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1.
Ribonuclease T1 was purified from an Escherichia coli overproducing strain and co-crystallized with adenosine 2'-monophosphate (2'-AMP) by microdialysis against 50% (v/v) 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol in 20 mM sodium acetate, 2 mM calcium acetate, pH 4.2. The crystals have orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with cell dimensions a = 48.93(1), b = 46.57(4), c = 41.04(2) A; Z = 4 and V = 93520 A3. The crystal structure was determined on the basis of the isomorphous structure of uncomplexed RNase T1 (Martinez-Oyanedel et al. (1991) submitted for publication) and refined by least squares methods using stereochemical restraints. The refinement was based on Fhkl of 7,445 reflections with Fo greater than or equal to 1 sigma (Fo) in the resolution range of 10-1.8 A, and converged at a crystallographic R factor of 0.149. The phosphate group of 2'-AMP is tightly hydrogen-bonded to the side chains of the active site residues Tyr38, His40, Glu58, Arg77, and His92, comparable with vanadate binding in the respective complex (Kostrewa, D., Choe, H.-W., Heinemann, U., and Saenger, W. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 7592-7600) and different from the complex with guanosine 2'-monophosphate (Arni, R., Heinemann, U., Tokuoka, R., and Saenger, W. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 15358-15368) where the phosphate does not interact with Arg77 and His92. The adenosine moiety is not located in the guanosine recognition site but stacked on Gly74 carbonyl and His92 imidazole, which serve as a subsite, as shown previously (Lenz, A., Cordes, F., Heinemann, U., and Saenger, W. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 7661-7667); in addition, there are hydrogen bonds adenine N6H . . . O Gly74 (minor component of three-center hydrogen bond) and adenosine O5' . . . O delta Asn36. These binding interactions readily explain why RNase T1 has some affinity for 2'-AMP. The molecular structure of RNase T1 is only marginally affected by 2'-AMP binding. Its "empty" guanosine-binding site features a flipped Asn43-Asn44 peptide bond and the side chains of Tyr45, Glu46 adopt conformations typical for RNase T1 not involved in guanosine binding. The side chains of amino acids Leu26, Ser35, Asp49, Val78 are disordered. The disorder of Val78 is of interest since this amino acid is located in a hydrophobic cavity, and the disorder appears to be correlated with an "empty" guanosine-binding site. The two Asp15 carboxylate oxygens and six water molecules coordinate a Ca2+ ion 8-fold in the form of a square antiprism.  相似文献   

2.
The recombinant Tyr45Trp mutant of Lys25-ribonuclease T1 was overexpressed and purified from an Escherichia coli strain. The mutant enzyme, which shows reduced activity towards GpA and increased activity towards pGpC, pApC and pUpC compared with wild-type RNase T1, was co-crystallized with 2'-adenylic acid by microdialysis. The space group is P212121 with unit cell dimenions a = 4.932(2), b = 4.661(2), c = 4.092(1) nm. The crystal structure was solved using the coordinates of the isomorphous complex of wild-type RNase T1 with 2'-AMP. The refinement was based on Fhkl of 7726 reflexions with Fo greater than or equal to 1 sigma (Fo) in the resolution range of 2.0-0.19 nm and converged with an R factor of 0.179. The adenosine of 2'-AMP is not bound to the guanosine binding site, as could be expected from the mutation of Tyr45Trp, but is stacked on the Gly74 carbonyl group and the His92 imidazole group which form a subsite for substrate binding, as already observed in the wild-type 2'-AMP complex. The point mutation of Tyr45Trp does not perturb the backbone conformation and the Trp-indole side chain is in a comparable position to the phenolic Tyr45 of the wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
In the crystal structure of the ribonuclease T1 (RNase T1; EC 3.1.27.3)-2'-GMP complex the hydrogen-bonding potential of the guanine base is saturated [Arni, R., Heinemann, U., Tokuoka, R., & Saenger, W. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 15358-15368]. The oxygens of the Glu46 carboxylate and the Asn98 main-chain carbonyl act as hydrogen-bond acceptors for the N(1)H-C(2)-N(2)H2 part of the base. We measured the transesterification kinetics of wild-type and Glu46Ala RNase T1 using the GpU, IpU, and XpU series of analogous substrates. We found that the N(1)H---Glu46 O epsilon 1, the N(2)H---Glu46 O epsilon 2, and the N(2)H---Asn98 O hydrogen bonds have an apparent contribution of 2.7, 1.1, and 1.2 kcal/mol to the interaction energy of the enzyme and the transition state of the substrate. Wild-type RNase T1 discriminates guanine from nonionized xanthine (a guanine analogue in which the exocyclic amino group is replaced by an oxygen) by about 4.4 kcal/mol. Loss of the specific hydrogen bonds with the exocyclic amino group of the guanine base accounts for 2.4 kcal/mol of this discrimination energy; 2.0 kcal/mol is due to unfavorable non-H-bonded oxygen-oxygen contacts in the enzyme-xanthine complex. A pH dependence study shows that the deprotonated form of xanthine (i.e., the 6-keto-2-enolate anion; pKa = 5.4) is far less preferred, if not excluded, as substrate by wild-type RNase T1; this may be attributed to an electrostatic repulsion of the negatively charged xanthine by the Glu46 carboxylate group.  相似文献   

