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1.
T Pan  M Jakacka 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(9):2249-2255
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.
Qin H  Sosnick TR  Pan T 《Biochemistry》2001,40(37):11202-11210
The structure of the specificity domain (S-domain) of the Bacillus subtilis RNase P RNA has been proposed to be composed of a core and a buttress module, analogous to the bipartite structure of the P4-P6 domain of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme. The core module is the functional unit of the S-domain and contains the binding site for the T stem-loop of a tRNA. The buttress module provides structural stability to the core module and consists of a GA3 tetraloop and its receptor. To explicitly test the hypothesis that modular construction can describe the structure of the S-domain and is a useful RNA design strategy, we analyzed the equilibrium folding and substrate binding of three classes of S-domain mutants. Addition or deletion of a base pair in the helical linker region between the modules only modestly destabilizes the tertiary structure. tRNA binding selectivity is affected in one but not in two other mutants of this class. Elimination of the GA3 tetraloop-receptor interactions significantly destabilizes the core module and results in the loss of tRNA binding selectivity. Replacing the buttress module with that of a homologous RNase P RNA maintains the tRNA binding selectivity. Overall, we have observed that the linker regions between the two modules can tolerate moderate structural changes and that the buttress modules can be shuffled between homologous S-domains. These results suggest that it is feasible to design an RNA using a buttress module to stabilize a functional module.  相似文献   

3.
Substrate recognition and cleavage by the bacterial RNase P RNA requires two domains, a specificity domain, or S-domain, and a catalytic domain, or C-domain. The S-domain binds the T stem-loop region in a pre-tRNA substrate to confer specificity for tRNA substrates. In this work, the entire S-domain of the Bacillus subtilis RNase P RNA is replaced with an artificial substrate binding module. New RNA substrates are isolated by in vitro selection using two libraries containing random regions of 60 nt. At the end of the selection, the cleavage rates of the substrate library are approximately 0.7 min(-1)in 10 mM MgCl(2)at 37 degrees C, approximately 4-fold better than the cleavage of a pre-tRNA substrate by the wild-type RNase P RNA under the same conditions. The contribution of the S-domain replacement to the catalytic efficiency is from 6- to 22 000-fold. Chemical and nuclease mapping of two ribozyme-product complexes shows that this contribution correlates with direct interactions between the S-domain replacement and the selected substrate. These results demonstrate the feasibility of design and isolation of RNase P-based, matching ribozyme-substrate pairs without prior knowledge of the sequence or structure of the interactive modules in the ribozyme or substrate.  相似文献   

4.
A Loria  T Pan 《Biochemistry》1999,38(27):8612-8620
The cleavage step of bacterial RNase P catalysis involves concentration-independent processes after the formation of the ribozyme-substrate complex that result in the breaking of a phosphodiester bond. The 2'OH group at the cleavage site of a pre-tRNA substrate is an important determinant in the cleavage step. We determined here that in contrast to a tRNA substrate, the 2'OH at the cleavage site of two in vitro selected substrates has no effect, whereas a 2'OH located adjacent to the cleavage site has a similarly large effect on the cleavage step. This result indicates that a unique 2'OH in the vicinity of the cleavage site interacts with the ribozyme to achieve the maximal efficiency of the cleavage step. Individual modifications in a pre-tRNA substrate that disrupt ES interactions proximal to the cleavage site generally have little effect on the usage of this unique 2'OH. Ribozyme modifications that delete the interactions involving the T stem-loop of the tRNA have a large effect on the usage of this unique 2'OH and also alter the location of this 2'OH. We propose a new ES complex prior to the bond-breaking step in the reaction scheme to explain these results. This second ES complex is in fast equilibrium with the initial ES complex formed by bimolecular collision. The ribozyme interaction with this unique 2'OH shifts the equilibrium in favor of the second ES complex. The formation of the second ES complex may require optimal geometry of the two independently folding domains of this ribozyme to precisely position crucial functional groups and Mg2+ ions in the active site. Such a domain geometry is significantly favored by the RNase P protein. In the absence of the protein, spatial rearrangement of these domains in the ES complex may be necessary.  相似文献   

