from Pylaiella littoralis (PL) into a hydrolytic ribozyme, comprising domains 1-3 (D123) connected in cis plus domain 5 (D5) supplied in trans that efficiently cleaves spliced exon substrates. Using a novel gel-based fluorescence assay and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, we monitored the direct binding of D5 to D123, characterized the kinetics of the spliced exon hydrolysis reaction (which is mechanistically analogous to the reverse of the second catalytic step of splicing), and identified the binding surface of D123 on D5. This PL ribozyme acts as an RNA endonuclease even at low monovalent (100 mM KCl) and divalent ion concentrations (1-10 mM MgCl(2)). This is in contrast to other group II intron ribozyme systems that require high levels of salt, making NMR analysis problematic. D5 binds tightly to D123 with a K(d) of 650 +/- 250 nM, a K(m) of approximately 300 nM, and a K(cat) of 0.02 min(-1) under single turnover conditions. Within the approximately 160-kDa D123-D5 binary complex, site-specific binding to D123 leads to dramatic chemical shift perturbation of residues localized to the tetraloop and internal bulge within D5, suggesting a structural switch model for D5-assisted splicing. This minimal ribozyme thus recapitulates the essential features of the reverse of the second catalytic step and represents a well-behaved system for ongoing high-resolution structural work to complement folding and catalytic functional studies.  相似文献   

19.
We have previously shown that a protein derived from the p7 nucleocapsid (NC) protein of HIV type-1 increases kcat/Km and kcat for cleavage of a cognate substrate by a hammerhead ribozyme. Here we show directly that the increase in kcat/Km arises from catalysis of the annealing of the RNA substrate to the ribozyme and the increase in kcat arises from catalysis of dissociation of the RNA products from the ribozyme. A peptide polymer derived from the consensus sequence of the C-terminal domain of the hnRNP A1 protein (A1 CTD) provides similar enhancements. Although these effects apparently arise from non-specific interactions, not all non-specific binding interactions led to these enhancements. NC and A1 CTD exert their effects by accelerating attainment of the thermodynamically most stable species throughout the ribozyme catalytic cycle. In addition, NC protein is shown to resolve a misfolded ribozyme-RNA complex that is otherwise long lived. These in vitro results suggest that non-specific RNA binding proteins such as NC and hnRNP proteins may have a biological role as RNA chaperones that prevent misfolding of RNAs and resolve RNAs that have misfolded, thereby ensuring that RNA is accessible for its biological functions.  相似文献   

20.
The catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) of Escherichia coli flavin pyruvate oxidase can be stimulated 450-fold either by the addition of lipid activators or by limited proteolytic hydrolysis. Previous studies have shown that a functional lipid binding site is a mandatory prerequisite for the in vivo functioning of this enzyme (Grabau, C., and Cronan, J. E., Jr. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 3748-3751). The effect of activation on the transient state kinetics of partial reactions in the overall oxidative conversion of pyruvate to acetate and CO2 has now been examined. The rate of decarboxylation of pyruvate to form CO2 and hydroxyethylthiamin pyrophosphate for both activated and unactivated forms of the enzyme is identical within experimental error. The decarboxylation step was measured using substrate concentrations of the enzyme in the absence of an electron acceptor. The pseudo-first order rate constant for the decarboxylation step is 60-80 s-1. The rate of oxidation of hydroxyethylthiamin pyrophosphate and concomitant enzyme-bound flavin reduction was analyzed by stopped-flow methods utilizing synthetic hydroxyethylthiamin pyrophosphate. The pseudo-first order rate for this step with unactivated enzyme was 2.85 s-1 and increased 145-fold for lipid-activated enzyme to 413 s-1 and 61-fold for the proteolytically activated enzyme to 173 s-1. The analysis of a third reaction step, the reoxidation of enzyme-bound FADH, was also investigated by stopped-flow techniques utilizing ferricyanide as the electron acceptor. The rate of oxidation of enzyme.FADH is very fast for both unactivated (1041 s-1) and activated enzyme (645 s-1). The data indicate that the FAD reduction step is the rate-limiting step in the overall reaction for unactivated enzyme. Alternatively, the rate-limiting step in the overall reaction with the activated enzyme shifts to one of the partial steps in the decarboxylation reaction.  相似文献   

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