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1.
RNase P recognizes many different precursor tRNAs as well as other substrates and cleaves all of them accurately at the expected position. RNase P recognizes the tRNA structure of the precursor tRNA by a set of interactions between the catalytic RNA subunit and the T- and acceptor-stems mainly, although residues in the 5-leader sequence as well as the 3-terminal CCA are important. These conclusions have been reached by several studies on mutant precursor tRNAs as well as cross-linking studies between RNase P RNA and precursor tRNAs. The protein subunit of RNase P seems also to affect the way that the substrate is recognized as well as the range of substrates that can be used by RNase P, although the protein does not seem to interact directly with the substrates. The interaction between the protein and RNA subunits of RNase P has been extensively studiedin vitro. The protein subunit sequence is not highly conserved among bacteria, however different proteins are functionally equivalent as heterologous reconstitution of the RNase P holoenzyme can be achieved in many cases.Abbreviations C5 protein protein subunit fromE. coli RNase P - EGS external guide sequence - M1 RNA RNA subunit formE. coli RNase P - ptRNA precursor tRNA - RNase P ribonuclease P  相似文献   

2.
Li D  Willkomm DK  Schön A  Hartmann RK 《Biochimie》2007,89(12):1528-1538
Ribonuclease P (RNase P) is a ribonucleoprotein enzyme that generates the mature 5' ends of tRNAs. Ubiquitous across all three kingdoms of life, the composition and functional contributions of the RNA and protein components of RNase P differ between the kingdoms. RNA-alone catalytic activity has been reported throughout bacteria, but only for some archaea, and only as trace activity for eukarya. Available information for RNase P from photosynthetic organelles points to large differences to bacterial as well as to eukaryotic RNase P: for spinach chloroplasts, protein-alone activity has been discussed; for RNase P from the cyanelle of the glaucophyte Cyanophora paradoxa, a type of organelle sharing properties of both cyanobacteria and chloroplasts, the proportion of protein was found to be around 80% rather than the usual 10% in bacteria. Furthermore, the latter RNase P was previously found catalytically inactive in the absence of protein under a variety of conditions; however, the RNA could be activated by a cyanobacterial protein, but not by the bacterial RNase P protein from Escherichia coli. Here we demonstrate that, under very high enzyme concentrations, the RNase P RNA from the cyanelle of C. paradoxa displays RNA-alone activity well above the detection level. Moreover, the RNA can be complemented to a functional holoenzyme by the E. coli RNase P protein, further supporting its overall bacterial-like architecture. Mutational analysis and domain swaps revealed that this A,U-rich cyanelle RNase P RNA is globally optimized but conformationally unstable, since changes as little as a single point mutation or a base pair identity switch at positions that are not part of the universally conserved catalytic core led to a complete loss of RNA-alone activity. Likely related to this low robustness, extensive structural changes towards an E. coli-type P5-7/P15-17 subdomain as a canonical interaction site for tRNA 3'-CCA termini could not be coaxed into increased ribozyme activity.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The 287-bp spacer and the flanking 3-end of the 16S- and 5-end of the 23S-rRNA genes of the cyanelles from Cyanophora paradoxa have been sequenced and compared with the corresponding regions of cyanobacteria and chloroplasts. The spacer contains the uninterrupted genes for tRNAile and tRNAala. All coding regions show high homology to their prokaryotic counterparts. At the 3-end of the 16S-rDNA a CCTCCTTT sequence has been identified which is complementary to putative ribosome binding sites observed immediately upstream of the coding region of cyanelle protein genes.  相似文献   

5.
An Arabidopsis mutant rnr1, which has a defect in the basic genetic system in chloroplasts, was isolated using the screening of the high chlorophyll fluorescence phenotype. Whereas chlorophyll fluorescence and immunoblot studies showed the mutant had reduced activities of photosystems I and II, molecular characterization of the mutant suggested that a T-DNA insertion impaired the expression of a gene encoding a RNase R family member with a targeting signal to chloroplasts. Since RNase R family members have a 3–5 exoribonuclease activity, we examined the RNA profile in chloroplasts. In rnr1 the intercistronic cleavage between 23S and 4.5S rRNA was impaired, and a significant reduction in rRNA in chloroplasts was found, suggesting that RNR1 functions in the maturation of chloroplast rRNA. The present results suggest that defects in the genetic system in chloroplasts cause high chlorophyll fluorescence, pale green leaf, and marked reduction in the growth rate, whereas the levels of some chloroplast RNA were higher in rnr1 than in the wild-type.  相似文献   