5.
P Trang  A W Hsu    F Liu 《Nucleic acids research》1999,27(23):4590-4597
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   

6.
We showed previously that the bacterial ribonuclease P (RNase P) ribozyme has substrate shape preference depending on the concentrations of catalytically important magnesium ions. The ribozyme discriminates a canonical cloverleaf precursor tRNA from a hairpin RNA with a CCA-tag sequence at low concentrations of magnesium ions. By detailed analysis of the shape preference using the bottom-half part-shifting variants of a tRNA precursor, we showed that the RNAs in a T-shape structure can be substrates for the ribozyme reactions even at low concentrations of magnesium ions, and that the RNA in a natural L-shape is the best substrate for both the ribozyme and the holo enzyme. The results also showed that the position of the bottom-half part did not affect the cleavage site selection of a substrate by the enzyme. Our results are the first kinetic evidence to show the importance of the bottom-half part of tRNA molecule, and our result also showed that the holo enzyme can discriminate substrate shape as well as the ribozyme at low concentrations of metal ions.  相似文献   

7.
Developing RNase P ribozymes for gene-targeting and antiviral therapy   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
RNase P, a tRNA processing enzyme, contains both RNA and protein subunits. M1 RNA, the catalytic RNA subunit of RNase P from Escherichia coli, recognizes its target RNA substrate mainly on the basis of its structure and cleaves a double stranded RNA helix at the 5' end that resembles the acceptor stem and T-stem structure of its natural tRNA substrate. Accordingly, a guide sequence (GS) can be covalently attached to the M1 RNA to generate a sequence specific ribozyme, M1GS RNA. M1GS ribozyme can target any mRNA sequence of choice that is complementary to its guide sequence. Recent studies have shown that M1GS ribozymes efficiently cleave the mRNAs of herpes simplex virus 1 and human cytomegalovirus, and the BCR-ABL oncogenic mRNA in vitro and effectively reduce the expression of these mRNAs in cultured cells. Moreover, an in vitro selection scheme has been developed to select for M1 GS ribozyme variants with more efficient catalytic activity in cleaving mRNAs. When expressed in cultured cells, these selected ribozymes also show an enhance ability to inhibit viral gene expression and growth. These recent results demonstrate the feasibility of developing the M1GS ribozyme-based technology as a promising gene targeting approach for basic research and clinical therapeutic application.  相似文献   

8.
Mammalian tRNA 3' processing endoribonuclease (3' tRNase) can be converted to an RNA cutter that recognizes four bases, with about a 65-nt 3'-truncated tRNA(Arg) or tRNA(Ala). The 3'-truncated tRNA recognizes the target RNA via four base pairings between the 5'terminal sequence and a sequence 1-nt upstream of the cleavage site, resulting in a pre-tRNA-like complex (Nashimoto M, 1995, Nucleic Acids Res 23:3642-3647). Here I developed a general method for more specific RNA cleavage using 3' tRNase. In the presence of a 36-nt 5' half tRNA(Arg) truncated after the anticodon, 3' tRNase cleaved the remaining 56-nt 3' half tRNA(Arg) with a 19-nt 3' trailer after the discriminator. This enzyme also cleaved its derivatives with a 5' extra sequence or nucleotide changes or deletions in the T stem-loop and extra loop regions, although the cleavage efficiency decreases as the degree of structural change increases. This suggests that any target RNA can be cleaved site-specifically by 3'tRNase in the presence of a 5' half tRNA modified to form a pre-tRNA-like complex with the target. Using this method, two partial HIV-1 RNA targets were cleaved site-specifically in vitro. These results also indicate that the sequence and structure of the T stem-loop domain are important, but not essential, for the recognition of pre-tRNAs by 3' tRNase.  相似文献   

