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1.
Multiple substrate binding sites in the ribozyme from Bacillus subtilis RNase P. 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
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The ribozyme from Bacillus subtilis RNase P (P RNA) recognizes an RNA structure consisting of the acceptor stem and the T stem-loop of tRNA substrates. An in vitro selection experiment was carried out to obtain potential RNA substrates that may interact with the P RNA differently from the tRNA substrate. Using a P RNA-derived ribozyme that contains most, if not all, of the structural elements thought to be involved in active site formation of P RNA, but lacks the putative binding site for the T stem-loop of tRNA, a single RNA substrate was isolated after nine rounds of selection. This RNA is a competent substrate for the ribozyme used in selection as well as for the full-length P RNA. Biochemical characterization shows that this selected substrate interacts at a different site compared with the tRNA substrate. The selection experiment also identified a self-cleaving RNA seemingly different from other known ribozymes. These results indicate that a biological ribozyme can contain different binding sites for different RNA substrates. This alternate binding site model suggests a simple mechanism for evolving existing ribozymes to recognize RNA substrates of diverse structures. 相似文献
2.
Ribonuclease P (RNase P) is a ribozyme required for the 5' maturation of all tRNA. RNase P and the ribosome are the only known ribozymes conserved in all organisms. We set out to determine whether this ribonucleoprotein enzyme interacts with other cellular components, which may imply other functions for this conserved ribozyme. Incubation of the Bacillus subtilis RNase P holoenzyme with fractionated B. subtilis cellular extracts and purified ribosomal subunits results in the formation of a gel-shifted complex with the 30S ribosomal subunit at a binding affinity of approximately 40 nM in 0.1 M NH(4)Cl and 10 mM MgCl(2). The complex does not form with the RNase P RNA alone and is disrupted by a mRNA mimic polyuridine, but is stable in the presence of high concentrations of mature tRNA. Endogenous RNase P can also be detected in the 30S ribosomal fraction. Cleavage of a pre-tRNA substrate by the RNase P holoenzyme remains the same in the presence of the 30S ribosome, but the cleavage of an artificial non-tRNA substrate is inhibited eightfold. Hydroxyl radical protection and chemical modification identify several protected residues located in a highly conserved region in the RNase P RNA. A single mutation within this region significantly reduces binding, providing strong support on the specificity of the RNase P-30S ribosome complex. Our results also suggest that the dimeric form of the RNase P is primarily involved in 30S ribosome binding. We discuss several models on a potential function of the RNase P-30S ribosome complex. 相似文献
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4.
Ion dependence of the Bacillus subtilis RNase P reaction 总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22
The properties of the Bacillus subtilis RNase P are characterized with regard to the types and concentrations of monovalent and divalent ions required to potentiate precursor tRNA cleavage by the protein-RNA holoenzyme and the catalytic RNA alone. The ionic dependence of the RNase P RNA-catalyzed reaction in part seems due to a requirement for ion shielding between substrate and catalytic RNAs. The RNase P protein, which binds to RNA nonspecifically and tightly, likely serves, in part, as a cation screen. However, the character of the ion dependence of the RNA catalysis, the inhibition by high SO2-4 concentration, and potentiation by solvents suggest that RNA conformational transition may be involved in the reaction. It is proposed that the reason for catalysis by RNA in the RNase P reaction may be a requirement for fluidity in the structure of the catalyst, so that it can accommodate many tRNA substrates, which vary in their structural details. 相似文献
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6.
We have partially characterised an alpha4-fucosyltransferase (alpha4-FucT) from Vaccinium myrtillus, which catalysed the biosynthesis of the Lewis(a) adhesion determinant. The enzyme was stable up to 50 degrees C. The optimum pH was 7.0, both in the presence and in the absence of Mn(2+). The enzyme was inhibited by Mn(2+) and Co(2+), and showed resistance towards inhibition with N-ethylmaleimide. It transferred fucose to N-acetylglucosamine in the type I Galbeta3GlcNAc motif from oligosaccharides linked to a hydrophobic tail and glycoproteins (containing the type I motif). Sialylated oligosaccharides containing the type II Galbeta4GlcNAc motif were not acceptors. The catalytic mechanism of the plant alpha4-FucT possibly involves a His residue, and it must have arisen by convergent evolution relative to its mammalian counterparts. 相似文献
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8.