6.
RNase P, the enzyme responsible for 5-end processing of tRNAs and 4.5S RNA, has been extensively characterized fromE. coli. The RNA component ofE. coli RNase P, without the protein, has the enzymatic activity and is the first true RNA enzyme to be characterized. RNase P and MRP are two distinct nuclear ribonucleoprotein (RNP) particles characterized in many eukaryotic cells including human, yeast and plant cells. There are many similarities between RNase P and MRP. These include: (1) sequence specific endonuclease activity; (2) homology at the primary and secondary structure levels; and (3) common proteins in both the RNPs. It is likely that RNase P and MRP originated from a common ancestor.  相似文献   

7.
Ribonuclease P (RNase P) is a key enzyme involved in tRNA biosynthesis. It catalyses the endonucleolytic cleavage of nearly all tRNA precursors to produce 5-end matured tRNA. RNase P activity has been found in all organisms examined, from bacteria to mammals. Eubacterial RNase P RNA is the only known RNA enzyme which functionsin trans in nature. Similar behaviour has not been demonstrated in RNase P enzymes examined from archaebacteria or eukaryotes. Characterisation of RNase P enzymes from more diverse eukaryotic species, including the slime moldDictyostelium discoideum, is useful for comparative analysis of the structure and function of eukaryotic RNase P.Abbreviations RNase P ribonuclease P - MN micrococcal nuclease  相似文献   

8.
There are at least six small stable RNAs inMycoplasma capricolum cells besides tRNAs and rRNAs. One of them, MCS5 RNA, is a homolog of RNase P RNA. The predicted secondary structure of this RNA is essentially the same as that of other eubacterial RNase P RNAs. MCS5 RNA is more similar to the RNase P RNA ofB. subtilis than to that ofE. coli. This is consistent with previous conclusions that mycoplasmas are phylogenetically related to the low G+C Gram-positive bacterial group. The major substrates for MCS5 RNA must be the precursors of tRNAs. The precursor of MCS6 RNA, which is a homolog of theE. coli 10Sa RNA, may also be a substrate for the MCS5 RNA because this RNA has a tRNA-like structure at its 5 and 3 ends.  相似文献   

9.
The cyanelles of Cyanophora paradoxa, plastids surrounded by a peptidoglycan wall, are considered as a surviving example for an early stage of plastid evolution from endosymbiotic cyanobacteria. We highlight the model character of the system by focusing on three aspects: “organelle wall” structure, plastid genome organization, and protein translocation.

The biosynthetic pathway for cyanelle peptidoglycan appears to be analogous to that in Escherichia coli. Also, the basic structure of this peculiar organelle wall corresponds to that of the E. coli sacculus, with one notable exception: the C-1 carboxyl group of the D-isoglutamyl residue is partially amidated with N-acetylputrescine. Cyanelles harbor on their completely sequenced 135.6-kb genome genes for approximately 150 polypeptides, many of which are nucleus encoded in higher plants. Nevertheless, there are striking parallels in genome organization between cyanelles (and other primitive plastids) and higher plant chloroplasts. The transit sequences of nucleus-encoded cyanelle preproteins resemble stroma targeting peptides of higher plant chloroplast precursors. Heterologous import of precursors from C. paradoxa into isolated pea chloroplasts is possible and vice versa. Cyanelles are considered to represent a very early, diverging branch of plastid evolution and are derived from the semiautonomous endosymbiont that had already abandoned about 90% of its genetic information but still retained its prokaryotic wall. Recent data on the molecular biology of cyanelles and rhodoplasts are consistent with the assumption of a primary endosymbiotic event that was not only monophyletic with respect to the cyanobacterial invader, but also singular.

Cyanophora paradoxa is the best-investigated member of the glaucocystophyceae, phototrophic protists containing cyanelles, that is, plastids stabilized by a peptidoglycan-containing envelope. The classification of this group, comprising only eight (mostly monotypic) genera, is also based on parallels in morphology and organization of the “host cells” (Kies, 1992). Recently, this was corroborated by 16S and 18S rRNA-based phylogenetic analysis (Helmchen et al., 1995; Bhattacharya et al, 1995). Apart from C. paradoxa, only Glaucocystis nostochinearum can be grown at a reasonable rate. Thus, biochemical and molecular genetic data are mostly available for C. paradoxa and more precisely for the isolate 555UTEX (Pringsheim) that is kept in the major culture collections of algae. Biochemical work done on C. paradoxa and the sequencing of individual cyanelle genes have been described in several recent reviews (Schenk, 1992; Löffelhardt and Bohnert, 1994a,b). Here we discuss three topics: the cyanelle wall, aspects deduced from the complete cyanelle genome sequence, and protein translocation into and within cyanelles.  相似文献   


