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1.
Harris DA  Rueda D  Walter NG 《Biochemistry》2002,41(40):12051-12061
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV) is a human pathogen and satellite RNA of the hepatitis B virus. It utilizes a self-cleaving catalytic RNA motif to process multimeric intermediates in the double-rolling circle replication of its genome. Previous kinetic analyses have suggested that a particular cytosine residue (C(75)) with a pK(a) close to neutrality acts as a general acid or base in cleavage chemistry. The crystal structure of the product form of a cis-acting HDV ribozyme shows this residue positioned close to the 5'-OH leaving group of the reaction by a trefoil turn in the RNA backbone. By modifying G(76) of the trefoil turn of a synthetic trans-cleaving HDV ribozyme to the fluorescent 2-aminopurine (AP), we can directly monitor local conformational changes in the catalytic core. In the ribozyme-substrate complex (precursor), AP fluorescence is strongly quenched, suggesting that AP(76) is stacked with other bases and that the trefoil turn is not formed. In contrast, formation of the product complex upon substrate cleavage or direct product binding results in a significant increase in fluorescence, consistent with AP(76) becoming unstacked and solvent-exposed as evidenced in the trefoil turn. Using AP fluorescence and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) in concert, we demonstrate that this local conformational change in the trefoil turn is kinetically coincidental with a previously observed global structural change of the ribozyme. Our data show that, at least in the trans-acting HDV ribozyme, C(75) becomes positioned for reaction chemistry only along the trajectory from precursor to product.  相似文献   

2.
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV), an infectious human pathogen affecting millions of people worldwide, leads to intensified disease symptoms, including progression to liver cirrhosis upon coinfection with its helper virus, HBV. Both the circular RNA genome of HDV and its complementary antigenome contain a common cis-cleaving catalytic RNA motif, the HDV ribozyme, which plays a crucial role in viral replication. Previously, the crystal structure of the product form of the cis-acting genomic HDV ribozyme has been determined, and the precursor form has been suggested to be structurally similar. In contrast, solution studies by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) on a trans-cleaving form of the ribozyme have shown significant global conformational changes upon catalysis, while 2-aminopurine (AP) fluorescence assays have detected concomitant local conformational changes in the catalytic core. Here, we augment these studies by using terbium(III) to probe the structure of the trans-acting HDV ribozyme at nucleotide resolution. We observe significant structural differences between the precursor and product forms, especially in the P1.1 helix and the trefoil turn in the single-stranded region connecting P4 and P2 (termed J4/2) of the catalytic core. We show, using terbium(III) footprinting and sensitized luminescence spectroscopy as well as steady-state, time-resolved, and gel-mobility FRET assays on a systematic set of substrates, that the substrate sequence immediately 5' to the cleavage site significantly modulates these local as well as resultant global structural differences. Our results suggest a structural basis for the previously observed impact of the 5' substrate sequence on catalytic activity.  相似文献   

3.
Tinsley RA  Harris DA  Walter NG 《Biochemistry》2004,43(28):8935-8945
The ability of divalent metal ions to participate in both structure formation and catalytic chemistry of RNA enzymes (ribozymes) has made it difficult to separate their cause and effect in ribozyme function. For example, the recently solved crystal structures of precursor and product forms of the cis-cleaving genomic hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozyme show a divalent metal ion bound in the active site that is released upon catalysis due to an RNA conformational change. This conformational switch is associated with a repositioning of the catalytically involved base C75 in the active-site cleft, thus controlling catalysis. These findings confirm previous data from fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) on a trans-acting form of the HDV ribozyme that found a global conformational change to accompany catalysis. Here, we further test the conformational switch model by measuring the Mg(2+) dependence of the global conformational change of the trans-acting HDV ribozyme, using circular dichroism and time-resolved FRET as complementary probes of secondary and tertiary structure formation, respectively. We observe significant differences in both structure and Mg(2+) affinity of the precursor and product forms, in the presence and absence of 300 mM Na(+) background. The precursor shortens while the product extends with increasing Mg(2+) concentration, essentially amplifying the structural differences observed in the crystal structures. In addition, the precursor has an approximately 2-fold and approximately 13-fold lower Mg(2+) affinity than the product in secondary and tertiary structure formation, respectively. We also have compared the C75 wild-type with the catalytically inactive C75U mutant and find significant differences in global structure and Mg(2+) affinity for both their precursor and product forms. Significantly, the Mg(2+) affinity of the C75 wild-type is 1.7-2.1-fold lower than that of the C75U mutant, in accord with the notion that C75 is essential for a catalytic conformational change that leads to a decrease in the local divalent metal ion affinity and release of a catalytic metal. Thus, a consistent picture emerges in which divalent metal ions and RNA functional groups are intimately intertwined in affecting structural dynamics and catalysis in the HDV ribozyme.  相似文献   