Processing of multimeric precursor tRNAs from Bacillus subtilis by the catalytic RNA component of RNase P was studied in vitro. Previous studies on processing by either Escherichia coli or B. subtilis RNase P-RNA utilized monomeric or dimeric substrates. In the experiments described here, a multimeric precursor tRNA containing six complete tRNA sequences and the partial sequence of a seventh were used. One species did not encode the 3'-terminal CCA sequence and the partial tRNA lacked 3' nucleotides and could form only a 3-base pair instead of a 7-base paired aminoacyl stem. Two species had the potential for forming extended base-paired aminoacyl stems. Processing was studied under varied ionic conditions. Chemical sequencing of the products showed that the RNase P-RNA cleavage produced the proper mature 5' termini for all of the six complete tRNA species, but no 5'-cleavage of the partial species was observed. At suboptimal ionic concentrations, the two species capable of forming extended base-paired aminoacyl stems were not observed. Thus, encoding of the 3'-CCA in a tRNA species is not critical for processing, but the formation of an aminoacyl stem with more than 3 base pairs is necessary. Particularly noteworthy was the observation that all species of the multimeric precursor could be processed at significantly lower ionic conditions than monomeric precursors used previously by ourselves and others. However, a single precursor species produced from the multimeric precursor could also be processed at the same lower ionic conditions as the multimeric precursor. This demonstrates that precursor tRNA species can differ widely in their ionic requirements for processing and that, to a large extent, the optimal conditions of MgCl2 or NH4Cl are a function of the substrate which is used. 相似文献
9.
The RNA subunit of bacterial ribonuclease P (RNase P) requires high concentrations of magnesium ions for efficient catalysis of tRNA 5'-maturation in vitro. The protein component of RNase P, required for cleavage of precursor tRNA in vivo, enhances pre-tRNA binding by directly contacting the 5'-leader sequence. Using a combination of transient kinetics and equilibrium binding measurements, we now demonstrate that the protein component of RNase P also facilitates catalysis by specifically increasing the affinities of magnesium ions bound to the RNase P x pre-tRNA(Asp) complex. The protein component does not alter the number or apparent affinity of magnesium ions that are either diffusely associated with the RNase P RNA polyanion or required for binding mature tRNA(Asp). Nor does the protein component alter the pH dependence of pre-tRNA(Asp) cleavage catalyzed by RNase P, providing further evidence that the protein component does not directly stabilize the catalytic transition state. However, the protein subunit does increase the affinities of at least four magnesium sites that stabilize pre-tRNA binding and, possibly, catalysis. Furthermore, this stabilizing effect is coupled to the P protein/5'-leader contact in the RNase P holoenzyme x pre-tRNA complex. These results suggest that the protein component enhances the magnesium affinity of the RNase P x pre-tRNA complex indirectly by binding and positioning pre-tRNA. Furthermore, RNase P is inhibited by cobalt hexammine (K(I) = 0.11 +/- 0.01 mM) while magnesium, manganese, cobalt, and zinc compete with cobalt hexammine to activate RNase P. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that catalysis by RNase P requires at least one metal-water ligand or one inner-sphere metal contact. 相似文献
10.
The RNA component of bacterial ribonuclease P (RNase P) binds to substrate pre-tRNAs with high affinity and catalyzes site-specific phosphodiester bond hydrolysis to generate the mature tRNA 5' end. Herein we describe the use of biotinylated pre-tRNA substrates to isolate RNase P ribozyme-substrate complexes for nucleotide analogue interference mapping of ribozyme base functional groups involved in substrate recognition. By using a series of adenosine base analogues tagged with phosphorothioate substitutions, we identify specific chemical groups involved in substrate binding. Only 10 adenosines in the Escherichia coli ribozyme show significant sensitivity to interference: A65, A66, A136, A232-234, A248, A249, A334, and A347. Most of these adenosine positions are universally conserved among all bacterial RNase P RNAs; however, not all conserved adenosines are sensitive to analogue substitution. Importantly, all but one of the sensitive nucleotides are located at positions of intermolecular cross-linking between the ribozyme and the substrate. One site of interference that did not correlate with available structural data involved A136 in J11/12. To confirm the generality of the results, we repeated the interference analysis of J11/12 in the Bacillus subtilis RNase P ribozyme, which differs significantly in overall secondary structure. Notably, the B. subtilis ribozyme shows an identical interference pattern at the position (A191) that is homologous to A136. Furthermore, mutation of A136 in the E. coli ribozyme gives rise to a measurable increase in the equilibrium binding constant for the ribozyme-substrate interaction, while mutation of a nearby conserved nucleotide (A132) that is not sensitive to analogue incorporation does not. These results strongly support direct participation of nucleotides in the P4, P11, J5/15, and J18/2 regions of ribozyme structure in pre-tRNA binding and implicate an additional region, J11/12, as involved in substrate recognition. In aggregate, the interference results provide a detailed chemical picture of how the conserved nucleotides adjacent to the pre-tRNA substrate contribute to substrate binding and provide a framework for subsequent identification of the specific roles of these chemical groups in substrate recognition. 相似文献
11.