10.
Chloroplasts of land plants have an active transfer RNA processing system, consisting of an RNase P-like 5 endonuclease, a 3 endonuclease, and a tRNA:CCA nucleotidyltransferase. The specificity of these enzymes resembles more that of their eukaryotic counterparts than that of their cyanobacterial predecessors. Most strikingly, chloroplast RNase P activity almost certainly resides in a protein, rather than in an RNA protein complex as in Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. The chloroplast enzyme may have evolved from a preexisting chloroplast NADP-binding protein. Chloroplast RNase P cleaves pre-tRNA by a reaction mechanism in which at least one of the Mg2+ ions utilized by the bacterial ribozyme RNase P is replaced by an amino acid side chain.Abbreviations pre-tRNA precursor to tRNA - pCp cytidine 5, 3-bisphosphate - IC50 inhibitor concentration giving 50% inhibition - GAPDH glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase  相似文献   

11.
Summary Cyanelles which have been found in few eukaryotic organisms are photosynthetically active organelles which strikingly resemble cyanobacteria. The complexity of the cyanelle genome in Cyanophora paradoxa (127 Kbp) is too low to consider them as independent organisms in a symbiotic relationship. In order to correlate cyanelle genome and gene structure with those of plastid chromosomes of other plants, a circular map of the cyanelle DNA from Cyanophora paradoxa (strain LB555 UTEX) has been constructed using the restriction endonucleases SalI (generating 6 DNA fragments), BamHI (6), SalI (5), XhoI (9), and BglII (19).Besides the rRNA genes (16S, 23S, 5S), genes for 14 proteins have been located on this circular map. Among those are components of several multienzyme complexes involved in photosynthetic electron transport, as well as the large subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase and two ribosomal proteins. All the probes used, were derived from a collection of spinach chloroplast DNA clones. Hybridization experiments showed signals to DNA fragments primarily from the large single-copy region of cyanelle DNA. The arrangement of genes on cyanelle DNA is different from that on spinach chloroplast DNA. However, genes which have been shown to be cotranscribed in spinach chloroplasts are also clustered on cyanelle DNA.Abbreviations Kbp 103 base pairs - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase holoenzyme  相似文献   

12.
An important approach to understanding RNA-based catalytic function by ribonuclease P is the investigation of its evolutionary diversity in structure and function. Because RNase P enzymes from all organisms are thought to share common ancestry, the fundamental features of structure and biochemistry should be conserved in all of its modern forms. In contrast to the bacterial enzyme, the RNase P enzymes fromEucarya, organelles, andArchaea are poorly understood. This review describes our nascent understanding of the structure and function of RNase P inArchaea, and how this enzyme compares to its homologs in the other evolutionary Domains.Abbreviations RNase P ribonuclease P - tRNA transfer RNA - pre-tRNA 5-unprocessed precursor transfer RNA - Archaea a.k.a. archaebacteria - Bacteria a.k.a. eubacteria - Eucarya a.k.a. eukaryotic nucleus/cytoplasm  相似文献   