4.
The self-cleaving hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozyme is essential for the replication of HDV, a liver disease causing pathogen in humans. The catalytically critical nucleotide C75 of the ribozyme is buttressed by a trefoil turn pivoting around an extruded G76. In all available crystal structures, the conformation of G76 is restricted by stacking with G76 of a neighboring molecule. To test whether this crystal contact introduces a structural perturbation into the catalytic core, we have analyzed approximately 200 ns of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. In the absence of crystal packing, the simulated G76 fluctuates between several conformations, including one wherein G76 establishes a perpendicular base quadruplet in the major groove of the adjacent P1 stem. Second-site mutagenesis experiments suggest that the identity of the nucleotide in position 76 (N76) indeed contributes to the catalytic activity of a trans-acting HDV ribozyme through its capacity for hydrogen bonding with P1. By contrast, in the cis-cleaving genomic ribozyme the functional relevance of N76 is less pronounced and not correlated with the P1 sequence. Terbium(III) footprinting and additional MD show that the activity differences between N76 mutants of this ribozyme are related instead to changes in average conformation and modified cross-correlations in the trefoil turn.  相似文献   

5.
The two forms of the hepatitis delta virus ribozyme are derived from the genomic and antigenomic RNA strands of the human hepatitis delta virus (HDV), where they serve a crucial role in pathogen replication by catalyzing site-specific self-cleavage reactions. The HDV ribozyme requires divalent metal ions for formation of its tertiary structure, consisting of a tight double-nested pseudoknot, and for efficient self- (or cis-) cleavage. Comparison of recently solved crystal structures of the cleavage precursor and 3' product indicates that a significant conformational switch is required for catalysis by the genomic HDV ribozyme. Here, we have used the lanthanide metal ion terbium(III) to footprint the precursor and product solution structures of the cis-acting antigenomic HDV ribozyme. Inhibitory Tb(3+) binds with high affinity to similar sites on RNA as Mg(2+) and subsequently promotes slow backbone scission. We find subtle, yet significant differences in the terbium(III) footprinting pattern between the precursor and product forms of the antigenomic HDV ribozyme, consistent with differences in conformation as observed in the crystal structures of the genomic ribozyme. In addition, UV melting profiles provide evidence for a less tight tertiary structure in the precursor. In both the precursor and product we observe high-affinity terbium(III) binding sites in joining sequence J4/2 (Tb(1/2) approximately 4 microM) and loop L3, which are key structural components forming the catalytic core of the HDV ribozyme, as well as in several single-stranded regions such as J1/2 and the L4 tetraloop (Tb(1/2) approximately 50 microM). Sensitized luminescence spectroscopy confirms that there are at least two affinity classes of Tb(3+) binding sites. Our results thus demonstrate that a significant conformational change accompanies catalysis in the antigenomic HDV ribozyme in solution, similar to the catalytic conformational switch observed in crystals of the genomic form, and that structural and perhaps catalytic metal ions bind close to the catalytic core.  相似文献   

6.
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozyme is a member of the class of small, self-cleaving catalytic RNAs found in a wide range of genomes from HDV to human. Both pre- and post-catalysis (precursor and product) crystal structures of the cis-acting genomic HDV ribozyme have been determined. These structures, together with extensive solution probing, have suggested that a significant conformational change accompanies catalysis. A recent crystal structure of a trans-acting precursor, obtained at low pH and by molecular replacement from the previous product conformation, conforms to the product, raising the possibility that it represents an activated conformer past the conformational change. Here, using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), we discovered that cleavage of this ribozyme at physiological pH is accompanied by a structural lengthening in magnitude comparable to previous trans-acting HDV ribozymes. Conformational heterogeneity observed by FRET in solution appears to have been removed upon crystallization. Analysis of a total of 1.8 µsec of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations showed that the crystallographically unresolved cleavage site conformation is likely correctly modeled after the hammerhead ribozyme, but that crystal contacts and the removal of several 2′-oxygens near the scissile phosphate compromise catalytic in-line fitness. A cis-acting version of the ribozyme exhibits a more dynamic active site, while a G-1 residue upstream of the scissile phosphate favors poor fitness, allowing us to rationalize corresponding changes in catalytic activity. Based on these data, we propose that the available crystal structures of the HDV ribozyme represent intermediates on an overall rugged RNA folding free-energy landscape.  相似文献   

