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1.
A study was made of the cleavage by M1 RNA and RNase P of a non-tRNA precursor that can serve as a substrate for RNase P from Escherichia coli, namely, the precursor to 4.5 S RNA (p4.5S). The overall efficiency of cleavage of p4.5S by RNase P is similar to that of wild-type tRNA precursors. However, unlike the reaction with wild-type tRNA precursors, the reaction catalyzed by the holoenzyme with p4.5S as substrate has a much lower Km value than that catalyzed by M1 RNA with the same substrate, indicating that the protein subunit plays a crucial role in the recognition of p4.5S. A model hairpin substrate, based on the sequence of p4.5S, is cleaved with greater efficiency than the parent molecule. The 3'-terminal CCC sequence of p4.5 S may be as important for cleavage of this substrate as the 3'-terminal CCA sequence is for cleavage of tRNA precursors.  相似文献   

2.
The role of 2'-hydroxyl groups in a model substrate for RNase P from Escherichia coli was studied using mixed DNA/RNA derivatives of such a substrate. The presence of the 2'-hydroxyl groups of nucleotides at positions -1 and -2 in the leader sequence and at position 1, as well as at the first C in the 3'-terminal CCA sequence, are important but not absolutely essential for efficient cleavage of the substrate by RNase P or its catalytic RNA subunit, M1 RNA. The 2'-hydroxyl groups in the substrate that are important for efficient cleavage also participate in the binding of Mg2+. An all-DNA external guide sequence (EGS) can efficiently render a potential substrate, derived from the model substrate, susceptible to cleavage by the enzyme or its catalytic RNA subunit. Furthermore, both DNA and RNA EGSs turn over during the reaction with RNase P in vitro. The identity of the nucleotide at position 1 in the substrate, the adjacent Mg(2+)-binding site in the leader sequence, and the junction of the single and double-stranded regions are the important elements in the recognition of model substrates, as well as in the identification of the sites of cleavage in those model substrates.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The effect of macrolide antibiotic spiramycin on RNase P holoenzyme and M1 RNA from Escherichia coli was investigated. Ribonuclease P (RNase P) is a ribozyme that is responsible for the maturation of 5' termini of tRNA molecules. Spiramycin revealed a dose-dependent activation on pre-tRNA cleavage by E. coli RNase P holoenzyme and M1 RNA. The K s and V max, as well as the K s(app) and V max(app) values of RNase P holoenzyme and M1 RNA in the presence or absence of spiramycin, were calculated from primary and secondary kinetic plots. It was found that the activity status of RNase P holoenzyme and M1 RNA is improved by the presence of spiramycin 18- and 12-fold, respectively. Primer extension analysis revealed that spiramycin induces a conformational change of the P10/11 structural element of M1 RNA, which is involved in substrate recognition.  相似文献   

5.
Bacterial double-stranded RNA-specific RNase III recognizes the A-form of an RNA helix with little sequence specificity. In contrast, baker yeast RNase III (Rnt1p) selectively recognizes NGNN tetraloops even when they are attached to a B-form DNA helix. To comprehend the general mechanism of RNase III substrate recognition, we mapped the Rnt1p binding signal and directly compared its substrate specificity to that of both Escherichia coli RNase III and fission yeast RNase III (PacI). Rnt1p bound but did not cleave long RNA duplexes without NGNN tetraloops, whereas RNase III indiscriminately cleaved all RNA duplexes. PacI cleaved RNA duplexes with some preferences for NGNN-capped RNA stems under physiological conditions. Hydroxyl radical footprints indicate that Rnt1p specifically interacts with the NGNN tetraloop and its surrounding nucleotides. In contrast, Rnt1p interaction with GAAA-capped hairpins was weak and largely unspecific. Certain duality of substrate recognition was exhibited by PacI but not by bacterial RNase III. E. coli RNase III recognized RNA duplexes longer than 11 bp with little specificity, and no specific features were required for cleavage. On the other hand, PacI cleaved long, but not short, RNA duplexes with little sequence specificity. PacI cleavage of RNA stems shorter than 27 bp was dependent on the presence of an UU-UC internal loop two nucleotides upstream of the cleavage site. These observations suggest that yeast RNase IIIs have two recognition mechanisms, one that uses specific structural features and another that recognizes general features of the A-form RNA helix.  相似文献   