13.
Summary The 4S RNA of cyanelles from Cyanophora paradoxa strain LB 555 UTEX was fractionated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Individual tRNA species were identified by aminoacylation, labeled in vitro and hybridized to restriction endonuclease fragments of cyanelle DNA. Hybridization experiments, using individual tRNA species, have revealed the location of two tRNA genes, coding for tRNAAla and tRNAIle, in each of the two spacer segments separating the 16S and 23S rRNA genes on the two inverted repeats (10 kbp each) and three tRNA genes in the small single-copy region (17 kbp) separating the two inverted repeats. A minimum of 14 tRNA genes in the large single-copy region (88.5 kbp) has also been found.Heterologous hybridization studies, using cyanelle tRNAs and chloroplast DNA from spinach, broad bean, or maize, indicate a high degree of homology between some tRNAs from cyanelles and chloroplasts.Although cyanelles are often condisered as having evolved from endosymbiotic cyanobacteria, the organization of tRNA genes on cyanelle DNA and the results of heterologous hybridization studies show that cyanelles are related to higher plant chloroplasts.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The time course of binding of the fluorescent stilbene anion exchange inhibitor, DBDS (4,4-dibenzamido-2,2-stilbene disulfonate), to band 3 can be measured by the stopped-flow method. We have previously used the reaction time constant, DBDS, to obtain the kinetic constants for binding and, thus, to report on the conformational state of the band 3 binding site. To validate the method, we have now shown that the ID50 (0.3±0.1 m) for H2-DIDS (4,4-diisothiocyano-2,2-dihydrostilbene disulfonate) inhibition of DBDS is virtually the same as the ID50 (0.47±0.04 m) for H2-DIDS inhibition of red cell Cl flux, thus relating DBDS directly to band 3 anion exchange. The specific glucose transport inhibitor, cytochalasin B, causes significant changes in DBDS, which can be reversed with intracellular, but not extracellular,d-glucose. ID50 for cytochalasin B modulation of DBDS is 0.1±0.2 m in good agreement withK D =0.06±0.005 m for cytochalasin B binding to the glucose transport protein. These experiments suggest that the glucose transport protein is either adjacent to band 3, or linked to it through a mechanism, which can transmit conformational information. Ouabain (0.1 m), the specific inhibitor of red cell Na+,K+-ATPase, increases red cell Cl exchange flux in red cells by a factor of about two. This interaction indicates that the Na+,K+-ATPase, like the glucose transport protein, is either in contact with, or closely linked to, band 3. These results would be consistent with a transport proteincomplex, centered on band 3, and responsible for the entire transport process, not only the provision of metabolic energy, but also the actual carriage of the cations and anions themselves.  相似文献   

15.
Mary E. Rumpho  Fred D. Sack 《Planta》1989,179(2):137-147
The usefulness of 4,4-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2-disulfonic acid (DIDS) for in-situ studies of the chloroplast phosphate translocator was evaluated by fluorescence microscopy and radiolabeling of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) (C3 plant) and maize (Zea mays L.) (C4 plant) chloroplasts. In maize mesophyll and bundle-sheath chloroplasts and in spinach chloroplasts that were either intact, broken or swollen, DIDS fluorescence was only associated with the chloroplast envelope. Intact chloroplasts often had fluorescent patches corresponding to concave regions of the chloroplast which we assume to be regions enriched in DIDS-binding sites.Incubation of intact or broken spinach chloroplasts or maize mesophyll chloroplasts with [3H2]DIDS resulted in the labeling of a single polypeptide (relative molecular mass, Mr, 30 kDa) in the envelope fraction, in each case. Label in the stromal fraction was not detected when intact chloroplasts were incubated with [3H2]DIDS. However, when broken chloroplasts were incubated with [3H2]DIDS, several polypeptides of various molecular masses were labeled, but not the 30×31-kDa polypeptide. In thylakoid fractions from both broken and intact chloroplasts, a single 30×31-kDa polypeptide was labeled inconsistently. When a mixture of intact maize mesophyll and bundle-sheath chloroplasts was labeled with [3H2]DIDS, extracts of whole chloroplasts displayed radioactivity only in the 30×31-kDa band.We conclude that DIDS is a valuable probe for the in-situ identification and characterization of the 30-kDa protein — the presumptive phosphate translocator — in C3 and C4 chloroplasts since DIDS (1) does not penetrate the inner membrane of the envelope of intact chloroplasts and, therefore, (2) does not bind internal sites in intact chloroplasts, and (3) only binds the 30-kDa protein in the inner membrane of the envelope.Abbreviations CBB Coomassie brilliant blue - DIC differential interference contrast optics - DIDS 4,4-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2-disulfonic acid - [3H2]DIDS 1,2-ditritio-1,2-(2,2-disulfo-4,4-diisothiocyano)diphenylethane - kDa kilodalton - Mr relative molecular mass - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - Pitranslocator phosphate translocator - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

16.
Proposals that an RNA-based genetic system preceeded DNA, stem from the ability of RNA to store genetic information and to promote simple catalysis. However, to be a valid basis for the RNA world, RNA catalysis must demonstrate or be related to intrinsic chemical properties which could have existed in primordial times. We analyze this question by first classifying RNA catalysis and related processes according to their mechanism. We define: (A) thedisjunct nucleophile class which leads to 5-phosphates. These include Group I and II intron splicing, nuclear mRNA splicing and RNase P reactions. Although Group I introns and its excision mechanism is likely to have existed in primordial times, present-day examples have arisen independently in different phyla much more recently. Comparative methodology indicates that RNase P catalysis originated before the divergence of the major kingdoms. In addition, alldisjunct nucleophile reactions can be interrelated by a proposed mechanism involving a distant 2-OH nucleophile. (B) theconjunct nucleophile class leading to 3-phosphates. This class is composed of self-cleaving RNAs found in plant viruses and the newt. We propose that tRNA splicing is related to this mechanism rather than the previous one. The presence of introns in tRNA genes of eukaryotes and archaebacteria supports the idea that tRNA splicing predates the divergence of these cell types.  相似文献   