9.
We showed previously that the bacterial ribonuclease P (RNase P) ribozyme has substrate shape preference depending on the concentrations of catalytically important magnesium ions. The ribozyme discriminates a canonical cloverleaf precursor tRNA from a hairpin RNA with a CCA-tag sequence at low concentrations of magnesium ions. By detailed analysis of the shape preference using the bottom-half part-shifting variants of a tRNA precursor, we showed that the RNAs in a T-shape structure can be substrates for the ribozyme reactions even at low concentrations of magnesium ions, and that the RNA in a natural L-shape is the best substrate for both the ribozyme and the holo enzyme. The results also showed that the position of the bottom-half part did not affect the cleavage site selection of a substrate by the enzyme. Our results are the first kinetic evidence to show the importance of the bottom-half part of tRNA molecule, and our result also showed that the holo enzyme can discriminate substrate shape as well as the ribozyme at low concentrations of metal ions.  相似文献   

10.
H Saito  K Watanabe    H Suga 《RNA (New York, N.Y.)》2001,7(12):1867-1878
We have recently reported an in vitro-evolved precursor tRNA (pre-tRNA) that is able to catalyze aminoacylation on its own 3'-hydroxyl group. This catalytic pre-tRNA is susceptible to RNase P RNA, generating the 5'-leader ribozyme and mature tRNA. The 5'-leader ribozyme is also capable of aminoacylating the tRNA in trans, thus acting as an aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase-like ribozyme (ARS-like ribozyme). Here we report its structural characterization that reveals the essential catalytic core. The ribozyme consists of three stem-loops connected by two junction regions. The chemical probing analyses show that a U-rich region (U59-U62 in J2a/3 and U67-U68 in L3) of the ribozyme is responsible for the recognition of the phenylalanine substrate. Moreover, a GGU-motif (G70-U72) of the ribozyme, adjacent to the U-rich region, forms base pairs with the tRNA 3' terminus. Our demonstration shows that simple RNA motifs can recognize both the amino acid and tRNA simultaneously, thus aminoacylating the 3' terminus of tRNA in trans.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The Neurospora VS ribozyme differs from other small, naturally occurring ribozymes in that it recognizes for trans cleavage or ligation a substrate that consists largely of a stem-loop structure. We have previously found that cleavage or ligation by the VS ribozyme requires substantial rearrangement of the secondary structure of stem-loop I, which contains the cleavage/ligation site. This rearrangement includes breaking the top base-pair of stem-loop I, allowing formation of a kissing interaction with loop V, and changing the partners of at least three other base-pairs within stem-loop I to adopt a conformation termed shifted. In the work presented, we have designed a binding assay and used mutational analysis to investigate the contribution of each of these structural changes to binding and ligation. We find that the loop I-V kissing interaction is necessary but not sufficient for binding and ligation. Constitutive opening of the top base-pair of stem-loop I has little, if any, effect on either activity. In contrast, the ability to adopt the shifted conformation of stem-loop I is a major determinant of binding: mutants that cannot adopt this conformation bind much more weakly than wild-type and mutants with a constitutively shifted stem-loop I bind much more strongly. These results implicate the adoption of the shifted structure of stem-loop I as an important process at the binding step in the VS ribozyme reaction pathway. Further investigation of features near the cleavage/ligation site revealed that sulphur substitution of the non-bridging phosphate oxygen atoms immediately downstream of the cleavage/ligation site, implicated in a putative metal ion binding site, significantly altered the cleavage/ligation equilibrium but did not perturb substrate binding significantly. This indicates that the substituted oxygen atoms, or an associated metal ion, affect a step that occurs after binding and that they influence the rates of cleavage and ligation differently.  相似文献   

13.
Translation initiation driven by internal ribosome entry site (IRES) elements is dependent on the structural organization of the IRES region. We have previously shown that a structural motif within the foot-and-mouth-disease virus IRES is recognized in vitro as substrate for the Synechocystis sp. RNase P ribozyme. Here we show that this structure-dependent endonuclease recognizes the IRES element in cultured cells, leading to inhibition of translation. Inhibition of IRES activity was dependent on the expression of the active ribozyme RNA subunit. Moreover, expression of the antisense sequence of the ribozyme did not inhibit IRES activity, demonstrating that stable RNA structures located upstream of the IRES element do not interfere with internal initiation. RNAs carrying defective IRES mutants that were substrates of the ribozyme in vivo revealed an increased translation of the reporter in response to the expression of the active ribozyme. In support of RNA cleavage, subsequent analysis of the translation initiation manner indicated a switch from IRES-dependent to 5′-end-dependent translation of RNase P target RNAs. We conclude that the IRES element is inactivated by expression in cis of RNase P in the cytoplasm of cultured cells, providing a promising antiviral tool to combat picornavirus infections. Furthermore, our results reinforce the essential role of the structural motif that serves as RNase P recognition motif for IRES activity.  相似文献   