Nuclease footprint analyses of the interactions between RNase P ribozyme and a model mRNA substrate. 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
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RNase P ribozyme cleaves an RNA helix substrate which resembles the acceptor stem and T-stem structures of its natural tRNA substrate. By linking the ribozyme covalently to a sequence (guide sequence) complementary to a target RNA, the catalytic RNA can be converted into a sequence-specific ribozyme, M1GS RNA. We have previously shown that M1GS RNA can efficiently cleave the mRNA sequence encoding thymidine kinase (TK) of herpes simplex virus 1. In this study, a footprint procedure using different nucleases was carried out to map the regions of a M1GS ribozyme that potentially interact with the TK mRNA substrate. The ribozyme regions that are protected from nuclease degradation in the presence of the TK mRNA substrate include those that interact with the acceptor stem and T-stem, the 3' terminal CCA sequence and the cleavage site of a tRNA substrate. However, some of the protected regions (e.g. P13 and P14) are unique and not among those protected in the presence of a tRNA substrate. Identification of the regions that interact with a mRNA substrate will allow us to study how M1GS RNA recognizes a mRNA substrate and facilitate the development of mRNA-cleaving ribozymes for gene-targeting applications. 相似文献
12.
The bacterial RNase P holoenzyme catalyzes the formation of the mature 5′-end of tRNAs and is composed of an RNA and a protein subunit. Among the two folding domains of the RNase P RNA, the catalytic domain (C-domain) contains the active site of this ribozyme. We investigated specific binding of the Bacillus subtilis C-domain with the B.subtilis RNase P protein and examined the catalytic activity of this C-domain–P protein complex. The C-domain forms a specific complex with the P protein with a binding constant of ~0.1 µM. The C-domain–P protein complex and the holoenzyme are equally efficient in cleaving single-stranded RNA (~0.9 min–1 at pH 7.8) and substrates with a hairpin–loop 3′ to the cleavage site (~40 min–1). The holoenzyme reaction is much more efficient with a pre-tRNA substrate, binding at least 100-fold better and cleaving 10–500 times more efficiently. These results demonstrate that the RNase P holoenzyme is functionally constructed in three parts. The catalytic domain alone contains the active site, but has little specificity and affinity for most substrates. The specificity and affinity for the substrate is generated by either the specificity domain of RNase P RNA binding to a T stem–loop-like hairpin or RNase P protein binding to a single-stranded RNA. This modular construction may be exploited to obtain RNase P-based ribonucleoprotein complexes with altered substrate specificity. 相似文献
13.
Talfournier F Stines-Chaumeil C Branlant G 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2011,286(25):21971-21981
Methylmalonate-semialdehyde dehydrogenase (MSDH) belongs to the CoA-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase subfamily. It catalyzes the NAD-dependent oxidation of methylmalonate semialdehyde (MMSA) to propionyl-CoA via the acylation and deacylation steps. MSDH is the only member of the aldehyde dehydrogenase superfamily that catalyzes a β-decarboxylation process in the deacylation step. Recently, we demonstrated that the β-decarboxylation is rate-limiting and occurs before CoA attack on the thiopropionyl enzyme intermediate. Thus, this prevented determination of the transthioesterification kinetic parameters. Here, we have addressed two key aspects of the mechanism as follows: 1) the molecular basis for recognition of the carboxylate of MMSA; and 2) how CoA binding modulates its reactivity. We substituted two invariant arginines, Arg-124 and Arg-301, by Leu. The second-order rate constant for the acylation step for both mutants was decreased by at least 50-fold, indicating that both arginines are essential for efficient MMSA binding through interactions with the carboxylate group. To gain insight into the transthioesterification, we substituted MMSA with propionaldehyde, as both substrates lead to the same thiopropionyl enzyme intermediate. This allowed us to show the following: 1) the pK(app) of CoA decreases by ~3 units upon binding to MSDH in the deacylation step; and 2) the catalytic efficiency of the transthioesterification is increased by at least 10(4)-fold relative to a chemical model. Moreover, we observed binding of CoA to the acylation complex, supporting a CoA-binding site distinct from that of NAD(H). 相似文献
14.