6.
Numerous DNA chemistries for improving oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN)-based RNA targeting have been explored. The majority of the modifications render the ODN/RNA target insensitive to RNase H1. Borano phosphonate ODN's are among the few modifications that are tolerated by RNase H1. To understand the effect of the stereochemistry of the BH(3) modification on the nucleic acid structure and RNase H1 enzyme activity, we have investigated two DNA/RNA hybrids containing either a R(P) or S(P) BH(3) modification by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. T(M) studies show that the stabilities of R(P) and S(P) modified DNA/RNA hybrids are essentially identical (313.8 K) and similar to that of an unmodified control (312.9 K). The similarity is also reflected in the imino proton spectra. To characterize such similar structures, we used a large number of NMR restraints (including dipolar couplings and backbone torsion angles) to determine structural features that were important for RNase H1 activity. The final NMR structures exhibit excellent agreement with the data (total R(x) values of <6%) with helical properties between those of an A and B helix. Subtle backbone variations are observed in the DNA near the modification, while the RNA strands are relatively unperturbed. In the case of the S(P) modification, for which more perturbations are recorded, a slightly narrower minor groove is also obtained. Unique NOE base contacts localize the S(P) BH(3) group in the major groove while the R(P) BH(3) group points away from the DNA. However, this creates a potential clash of the R(P) BH(3) groups with important RNase H1 residues in a complex, while the S(P) BH(3) groups could be tolerated. We therefore predict that on the basis of our NMR structures a fully R(P) BH(3) DNA/RNA hybrid would not be a substrate for RNase H1.  相似文献   

7.
The gene for M1 RNA, the catalytic subunit of RNase P of Escherichia coli, was subjected to random chemical mutagenesis in vitro. Mutations were selected by electrophoresis in denaturing gradient gels. Twenty-seven different mutants of the gene for M1 RNA were selected, and in 24 cases the mutations were identified as single base substitutions. The mutant forms of M1 RNA were analyzed in vitro for catalytic activity in the absence and in the presence of the protein subunit of RNase P (C5 protein). The structure of mutant RNAs was probed by limited digestion with ribonuclease T1; a correlation between reduced catalytic activity of mutant M1 RNAs and perturbations in secondary and tertiary structure was noted in many cases. The results indicate the involvement of specific regions of the M1 RNA molecule in the catalytic function of RNase P, in the binding of the C5 protein, and in substrate binding.  相似文献   

8.
Binding of ribosomes to the 32P-labeled genomic RNA of mengovirus was studied in lysates of mouse L929 and Krebs ascites cells under conditions for initiation of translation. Upon total digestion with RNase T1, the 32P-labeled RNA protected in either 40S or 80S initiation complexes yielded four unique, large oligonucleotides. Each of these oligonucleotides occurred once in the viral RNA molecule. The same four oligonucleotides were recovered from 80S initiation complexes formed in lysates in which unlabeled mengovirus RNA had been translated extensively, indicating that recognition by ribosomes was not modulated detectably by a viral translation product. The recognition of intact, 32P-labeled mengovirus RNA by eucaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF-2) was examined by direct complex formation. Fingerprint analysis of the RNA protected by eIF-2 against RNase T1 digestion yielded three T1 oligonucleotides that were identical to three of the four oligonucleotides protected in either 40S or 80S initiation complexes. A physical map of the large T1 oligonucleotides of the mengovirus RNA molecule was constructed, and the four protected oligonucleotides were found to map internally, within the region between the polycytidylate tract and the 3' end. For either ribosomes or eIF-2, the protected oligonucleotides could not be arranged in a continuous sequence, suggesting that they constitute at least two widely separated domains. These results show that ribosomes recognize and blind to more than a single sequence in mengovirus RNA, located internally in regions that are far removed from the 5' end of the molecule. eIF-2 itself binds with high specificity to mengovirus RNA, recognizing apparently three of the four sequences recognized by ribosomes.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The ribonucleoprotein RNase P is a critical component of metabolism in all known organisms. In Escherichia coli, RNase P processes a vast array of substrates, including precursor-tRNAs and precursor 4. 5S RNA. In order to understand how such catalytic versatility is achieved and how novel catalytic activity can be acquired, we evolve the M1 RNA ribozyme (the catalytic component of E. coli RNase P) in vitro for cleavage of a DNA substrate. In so doing, we probe the consequences of enhancing catalytic activity on a novel substrate and investigate the cost this versatile enzyme pays for molecular adaptation. A total of 25 generations of in vitro evolution yield a population showing more than a 1000-fold increase in DNA substrate cleavage efficiency (kcat/KM) relative to wild-type M1 RNA. This enhancement is accompanied by a significant reduction in the ability of evolved ribozymes to process the ptRNA class of substrates but also a contrasting increase in activity on the p4.5S RNA class of substrates. This change in the catalytic versatility of the evolved ribozymes suggests that the acquired activity comes at the cost of substrate versatility, and indicates that E. coli RNase P catalytic flexibility is maintained in vivo by selection for the processing of multiple substrates. M1 RNA derivatives enhance cleavage of the DNA substrate by accelerating the catalytic step (kcat) of DNA cleavage, although overall processing efficiency is offset by reduced substrate binding. The enhanced ability to cleave a DNA substrate cannot be readily traced to any of the predominant mutations found in the evolved population, and must instead be due to multiple sequence changes dispersed throughout the molecule. This conclusion underscores the difficulty of correlating observed mutations with changes in catalytic behavior, even in simple biological catalysts for which three-dimensional models are available.  相似文献   