14.
The RNA world hypothesis implies that coded protein synthesis evolved from a set of ribozyme catalyzed acyl-transfer reactions, including those of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase ribozymes. We report here that a bifunctional ribozyme generated by directed in vitro evolution can specifically recognize an activated glutaminyl ester and aminoacylate a targeted tRNA, via a covalent aminoacyl-ribozyme intermediate. The ribozyme consists of two distinct catalytic domains; one domain recognizes the glutamine substrate and self-aminoacylates its own 5'-hydroxyl group, and the other recognizes the tRNA and transfers the aminoacyl group to the 3'-end. The interaction of these domains results in a unique pseudoknotted structure, and the ribozyme requires a change in conformation to perform the sequential aminoacylation reactions. Our result supports the idea that aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase ribozymes could have played a key role in the evolution of the genetic code and RNA-directed translation.  相似文献   

15.
A minihelix-loop RNA acts as a trans-aminoacylation catalyst.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
N Lee  H Suga 《RNA (New York, N.Y.)》2001,7(7):1043-1051
We previously reported a bifunctional ribozyme that catalyzes self-aminoacylation and subsequent acyl-transfer to a tRNA. The ribozyme selectively recognizes a biotinyl-glutamine substrate, and charges the tRNA molecule in trans. Structurally, there are two catalytic domains, referred to as glutamine-recognition (QR) and acyl-transferase (ATRib). We report here the essential catalytic core of the QR domain as determined by extensive biochemical probing, mutation, and structural minimization. The minimal core of the QR domain is a 29-nt helix-loop RNA, which is also able to glutaminylate ATRib in trans. Its amino acid binding site is embedded in an 11-nt cluster that is adjacent to the loop that interacts with the ATRib domain. Our study shows that a minihelix-loop RNA can act as a trans-aminoacylation catalyst, which lends support for the critical role of minihelix-loops in the early evolution of the aminoacylation system.  相似文献   

16.
Poon AH  Olive JE  McLaren M  Collins RA 《Biochemistry》2006,45(44):13394-13400
The cleavage site of the Neurospora VS ribozyme is located in an internal loop in a hairpin called stem-loop I. Stem-loop I undergoes a cation-dependent structural change to adopt a conformation, termed shifted, that is required for activity. Using site-directed mutagenesis and kinetic analyses, we show here that the insertion of a single-stranded linker between stem-loop I and the rest of the ribozyme increases the observed self-cleavage rate constant by 2 orders of magnitude without affecting the Mg(2+) requirement of the reaction. A distinct set of mutations that favors the formation of the shifted conformation of stem-loop I decreases the Mg(2+) requirement by an order of magnitude with little or no effect on the observed cleavage rate under standard reaction conditions. Similar trends were seen in reactions that contained Li(+) instead of Mg(2+). Mutants with lower ionic requirements also exhibited increased thermostability, providing evidence that the shifted conformation of stem-loop I favors the formation of the active conformation of the RNA. In natural, multimeric VS RNA, where a given ribozyme core is flanked by one copy of stem-loop I immediately upstream and another copy 0.7 kb downstream, cleavage at the downstream site is strongly preferred, providing evidence that separation of stem-loop I from the ribozyme core reflects the naturally evolved organization of the RNA.  相似文献   