4.
Histidine-40 is known to participate in phosphodiester transesterification catalyzed by the enzyme ribonuclease T1. A mutant enzyme with a lysine replacing the histidine-40 (His40Lys RNase T1) retains considerable catalytic activity [Steyaert, J., Hallenga, K., Wyns, L., & Stanssens, P. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 9064-9072]. We report on the crystal structures of His40Lys RNase T1 containing a phosphate anion and a guanosine 2'-phosphate inhibitor in the active site, respectively. Similar to previously described structures, the phosphate-containing crystals are of space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with one molecule per asymmetric unit (a = 48.27 A, b = 46.50 A, c = 41.14 A). The complex with 2'-GMP crystallized in the lower symmetry space group P2(1), with two molecules per asymmetric unit (a = 49.20 A, b = 48.19 A, c = 40.16 A, beta = 90.26). The crystal structures have been solved at 1.8- and 2.0-A resolution yielding R values of 14.5% and 16.0%, respectively. Comparison of these His40Lys structures with the corresponding wild-type structures, containing 2'-GMP [Arni, R., Heinemann, U., Tokuoka, R., & Saenger, W. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 15358-15368] and vanadate [Kostrewa, D., Hui-Woog Choe, Heinemann, U., & Saenger, W. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 7692-7600] in the active site, respectively, leads to the following conclusions. First, the His40Lys mutation causes no significant changes in the overall structure of RNase T1; second, the Lys40 side chains in the mutant structures occupy roughly the same space as His40 in the corresponding wild-type RNase T1 structures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Mechanisms for the ribonuclease T1 (RNase T1; EC 3.1.27.3) catalyzed transesterification reaction generally include the proposal that Glu58 and His92 provide general base and general acid assistance, respectively [Heinemann, U., & Saenger, W. (1982) Nature (London) 299, 27-31]. This view was recently challenged by the observation that mutants substituted at position 58 retain high residual activity; a revised mechanism was proposed in which His40, and not Glu58, is engaged in catalysis as general base [Nishikawa, S., Morioka, H., Kim, H., Fuchimura, K., Tanaka, T., Uesugi, S., Hakoshima, T., Tomita, K., Ohtsuka, E., & Ikehara, M. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 8620-8624]. To clarify the functional roles of His40, Glu58, and His92, we analyzed the consequences of several amino acid substitutions (His40Ala, His40Lys, His40Asp, Glu58Ala, Glu58Gln, and His92Gln) on the kinetics of GpC transesterification. The dominant effect of all mutations is on Kcat, implicating His40, Glu58, and His92 in catalysis rather than in substrate binding. Plots of log (Kcat/Km) vs pH for wild-type, His40Lys, and Glu58Ala RNase T1, together with the NMR-determined pKa values of the histidines of these enzymes, strongly support the view that Glu58-His92 acts as the base-acid couple. The curves also show that His40 is required in its protonated form for optimal activity of wild-type enzyme. We propose that the charged His40 participates in electrostatic stabilization of the transition state; the magnitude of the catalytic defect (a factor of 2000) from the His40 to Ala replacement suggests that electrostatic catalysis contributes considerably to the overall rate acceleration. For Glu58Ala RNase T1, the pH dependence of the catalytic parameters suggests an altered mechanism in which His40 and His92 act as base and acid catalyst, respectively. The ability of His40 to adopt the function of general base must account for the significant activity remaining in Glu58-mutated enzymes.  相似文献   

6.
The function of the conserved Phe 100 residue of RNase T1 (EC 3.1.27.3) has been investigated by site-directed mutagenesis and X-ray crystallography. Replacement of Phe 100 by alanine results in a mutant enzyme with kcat reduced 75-fold and a small increase in Km for the dinucleoside phosphate substrate GpC. The Phe 100 Ala substitution has similar effects on the turnover rates of GpC and its minimal analogue GpOMe, in which the leaving cytidine is replaced by methanol. The contribution to catalysis is independent of the nature of the leaving group, indicating that Phe 100 belongs to the primary site. The contribution of Phe 100 to catalysis may result from a direct van der Waals contact between its aromatic ring and the phosphate moiety of the substrate. Phe 100 may also contribute to the positioning of the pentacovalent phosphorus of the transition state, relative to other catalytic residues. If compared to the corresponding wild-type data, the structural implications of the mutation in the present crystal structure of Phe 100 Ala RNase T1 complexed with the specific inhibitor 2'-GMP are restricted to the active site. Repositioning of 2'-GMP, caused by the Phe 100 Ala mutation, generates new or improved contacts of the phosphate moiety with Arg 77 and His 92. In contrast, interactions with the Glu 58 carboxylate appear to be weakened. The effects of the His 92 Gln and Phe 100 Ala mutations on GpC turnover are additive in the corresponding double mutant, indicating that the contribution of Phe 100 to catalysis is independent of the catalytic acid His 92. The present results lead to the conclusion that apolar residues may contribute considerably to catalyze conversions of charged molecules to charged products, involving even more polar transition states.  相似文献   