11.
Catalytic RNAs are metalloenzymes that require precise coordination of divalent cation cofactors. In RNase P RNA, a conserved structural subdomain that has been implicated in magnesium coordination contains the consensus sequence acAGaRA. Randomization mutagenesis of the analogous sequence in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae nuclear RNase P RNA gene, RPR1, gave viable sequence variants that confer magnesium-correctable growth defects and are defective in magnesium cofactor utilization by the RNase P holoenzyme in vitro. Kinetic analysis of the defective holoenzymes suggests that the primary effects were on catalytic rate, rather than substrate recognition. The possible involvement of this RNA subdomain in catalysis is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Ribonuclease P (RNase P) is involved in regulation of noncoding RNA (ncRNA) expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A hidden-in-reading-frame antisense-1 (HRA1) RNA in S. cerevisiae, which belongs to a class of ncRNAs located in the antisense strand to verified protein coding regions, was cloned for further use in RNase P assays. Escherichia coli RNase P assays in vitro of HRA1 RNA show two cleavage sites, one major and one minor in terms of rates. The same result was observed with a partially purified S. cerevisiae RNase P activity, both at 30 degrees C and 37 degrees C. These latter cells are normally grown at 30 degrees C. Predictions of the secondary structure of HRA1 RNA in silico show the cleavage sites are canonical RNase P recognition sites. A relatively small amount of endogenous HRA1 RNA was identified by RT-PCR in yeast cells. The endogenous HRA1 RNA is increased in amount in strains that are deficient in RNase P activity. A deletion of 10 nucleotides in the HRA1 gene that does not overlap with the gene coding for a protein (DRS2) in the sense strand shows no defective growth in galactose or glucose. These data indicate that HRA1 RNA is a substrate for RNase P and does not appear as a direct consequence of separate regulatory effects of the enzyme on ncRNAs.  相似文献   

14.
Seven sequence-specific ribozymes (M1GS RNAs) derived in vitro from the catalytic RNA subunit of Escherichia coli RNase P and targeting the mRNAs transcribed by the UL54 gene encoding the DNA polymerase of human cytomegalovirus were screened from 11 ribozymes that were designed based on four rules: (1) the NCCA-3′ terminal must be unpaired with the substrate; (2) the guide sequence (GS) must be at least 12 nt in length; (3) the eighth nucleotide must be U, counting from the site-1; and (4) around the cleavage site, the sites -1/ 1/ 2 must be U/G/C or C/G/C. Further investigation of the factors affecting the cleavage effect and the optimal ratio for M1GS/substrate was carried out. It was determined that the optimal ratio for M1GS/substrate was 2:1 and too much M1GS led to substrate degrading. As indicated above, several M1GS that cleaved HCMV UL54 RNA segments in vitro were successfully designed and constructed.Our studies support the use of ribozyme M1GS as antisense molecules to silence HCMV mRNA in vitro, and using the selection procedure as a general approach for the engineering of RNase P ribozymes.  相似文献   

15.
A synthetic tRNA precursor analog containing the structural elements of Escherichia coli tRNA(Phe) was characterized as a substrate for E. coli ribonuclease P and for M1 RNA, the catalytic RNA subunit. Processing of the synthetic precursor exhibited a Mg2+ dependence quite similar to that of natural tRNA precursors such as E. coli tRNA(Tyr) precursor. It was found that Sr2+, Ca2+, and Ba2+ ions promoted processing of the dimeric precursor at Mg2+ concentrations otherwise insufficient to support processing; very similar behavior was noted for E. coli tRNA(Tyr). As noted previously for natural tRNA precursors, the absence of the 3'-terminal CA sequence in the synthetic precursor diminished the facility of processing of this substrate by RNase P and M1 RNA. A study of the Mg2+ dependence of processing of the synthetic tRNA dimeric substrate radiolabeled between C75 and A76 provided unequivocal evidence for an alteration in the actual site of processing by E. coli RNase P as a function of Mg2+ concentration. This property was subsequently demonstrated to obtain (Carter, B. J., Vold, B.S., and Hecht, S. M. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 7100-7103) for a mutant Bacillus subtilis tRNAHis precursor containing a potential A-C base pair at the end of the acceptor stem.  相似文献   