7.
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV), an infectious human pathogen and satellite of hepatitis B virus, leads to intensified disease symptoms, including progression to liver cirrhosis. Both the circular RNA genome of HDV and its complementary antigenome contain the same cis-cleaving catalytic RNA motif that plays a crucial role in virus replication. Previously, the high-resolution crystal structure of the product form of a cis-acting genomic HDV ribozyme has been determined, while a trans-acting version of the ribozyme was used to dissect the cleavage reaction pathway. Using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) on a synthetic trans-cleaving form of the ribozyme, we are able to directly observe substrate binding (at a rate constant k(on) of 7.8 x 10(6) M(-1) min(-1) at pH 7.5, 11 mM MgCl(2), and 25 degrees C) and dissociation (at 0.34 min(-1)). Steady-state and time-resolved FRET experiments in solution and in nondenaturing gels reveal that the substrate (precursor) complex is slightly more compact (by approximately 3 A) than the free ribozyme, yet becomes significantly extended (by approximately 15 A) upon cleavage and product complex formation. We also find that trans cleavage is characterized by a high transition-state entropy (-26 eu). We propose that the significant global conformational change that we observe between the precursor and product structures occurs on the reaction trajectory into a constrained product complex-like transition state. Our observations may present the structural basis of the recently described utilization of intrinsic substrate binding energy to the overall catalytic rate enhancement by the trans-acting HDV ribozyme.  相似文献   

8.
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozyme is a self-cleaving RNA enzyme involved in the replication of a human pathogen, the hepatitis delta virus. Recent crystal structures of the precursor and product of self-cleavage, together with detailed kinetic analyses, have led to hypotheses on the catalytic strategies employed by the HDV ribozyme. We report molecular dynamics (MD) simulations (approximately 120 ns total simulation time) to test the plausibility that specific conformational rearrangements are involved in catalysis. Site-specific self-cleavage requires cytidine in position 75 (C75). A precursor simulation with unprotonated C75 reveals a rather weak dynamic binding of C75 in the catalytic pocket with spontaneous, transient formation of a H-bond between U-1(O2') and C75(N3). This H-bond would be required for C75 to act as the general base. Upon protonation in the precursor, C75H+ has a tendency to move towards its product location and establish a firm H-bonding network within the catalytic pocket. However, a C75H+(N3)-G1(O5') H-bond, which would be expected if C75 acted as a general acid catalyst, is not observed on the present simulation timescale. The adjacent loop L3 is relatively dynamic and may serve as a flexible structural element, possibly gated by the closing U20.G25 base-pair, to facilitate a conformational switch induced by a protonated C75H+. L3 also controls the electrostatic environment of the catalytic core, which in turn may modulate C75 base strength and metal ion binding. We find that a distant RNA tertiary interaction involving a protonated cytidine (C41) becomes unstable when left unprotonated, leading to disruptive conformational rearrangements adjacent to the catalytic core. A Na ion temporarily compensates for the loss of the protonated hydrogen bond, which is strikingly consistent with the experimentally observed synergy between low pH and high Na+ concentrations in mediating residual self-cleavage of the HDV ribozyme in the absence of divalents.  相似文献   

9.
The hairpin ribozyme is a small endonucleolytic RNA motif with potential for targeted RNA inactivation. It optimally cleaves substrates containing the sequence 5'-GU-3' immediately 5' of G. Previously, we have shown that tertiary structure docking of its two domains is an essential step in the reaction pathway of the hairpin ribozyme. Here we show, combining biochemical and fluorescence structure and function probing techniques, that any mutation of the substrate base U leads to a docked RNA fold, yet decreases cleavage activity. The docked mutant complex shares with the wild-type complex a common interdomain distance as measured by time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) as well as the same solvent-inaccessible core as detected by hydroxyl-radical protection; hence, the mutant complex appears nativelike. FRET experiments also indicate that mutant docking is kinetically more complex, yet with an equilibrium shifted toward the docked conformation. Using 2-aminopurine as a site-specific fluorescent probe in place of the wild-type U, a local structural rearrangement in the substrate is observed. This substrate straining accompanies global domain docking and involves unstacking of the base and restriction of its conformational dynamics, as detected by time-resolved 2-aminopurine fluorescence spectroscopy. These data appear to invoke a mechanism of functional interference by a single base mutation, in which the ribozyme-substrate complex becomes trapped in a nativelike fold preceding the chemical transition state.  相似文献   