7.
The enzyme ribonuclease T1 (RNase T1) isolated from Aspergillus oryzae was cocrystallized with the specific inhibitor guanylyl-2',5'-guanosine (2',5'-GpG) and the structure refined by the stereochemically restrained least-squares refinement method to a crystallographic R-factor of 14.9% for X-ray data above 3 sigma in the resolution range 6 to 1.8 A. The refined model consists of 781 protein atoms, 43 inhibitor atoms in a major site and 29 inhibitor atoms in a minor site, 107 water oxygen atoms, and a metal site assigned as Ca. At the end of the refinement, the orientation of His, Asn and Gln side-chains was reinterpreted on the basis of two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance data. The crystal packing and enzyme conformation of the RNase T1/2',5'-GpG complex and of the near-isomorphous RNase T1/2'-GMP complex are comparable. The root-mean-square deviation is 0.73 A between equivalent protein atoms. Differences in the unit cell dimensions are mainly due to the bound inhibitor. The 5'-terminal guanine of 2',5'-GpG binds to RNase T1 in much the same way as in the 2'-GMP complex. In contrast, the hydrogen bonds between the catalytic center and the phosphate group are different and the 3'-terminal guanine forms no hydrogen bonds with the enzyme. This poor binding is reflected in a 2-fold disorder of 2',5'-GpG (except the 5'-terminal guanine), which originates from differences in the pucker of the 5'-terminal ribose. The pucker is C2'-exo for the major site (2/3 occupancy) and C1'-endo for the minor site (1/3 occupancy). The orientation of the major site is stabilized through stacking interactions between the 3'-terminal guanine and His92, an amino acid necessary for catalysis. This might explain the high inhibition rate observed for 2',5'-GpG, which exceeds that of all other inhibitors of type 2',5'-GpN. On the basis of distance criteria, one solvent peak in the electron density was identified as metal ion, probably Ca2+. The ion is co-ordinated by the two Asp15 carboxylate oxygen atoms and by six water molecules. The co-ordination polyhedron displays approximate 4m2 symmetry.  相似文献   

8.
Attempts to alter the guanine specificity of ribonuclease T1 (RNase T1) by rational or random mutagenesis have failed so far. The RNase T1 variant RV (Lys41Glu, Tyr42Phe, Asn43Arg, Tyr45Trp, and Glu46Asn) designed by combination of a random and a rational mutagenesis approach, however, exhibits a stronger preference toward adenosine residues than wild-type RNase T1. Steady state kinetics of the cleavage reaction of the two dinucleoside phosphate substrates adenylyl-3',5'-cytidine and guanylyl-3',5'-cytidine revealed that the ApC/GpC ratio of the specificity coefficient (k(cat)/K(m)) was increased approximately 7250-fold compared to that of the wild-type. The crystal structure of the nucleotide-free RV variant has been refined in space group P6(1) to a crystallographic R-factor of 19.9% at 1.7 A resolution. The primary recognition site of the RV variant adopts a similar conformation as already known from crystal structures of RNase T1 not complexed to any nucleotide. Noteworthy is a high flexibility of Trp45 and Asn46 within the three individual molecules in the asymmetric unit. In addition to the kinetic studies, these data indicate the participation of Asn46 in the specific recognition of the base and therefore a specific binding of adenosine.  相似文献   

9.
The mechanism of action of ribonuclease (RNase) T1 is still a matter of considerable debate as the results of x-ray, 2-D nmr and site-directed mutagenesis studies disagree regarding the role of the catalytically important residues. Hence computer modelling studies were carried out by energy minimisation of the complexes of RNase T1 and some of its mutants (His40Ala, His40Lys, and Glu58Ala) with the substrate guanyl cytosine (GpC), and of native RNase T1 with the reaction intermediate guanosine 2',3'-cyclic phosphate (G greater than p). The puckering of the guanosine ribose moiety in the minimum energy conformer of the RNase T1-GpC (substrate) complex was found to be O4'-endo and not C3'-endo as in the RNase T1-3'-guanylic acid (inhibitor/product) complex. A possible scheme for the mechanism of action of RNase T1 has been proposed on the basis of the arrangement of the catalytically important amino acid residues His40, Glu58, Arg77, and His92 around the guanosine ribose and the phosphate moiety in the RNase T1-GpC and RNase T1-G greater than p complexes. In this scheme, Glu58 serves as the general base group and His92 as the general acid group in the transphosphorylation step. His40 may be essential for stabilising the negatively charged phosphate moiety in the enzyme-transition state complex.  相似文献   