RNase P from Bacillus subtilis cleaves in vitro the adenine riboswitch upstream of pbuE, which codes for an adenine efflux pump. The guanine riboswitch, encoded upstream of xpt-pbuX operon, is not cleaved. The cleavage sites do not occur at any predicted structures that should be recognized by RNase P in the theoretical model of the adenine riboswitch. However, it is possible to draw alternative secondary structure models that match the apparent requirements for RNase P substrates at these cleavage sites. Support for these models is provided by appropriate mutagenesis experiments. Adenine showed no effect on the cleavage in vitro of the pbuE adenine riboswitch by RNase P holoenzyme from B. subtilis. The results of genetic experiments performed in B. subtilis support the cleavage of adenine riboswitch by RNase P in vivo and suggest that it induces the stabilization of pbuE mRNA under normal conditions. 相似文献
15.
Multiple binding modes of substrate to the catalytic RNA subunit of RNase P from Escherichia coli.
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M1 RNA that contained 4'-thiouridine was photochemically cross-linked to different substrates and to a product of the reaction it governs. The locations of the cross-links in these photochemically induced complexes were identified. The cross-links indicated that different substrates share some contacts but have distinct binding modes to M1 RNA. The binding of some substrates also results in a substrate-dependent conformational change in the enzymatic RNA, as evidenced by the appearance of an M1 RNA intramolecular cross-link. The identification of the cross-links between M1 RNA and product indicate that they are shared with only one of the three cross-linked E-S complexes that were identified, an indication of noncompetitive inhibition by the product. We also examined whether the cross-linked complexes between M1 RNA and substrate(s) or product are altered in the presence of the enzyme's protein cofactor (C5 protein) and in the presence of different concentrations of divalent metal ions. C5 protein enhanced the yield of certain M1 RNA-substrate cross-linked complexes for both wild-type M1 RNA and a deletion mutant of M1 RNA (delta[273-281]), but not for the M1 RNA-product complex. High concentrations of Mg2+ increased the yield of all M1 RNA-substrate complexes but not the M1 RNA-product complex. 相似文献
16.
In this study, the thermodynamic properties of substrate-ribozyme recognition were explored using a system derived from group II intron ai5gamma. Substrate recognition by group II intron ribozymes is of interest because any nucleic ac?id sequence can be targeted, the recognition sequence can be quite long (>/=13 bp), and reaction can proceed with a very high degree of sequence specificity. Group II introns target their substrates throug?h the formation of base-pairing interactions with two regions of the intron (EBS1 and EBS2), which are usually located far apart in the secondary structure. These structures pair with adjacent, corresponding sites (IBS1 and IBS2) on the substrate. In order to understand the relative energetic contribution of each base-pairing interaction (EBS1-IBS1 or EBS2-IBS2) to substrate binding energy, the free energy of each helix was measured. The individual helices were found to have base-pairing free energies similar to those calculated for regular RNA duplexes of the same sequence, suggesting that each recognition helix derives its binding energy from base-pairing interactions alone and that each helix can form independently. Most interestingly, it was found that the sum of the measured individual free energies (approximately 20 kcal/mol) was much higher than the known free energy for substrate binding (approximately 12 kcal/mol). This indicates that certain group II intron ribozymes can bind their substrates in an antagonistic fashion, paying a net energetic penalty upon binding the full-length substrate. This loss of binding energy is not due to weakening of individual helices, but appears to be linked to ribozyme conformational changes induced by substrate binding. This coupling between substrate binding and ribozyme conformational rearrangement may provide a mechanism for lowering overall substrate binding energy while retaining the full information content of 13 bp, thus resulting in a mechanism for ensuring sequence specificity. 相似文献
17.
Osami Shoji Takashi Fujishiro Shingo Nagano Shota Tanaka Takuya Hirose Yoshitsugu Shiro Yoshihito Watanabe 《Journal of biological inorganic chemistry》2010,15(8):1331-1339
Cytochrome P450BSβ, a H2O2-dependent cytochrome P450 catalyzing the hydroxylation of long-alkyl-chain fatty acids, lacks the general acid–base residue
around the heme, which is indispensable for the efficient generation of the active species using H2O2. On the basis of the crystal structure of the palmitic acid bound form of cytochrome P450BSβ, it was suggested that the role of the general acid–base function was provided by the carboxylate group of fatty acids. The
participation of the carboxylate group of the substrate was supported by the fact that cytochrome P450BSβ can catalyze oxidations of nonnatural substrates such as styrene and ethylbenzene in the presence of a series of short-alkyl-chain
carboxylic acids as a dummy molecule of fatty acid. We refer to a series of short-alkyl-chain carboxylic acids as a “decoy
molecule”. As shown here, we have clarified the crystal structure of the decoy-molecule-bound form and elucidated that the
location of its carboxylate group is virtually the same as that of palmitic acid in the heme cavity, indicating that the carboxylate
group of the decoy molecule serves as the general acid–base catalyst. This result further confirms that the role of the acid–base
function is satisfied by the carboxylate group of the substrates. In addition, the structure analysis of the substrate-free
form has clarified that no remarkable structural change is induced by the binding of the decoy molecule as well as fatty acid.