10.
Shih Ih  Been MD 《The EMBO journal》2001,20(17):4884-4891
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozymes employ multiple catalytic strategies to achieve overall rate enhancement of RNA cleavage. These strategies include general acid-base catalysis by a cytosine side chain and involvement of divalent metal ions. Here we used a trans-acting form of the antigenomic ribozyme to examine the contribution of the 5' sequence in the substrate to HDV ribozyme catalysis. The cleavage rate constants increased for substrates with 5' sequence alterations that reduced ground-state binding to the ribozyme. Quantitatively, a plot of activation free energy of chemical conversion versus Gibb's free energy of substrate binding revealed a linear relationship with a slope of -1. This relationship is consistent with a model in which components of the substrate immediately 5' to the cleavage site in the HDV ribozyme-substrate complex destabilize ground-state binding. The intrinsic binding energy derived from the ground-state destabilization could contribute up to 2 kcal/mol toward the total 8.5 kcal/mol reduction in activation free energy for RNA cleavage catalyzed by the HDV ribozyme.  相似文献   

11.
Golden BL 《Biochemistry》2011,50(44):9424-9433
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozyme and related RNAs are widely dispersed in nature. This RNA is a small nucleolytic ribozyme that self-cleaves to generate products with a 2',3'-cyclic phosphate and a free 5'-hydroxyl. Although small ribozymes are dependent on divalent metal ions under biologically relevant buffer conditions, they function in the absence of divalent metal ions at high ionic strengths. This characteristic suggests that a functional group within the covalent structure of small ribozymes is facilitating catalysis. Structural and mechanistic analyses have demonstrated that the HDV ribozyme active site contains a cytosine with a perturbed pK(a) that serves as a general acid to protonate the leaving group. The reaction of the HDV ribozyme in monovalent cations alone never approaches the velocity of the Mg(2+)-dependent reaction, and there is significant biochemical evidence that a Mg(2+) ion participates directly in catalysis. A recent crystal structure of the HDV ribozyme revealed that there is a metal binding pocket in the HDV ribozyme active site. Modeling of the cleavage site into the structure suggested that this metal ion can interact directly with the scissile phosphate and the nucleophile. In this manner, the Mg(2+) ion can serve as a Lewis acid, facilitating deprotonation of the nucleophile and stabilizing the conformation of the cleavage site for in-line attack of the nucleophile at the scissile phosphate. This catalytic strategy had previously been observed only in much larger ribozymes. Thus, in contrast to most large and small ribozymes, the HDV ribozyme uses two distinct catalytic strategies in its cleavage reaction.  相似文献   

12.
Engineered “aptazymes” fuse in vitro selected aptamers with ribozymes to create allosteric enzymes as biosensing components and artificial gene regulatory switches through ligand-induced conformational rearrangement and activation. By contrast, activating ligand is employed as an enzymatic cofactor in the only known natural aptazyme, the glmS ribozyme, which is devoid of any detectable conformational rearrangements. To better understand this difference in biosensing strategy, we monitored by single molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and 2-aminopurine (AP) fluorescence the global conformational dynamics and local base (un)stacking, respectively, of a prototypical drug-sensing aptazyme, built from a theophylline aptamer and the hammerhead ribozyme. Single molecule FRET reveals that a catalytically active state with distal Stems I and III of the hammerhead ribozyme is accessed both in the theophylline-bound and, if less frequently, in the ligand-free state. The resultant residual activity (leakage) in the absence of theophylline contributes to a limited dynamic range of the aptazyme. In addition, site-specific AP labeling shows that rapid local theophylline binding to the aptamer domain leads to only slow allosteric signal transduction into the ribozyme core. Our findings allow us to rationalize the suboptimal biosensing performance of the engineered compared to the natural aptazyme and to suggest improvement strategies. Our single molecule FRET approach also monitors in real time the previously elusive equilibrium docking dynamics of the hammerhead ribozyme between several inactive conformations and the active, long-lived, Y-shaped conformer.  相似文献   