16.
We compared cleavage efficiencies of mono-molecular and bipartite model RNAs as substrates for RNase P RNAs (M1 RNAs) and holoenzymes from E. coli and Thermus thermophilus, an extreme thermophilic eubacterium. Acceptor stem and T arm of pre-tRNA substrates are essential recognition elements for both enzymes. Impairing coaxial stacking of acceptor and T stems and omitting the T loop led to reduced cleavage efficiencies. Small model substrates were less efficiently cleaved by M1 RNA and RNase P from T. thermophilus than by the corresponding E. coli activities. Competition kinetics and gel retardation studies showed that truncated tRNA substrates are less tightly bound by RNase P and M1 RNA from both bacteria. Our data further indicate that (pre-)tRNA interacts stronger with E. coli than T. thermophilus M1 RNA. Thus, low cleavage efficiencies of truncated model substrates by T. thermophilus RNase P or M1 RNA could be explained by a critical loss of important contact points between enzyme and substrate. In addition, acceptor stem--T arm substrates, composed of two synthetic RNA fragments, have been designed to mimic internal cleavage of any target RNA molecule available for base pairing.  相似文献   

17.
Base pairing between Escherichia coli RNase P RNA and its substrate.   总被引:14,自引:2,他引:12       下载免费PDF全文
Base pairing between the substrate and the ribozyme has previously been shown to be essential for catalytic activity of most ribozymes, but not for RNase P RNA. By using compensatory mutations we have demonstrated the importance of Watson-Crick complementarity between two well-conserved residues in Escherichia coli RNase P RNA (M1 RNA), G292 and G293, and two residues in the substrate, +74C and +75C (the first and second C residues in CCA). We suggest that these nucleotides base pair (G292/+75C and G293/+74C) in the ribozyme-substrate complex and as a consequence the amino acid acceptor stem of the precursor is partly unfolded. Thus, a function of M1 RNA is to anchor the substrate through this base pairing, thereby exposing the cleavage site such that cleavage is accomplished at the correct position. Our data also suggest possible base pairing between U294 in M1 RNA and the discriminator base at position +73 of the precursor. Our findings are also discussed in terms of evolution.  相似文献   

18.
A K Knap  D Wesolowski  S Altman 《Biochimie》1990,72(11):779-790
Certain nucleotides in M1 RNA, the catalytic RNA subunit of RNase P from E coli, are protected from chemical modification when M1 RNA forms complexes with tRNA precursor molecules (ES complexes). Many of these nucleotides are important in the formation of the Michaelis complex. In the presence of tRNA precursor molecules, the pattern of protection from chemical modification of a region in M1 RNA that resembles the E site in 23S rRNA is similar to the pattern of protection of the E site in the presence of deacylated tRNA. In the complex with the RNA enzyme, more nucleotides in the substrate become accessible to modification, an indication that the substrate is in an unfolded conformation under these conditions.  相似文献   

19.
We have detected by nucleotide analog interference mapping (NAIM) purine N7 functional groups in Escherichia coli RNase P RNA that are important for tRNA binding under moderate salt conditions (0.1 M Mg2+, 0.1 M NH4+). The majority of identified positions represent highly or universally conserved nucleotides. Our assay system allowed us, for the first time, to identify c7-deaza interference effects at two G residues (G292, G306). Several c7-deazaadenine interference effects (A62, A65, A136, A249, A334, A351) have also been identified in other studies performed at very different salt concentrations, either selecting for substrate binding in the presence of 0.025 M Ca2+ and 1 M NH4+ or self-cleavage of a ptRNA-RNase P RNA conjugate in the presence of 3 M NH4+ or Na+. This indicates that these N7 functional groups play a key role in the structural organization of ribozyme-substrate and -product complexes. We further observed that a c7-deaza modification at A76 of tRNA interferes with tRNA binding to and ptRNA processing by E. coli RNase P RNA. This finding combined with the strong c7-deaza interference at G292 of RNase P RNA supports a model in which substrate and product binding to E. coli RNase P RNA involves the formation of intermolecular base triples (A258-G292-C75 and G291-G259-A76).  相似文献   

20.
M1 RNA, the RNA subunit of ribonuclease P from Escherichia coli, can under certain conditions catalytically cleave precursors to tRNA in the absence of C5, the protein moiety of RNase P. M1 RNA itself is not cleaved during the reaction, nor does it form any covalent bonds with its substrate. Only magnesium and, to a lesser extent, manganese ions can function at the catalytic center of M1 RNA. Several other ions either inhibit the binding of magnesium ion at the active site or function as structural counterions. The reaction rate of cleavage of precursors to tRNAs by M1 RNA is enhanced in the presence of poly-(ethylene glycol) or 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol. Many aspects of the reaction catalyzed by M1 RNA are compatible with a mechanism in which phosphodiester bond cleavage is mediated by metal ion.  相似文献   

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