17.
Chloroplasts isolated fromSorghum vulgare are active in light-dependent, organelle protein synthesis. Intact chloroplasts can use light as an energy source; photosynthetically inactive chloroplasts require the addition of ATP for this protein synthesis. Preincubation of chloroplasts in light at 25°C for 1 h depleted the endogenous templates completely; such preincubated chloroplasts translated exogenously added heterologous templates efficiently. When total cellular RNA fromChlorella protothecoides, a C3 plant, was used as template for translation in a cell-free light-dependent system of isolated mesophyll chloroplasts fromSorghum vulgare, a C4 type plant, polypeptides of 55 kDa (large subunit) and 15 kDa (small subunit) were detectable in the fluorographic profile of the newly synthesized proteins; these polypeptides were absent in the products obtained with endogenous RNA. Evidence for the fidelity of the system was obtained by immunological analysis of ribulose 1, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase obtained by the translation ofChlorella cellular RNAs.  相似文献   

18.
Most proteins located in chloroplasts are encoded by nuclear genes, synthesized in the cytoplasm, and transported into the organelle. The study of protein uptake by chloroplasts has greatly expanded over the past few years. The increased activity in this field is due, in part, to the application of recombinant DNA methodology to the analysis of protein translocation. Added interest has also been gained by the realization that the transport mechanisms that mediate protein uptake by chloroplasts, mitochondria and the endoplasmic reticulum display certain characteristics in common. These include amino terminal sequences that target proteins to particular organelles, a transport process that is mechanistically independent from the events of translation, and an ATP-requiring transport step that is thought to involve partial unfolding of the protein to be translocated. In this review we examine recent studies on the binding of precursors to the chloroplast surface, the energy-dependent uptake of proteins into the stroma, and the targeting of proteins to the thylakoid lumen. These aspects of protein transport into chloroplasts are discussed in the context of recent studies on protein uptake by mitochondria.Abbrevlations CAT chloramphenicol acetyl transferase - CCCP carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - DHFR dihydrofolate reductase - EPSP 5-enol-pyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate - ER endoplasmic reticulum - LHCP light harvesting chlorophyll a/b apoprotein - NPT neomycin phosphotransferase - oATP adenosine-2,3-dialdehyde-5-triphosphate - P-inorganic phosphate Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - SSU small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - SRP signal recognition particle  相似文献   

19.
Summary Escherichia coli rnh mutants were isolated using localized mutagenesis and selective measurements of RNase H activity in mutagenized cell extracts with [3H]poly(rC)·poly(dG) as substrate. RNase H activity in extracts of one mutant, ON152 (rnh-91), was undetectable (less than 0.05% of that of wild-type cells). This mutant formed small colonies at 43 °C. At this temperature, accumulation of nascent fragments was more prominent in the rnh-91·polA4113 double mutant than in the polA4113 mutant; however, no accumulation was found in the rnh single mutant at 43° C. Unlike the 1–3 nucleotide primer RNA found on nascent fragments of polA4113 cells, primers from the rnh-91·polA4113 cells ranged from one to about ten bases. These results suggest that the 53 exonuclease activity of DNA polymerase I plays a major role in removal of primer RNA and that RNase H functions in an auxiliary role, excising the 5-portion of longer primers.The rnh mutant supports replication of ColE1-type plasmids. A possible mechanism of replication of such plasmids in rnh mutants and a role of RNase H in the initiation of chromosomal replication are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
All hitherto identified aromatic compounds accumulating in leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. upon infection with virulent or avirulent strains of Pseudomonas syringae pathovar tomato (Pst) were indolic metabolites. We now report the strong accumulation of a novel type of natural product, 3-O--d-ribofuranosyl adenosine (3RA), exclusively during compatible interactions. In contrast to the various indolic metabolites, 3RA was undetectable in incompatible interactions of A. thaliana leaves with an avirulent Pst strain, as well as in uninfected control leaves. A similar, strong induction of 3RA was observed in compatible but, again, not in incompatible interactions of Pst with its natural host, Lycopersicon esculentum. The strength of the effect and its confinement to compatible interactions suggests that it may be applicable as a diagnostic tool.Abbreviations Pst Pseudomonas syringae pathovar tomato - 3RA 3-O--d-ribofuranosyl adenosine  相似文献   

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