13.
A trans-acting system has been designed in order to explore the three-dimensional structure of the anti-genomic HDV ribozyme. In this system, the substrate (SANT) is associated by base-pairing to the catalytic RNA (RzANT) forming helix H1. RzANT is able to cleave specifically the RNA substrate as well as a deoxysubstrate analogue containing a single ribocytidine at the cleavage site (position -1). This demonstrates that such deoxysubstrate analogues are valuable tools for structural studies of this ribozyme domain. They form however weak complexes with RzANT which is due in part to their ability to fold as stable hairpins unlike the RNA substrate. Using a set of full deoxy or of mixed deoxy-ribo substrate analogues site-specific substituted with the photoaffinity probe deoxy-4-thiouridine, ds4U, at a defined position, we were able to determine a number of long range contacts between the substrate and the ribozyme core. In particular, crosslinks between substrate position -1 and position -2 with residues C15, G19 and C67, thought to be involved in the ribozyme catalytic site, were detected. A three dimensional model of the antigenomic ribozyme system, derived from the structure proposed by Tanner et al. [Current Biol (1994) 4, 488-498] for the genomic system was constructed. Apart from residue deletion or insertion, only minor accommodations were needed to account for all photocrosslinks but one which is attributed to an alternative hybridization of the substrate with the ribozyme. This study therefore further supports the structure proposed by Tanner et al. for the pseudoknot model.  相似文献   

14.
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozyme uses both metal ion and nucleobase catalysis in its cleavage mechanism. A reverse G·U wobble was observed in a recent crystal structure of the precleaved state. This unusual base pair positions a Mg(2+) ion to participate in catalysis. Herein, we used molecular dynamics (MD) and X-ray crystallography to characterize the conformation and metal binding characteristics of this base pair in product and precleaved forms. Beginning with a crystal structure of the product form, we observed formation of the reverse G·U wobble during MD trajectories. We also demonstrated that this base pair is compatible with the diffraction data for the product-bound state. During MD trajectories of the product form, Na(+) ions interacted with the reverse G·U wobble in the RNA active site, and a Mg(2+) ion, introduced in certain trajectories, remained bound at this site. Beginning with a crystal structure of the precleaved form, the reverse G·U wobble with bound Mg(2+) remained intact during MD simulations. When we removed Mg(2+) from the starting precleaved structure, Na(+) ions interacted with the reverse G·U wobble. In support of the computational results, we observed competition between Na(+) and Mg(2+) in the precleaved ribozyme crystallographically. Nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann calculations revealed a negatively charged patch near the reverse G·U wobble. This anionic pocket likely serves to bind metal ions and to help shift the pK(a) of the catalytic nucleobase, C75. Thus, the reverse G·U wobble motif serves to organize two catalytic elements, a metal ion and catalytic nucleobase, within the active site of the HDV ribozyme.  相似文献   

15.
The genome of the human hepatitis delta virus (HDV) harbors a self-cleaving catalytic RNA motif, the genomic HDV ribozyme, whose crystal structure shows the dangling nucleotides 5′ of the cleavage site projecting away from the catalytic core. This 5′-sequence contains a clinically conserved U − 1 that we find to be essential for fast cleavage, as the order of activity follows U − 1 > C − 1 > A − 1 > G − 1, with a >25-fold activity loss from U − 1 to G − 1. Terbium(III) footprinting detects conformations for the P1.1 stem, the cleavage site wobble pair and the A-minor motif of the catalytic trefoil turn that depend on the identity of the N − 1 base. The most tightly folded catalytic core, resembling that of the reaction product, is found in the U − 1 wild-type precursor. Molecular dynamics simulations demonstrate that a U − 1 forms the most robust kink around the scissile phosphate, exposing it to the catalytic C75 in a previously unnoticed U-turn motif found also, for example, in the hammerhead ribozyme and tRNAs. Strikingly, we find that the common structural U-turn motif serves distinct functions in the HDV and hammerhead ribozymes.  相似文献   