17.
In this paper we report newly selected artificial modules that enhance the kcat values comparable with or higher than those of the wild-type ribozyme with broad substrate specificity. The elements required for the catalysis of Group I intron ribozymes are concentrated in the P3-P7 domain of their core region, which consists of two conserved helical domains, P4-P6 and P3-P7. Previously, we reported the in vitro selection of artificial modules residing at the peripheral region of a mutant Group I ribozyme lacking P4-P6. We found that derivatives of the ribozyme containing the modules performed the reversal of the first step of the self-splicing reaction efficiently by using their affinity to the substrate RNA, although their kcat values and substrate specificity were uninfluenced and limited, respectively. The results show that it is possible to add a variety of new domains at the peripheral region that play a role comparable with that of the conserved P4-P6 domain.  相似文献   

18.
Johnson AK  Sinha J  Testa SM 《Biochemistry》2005,44(31):10702-10710
A group I intron-derived ribozyme from Pneumocystis carinii has been previously shown to bind an exogenous RNA substrate, splice out an internal segment, and then ligate the two ends back together (the trans excision-splicing reaction). We demonstrate that this same ribozyme can perform a trans insertion-splicing (TIS) reaction, where the ribozyme binds two exogenous RNA substrates and inserts one directly into the other. Reactions were optimized for both yield and rate, with optimum reactions carried out in 10 mM MgCl(2) for 2 h. Reaction products are stable, with no visible loss at extended times. The ribozyme recognizes the two substrates primarily through base pairing and requires an omegaG on the ribozyme and an omegaG on the sequence being inserted. We give evidence that the reaction mechanism is not the reverse of the trans excision-splicing reaction, but is composed of three steps, with intermediates attached to the ribozyme. Surprisingly, the internal guide sequence of the ribozyme is utilized to sequentially bind both substrates, forming independent P1 helices. This is an indication that ribozymes with essentially the native intron sequence can catalyze reactions significantly more dynamic and complex than self-splicing. The implications of group I intron-derived ribozymes being able to catalyze this unique reaction, and via this mechanism, are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Ribozymes have a great potential for developing specific gene silencing molecules. One of the main limitations to ensure the efficient application of ribozymes is to achieve effective binding to the target. Stem-loop domains support efficient formation of the kissing complex between natural antisense molecules and their target sequence. We have characterized catalytic antisense RNA hybrid molecules composed of a hammerhead ribozyme and a stem-loop antisense domain. A series of artificial RNA substrates containing the TAR-RNA stem-loop and a target for the hammerhead ribozyme were constructed and challenged with a catalytic antisense RNA carrying the TAR complementary stem-loop. The catalytic antisense RNA cleaves each of these substrates significantly more efficiently than the parental hammerhead ribozyme. Deletion of the TAR domain in the substrate abolishes the positive effect. These results suggest that the enhancement is due to the interaction of both complementary stem-loop motifs. A similar improvement was corroborated when targeting the LTR region of HIV-1 with either hammerhead- and hairpin-based catalytic antisense RNAs. Our results indicate that the TAR domain can be used as an anchoring site to facilitate the access of ribozymes to their specific target sequences within TAR-containing RNAs. Finally, we propose the addition of stable stem-loop motifs to the ribozyme domain as a rational way for constructing catalytic antisense RNAs.  相似文献   

20.
Compensatory mutations in RNA are generally regarded as those that maintain base pairing, and their identification forms the basis of phylogenetic predictions of RNA secondary structure. However, other types of compensatory mutations can provide higher-order structural and evolutionary information. Here, we present a helix-length compensation study for investigating structure-function relationships in RNA. The approach is demonstrated for stem-loop I and stem-loop V of the Neurospora VS ribozyme, which form a kissing-loop interaction important for substrate recognition. To rapidly characterize the substrate specificity (k(cat)/K(M)) of several substrate/ribozyme pairs, a procedure was established for simultaneous kinetic characterization of multiple substrates. Several active substrate/ribozyme pairs were identified, indicating the presence of limited substrate promiscuity for stem Ib variants and helix-length compensation between stems Ib and V. 3D models of the I/V interaction were generated that are compatible with the kinetic data. These models further illustrate the adaptability of the VS ribozyme architecture for substrate cleavage and provide global structural information on the I/V kissing-loop interaction. By exploring higher-order compensatory mutations in RNA our approach brings a deeper understanding of the adaptability of RNA structure, while opening new avenues for RNA research.  相似文献   

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