Consequently, whether the carboxylate group is positioned in the active site provides the switching mechanism of the catalytic
cycle of cytochrome P450BSβ. 相似文献
18.
RNase MRP is a site-specific ribonucleoprotein endoribonuclease that processes RNA from the mammalian mitochondrial displacement loop containing region. RNase P is a site-specific ribonucleoprotein endoribonuclease that processes pre-tRNAs to generate their mature 5'-ends. A similar structure for the RNase P and RNase MRP RNAs and a common cleavage mechanism for RNase MRP and RNase P enzymes have been proposed. Experiments with protein synthesis antibiotics have shown that both RNase MRP and RNase P are inhibited by puromycin. We also show that E. coli RNase P cleaves the RNase MRP substrate, mouse mitochondrial primer RNA, exactly at a site that is cleaved by RNase MRP. 相似文献
19.
Christoph Rox Ralph Feltens Thomas Pfeiffer Roland K Hartmann 《Journal of molecular biology》2002,315(4):551-560
We have detected by nucleotide analog interference mapping (NAIM) AMPalphaS and IMPalphaS modifications in Bacillus subtilis RNase P RNA that interfere with binding of the homologous protein subunit. Interference as well as some enhancement effects were clustered in two main areas, in P10.1a/L10.1 and P12 of the specificity domain (cluster 1, domain I) and in P2, P3, P15.1, J18/2 and J19/4 of the catalytic domain (cluster 2a, domain II). Minor interferences in P1 and P19 and a strong and weak enhancement effect in P19 represent a third area located in domain II (cluster 2b). Our results suggest that P3, P2-J18/2 and J19/4 are key elements for anchoring of the protein to the catalytic domain close to the scissile phosphodiester in enzyme-substrate complexes. Sites of interference or enhancement in clusters 1 and 2a are located at distances between 65 and 130 A from each other in the current 3D model of a full-length RNase P RNA-substrate complex. Taking into account that the RNase P protein monomer can bridge a maximum distance of about 40 A, simultaneous direct contacts to the two aforementioned potential RNA-binding areas would be incompatible with our current understanding of bacterial RNase P RNA architecture. Our findings suggest that the current 3D model has to be rearranged in order to reduce the distance between clusters 1 and 2a. Alternatively, based on the recent finding that B. subtilis RNase P forms a tetramer consisting of two protein and two RNA subunits, cluster 1 may reflect one protein contact site in domain I, and cluster 2a a separate one in domain II. 相似文献
20.
G Cecchini M Perl J Lipsick T P Singer E B Kearney 《The Journal of biological chemistry》1979,254(15):7295-7301
Riboflavine uptake and membrane-associated riboflavin-binding activity has been investigated in Bacillus subtilis. Riboflavin uptake proceeds via a system whose general properties are indicative of a carrier-mediated process: it is inhibited by substrate analogues, exhibits saturation kinetics, and is temperature-dependent. The organism concentrates riboflavin primarily as the phosphorylated cofactors FMN and FAD. Energy is required for uptake but whether the energy demand is required for both uptake and phosphorylation or only for the phosphorylation step is not known. Membrane-associated binding activity for riboflavin has also been demonstrated in membrane vesicles prepared from B. subtilis, and the binding component can be "solubilized" with Triton X-100. Evidence supporting the function of the binding component in riboflavin uptake by the intact cells includes the following. (i) Riboflavin analogues inhibit binding and uptake to nearly the same extent and with similar specificity of action. (ii) The KD for riboflavin-binding and the Km for uptake are in the same range. Similarly the Ki determined for the inhibitory analogue 5-deazariboflavin in the uptake assay and the KD for its interaction with the riboflavin-binding component of membrane vesicles are in the same range. (iii) Uptake in cells and binding in vesicles vary in the same direction with differences in growth conditions. 相似文献