16.
The natural substrate cleaved by the hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozyme contains a 3',5'-phosphodiester linkage at the cleavage site; however, a 2',5'-linked ribose-phosphate backbone can also be cleaved by both trans-acting and self-cleaving forms of the HDV ribozyme. With substrates containing either linkage, the HDV ribozyme generated 2',3'-cyclic phosphate and 5'-hydroxyl groups suggesting that the mechanisms of cleavage in both cases were by a nucleophilic attack on the phosphorus center by the adjacent hydroxyl group. Divalent metal ion was required for cleavage of either linkage. However, although the 3',5'-linkage was cleaved slightly faster in Ca2+ than in Mg2+, the 2',5'-linkage was cleaved in Mg2+ (or Mn2+) but not Ca2+. This dramatic difference in metal-ion specificity is strongly suggestive of a crucial metal-ion interaction at the active site. In contrast to the HDV ribozymes, cleavage at a 2',5'-phosphodiester bond was not efficiently catalyzed by the hammerhead ribozyme. The relaxed linkage specificity of the HDV ribozymes may be due in part to lack of a rigid binding site for sequences 5' to the cleavage site.  相似文献   

17.
Oyelere AK  Kardon JR  Strobel SA 《Biochemistry》2002,41(11):3667-3675
The Hepatitis Delta Virus (HDV) ribozyme was the first RNA enzyme proposed to use a proton-transfer mechanism for catalysis. Previous biochemical evidence suggested that the genomic HDV ribozyme promotes cis-cleavage using cytosine 75 whose pK(a) is perturbed within the active site. Here we present further biochemical evidence for the involvement of C75 in proton transfer, as well as evidence to support a plausible mechanism for C75 pK(a) perturbation. Nucleotide analogue interference mapping (NAIM) experiments with C analogues having altered N3 pK(a)s demonstrate the importance of C75 ionization in the HDV cis-cleavage reaction. pH-dependent interference rescue with C analogues having enhanced N3 acidity indicates that C75 is the only cytidine residue that must be protonated for ribozyme activity. Furthermore, interference analysis with pseudoisocytidine, a charge-neutral mimic of a C with a protonated N3, shows a pattern consistent with proton transfer, possibly from the C75 N3 to the 5'-oxyanion leaving group during the cis-cleavage reaction. Strong pH-independent inhibition of ribozyme function also occurs at C75 with a C analogue that lacks the N4 amino group, implicating the exocyclic amine in critical interactions in the active site. Interactions with the amino group may play an important role in perturbing the C75 N3 pK(a). Protonation of C41 has been proposed to be important for ribozyme activity; however, no interference at C41 was observed in this analogue series, which argues against a functional role for C41 protonation. These data support a model wherein C75 of the genomic HDV ribozyme acts as a general acid during its cis-cleavage reaction, and provide a glimpse into how RNAs, in a manner similar to protein enzymes, might employ local environmental electronic modulation to catalyze reactions.  相似文献   

18.
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozyme is an RNA enzyme from the human pathogenic HDV. Cations play a crucial role in self-cleavage of the HDV ribozyme, by promoting both folding and chemistry. Experimental studies have revealed limited but intriguing details on the location and structural and catalytic functions of metal ions. Here, we analyze a total of approximately 200 ns of explicit-solvent molecular dynamics simulations to provide a complementary atomistic view of the binding of monovalent and divalent cations as well as water molecules to reaction precursor and product forms of the HDV ribozyme. Our simulations find that an Mg2+ cation binds stably, by both inner- and outer-sphere contacts, to the electronegative catalytic pocket of the reaction precursor, in a position to potentially support chemistry. In contrast, protonation of the catalytically involved C75 in the precursor or artificial placement of this Mg2+ into the product structure result in its swift expulsion from the active site. These findings are consistent with a concerted reaction mechanism in which C75 and hydrated Mg2+ act as general base and acid, respectively. Monovalent cations bind to the active site and elsewhere assisted by structurally bridging long-residency water molecules, but are generally delocalized.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
We have reconstituted a group I self-splicing reaction between two RNA molecules with different functional RNA parts: a substrate molecule containing the 5' splice site and a functional internal guide sequence (IGS), and a ribozyme molecule with core structure elements and splice sites but a mutated IGS. The 5' exon of the substrate molecule is ligated in trans to the 3' exon of the ribozyme molecule, suggesting that the deficient IGS in the ribozyme can be replaced by an externally added IGS present on the substrate molecule. This result is different from catalysis mediated by proteins where it is not possible to dissect the specificity of an enzyme from its catalytic activity.  相似文献   

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