10.
Numata T  Suzuki A  Yao M  Tanaka I  Kimura M 《Biochemistry》2001,40(2):524-530
The ribonuclease MC1 (RNase MC1), isolated from seeds of bitter gourd (Momordica charantia), consists of 190 amino acids and is characterized by specific cleavage at the 5'-side of uridine. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to evaluate the contribution of four amino acids, Asn71, Val72, Leu73, and Arg74, at the alpha4-alpha5 loop between alpha4 and alpha5 helices for recognition of uracil base by RNase MC1. Four mutants, N71T, V72L, L73A, and R74S, in which Asn71, Val72, Leu73, and Arg74 in RNase MC1 were substituted for the corresponding amino acids, Thr, Leu, Ala, and Ser, respectively, in a guanylic acid preferential RNase NW from Nicotiana glutinosa, were prepared and characterized with respect to enzymatic activity. Kinetic analysis with a dinucleoside monophosphate, CpU, showed that the mutant N71T exhibited 7.0-fold increased K(m) and 2.3-fold decreased k(cat), while the mutant L73A had 14.4-fold increased K(m), although it did retain the k(cat) value comparable to that of the wild-type. In contrast, replacements of Val72 and Arg74 by the corresponding amino acids Leu and Ser, respectively, had little effect on the enzymatic activity. This observation is consistent with findings in the crystal structure analysis that Asn71 and Leu73 are responsible for a uridine specificity for RNase MC1. The role of Asn71 in enzymatic reaction of RNase MC1 was further investigated by substituting amino acids Ala, Ser, Gln, and Asp. Our observations suggest that Asn71 has at least two roles: one is base recognition by hydrogen bonding, and the other is to stabilize the conformation of the alpha4-alpha5 loop by hydrogen bonding to the peptide backbone, events which possibly result in an appropriate orientation of the alpha-helix (alpha5) containing active site residues. Mutants N71T and N71S showed a remarkable shift from uracil to guanine specificity, as evaluated by cleavage of CpG, although they did exhibit uridine specificity against yeast RNA and homopolynucleotides.  相似文献   

11.
Kumar K  Walz FG 《Biochemistry》2001,40(12):3748-3757
Combinatorial random mutageneses involving either Asn43 with Asn44 (set 1) or Glu46 with an adjacent insertion (set 2) were undertaken to explore the functional perfection of the guanine recognition loop of ribonuclease T(1) (RNase T(1)). Four hundred unique recombinants were screened in each set for their ability to enhance enzyme catalysis of RNA cleavage. After a thorough selection procedure, only six variants were found that were either as active or more active than wild type which included substitutions of Asn43 by Gly, His, Leu, or Thr, an unplanned Tyr45Ser substitution and Glu46Pro with an adjacent Glu47 insertion. Asn43His-RNase T(1) has the same loop sequence as that for RNases Pb(1) and Fl(2). None of the most active mutants were single substitutions at Asn44 or double substitutions at Asn43 and Asn44. A total of 13 variants were purified, and these were subjected to kinetic analysis using RNA, GpC, and ApC as substrates. Modestly enhanced activities with GpC and RNA involved both k(cat) and K(M) effects. Mutants having low activity with GpC had proportionately even lower relative activity with RNA. Asn43Gly-RNase T(1) and all five of the purified mutants in set 2 exhibited similar values of k(cat)/K(M) for ApC which were the highest observed and about 10-fold that for wild type. The specificity ratio [(k(cat)/K(M))(GpC)/(k(cat)/K(M))(ApC)] varied over 30 000-fold including a 10-fold increase [Asn43His variant; mainly due to a low (k(cat)/K(M))(ApC)] and a 3000-fold decrease (Glu46Ser/(insert)Gly47 variant; mainly due to a low (k(cat)/K(M))(GpC)) as compared with wild type. It is interesting that k(cat) (GpC) for the Tyr45Ser variant was almost 4-fold greater than for wild type and that Pro46/(insert)Glu47 RNase T(1) is 70-fold more active than the permuted variant (insert)Pro47-RNase T(1) which has a conserved Glu46. In any event, the observation that only 6 out of 800 variants surveyed had wild-type activity supports the view that functional perfection of the guanine recognition loop of RNase T(1) has been achieved.  相似文献   

12.
J Steyaert  L Wyns  P Stanssens 《Biochemistry》1991,30(35):8661-8665
We report on the effect of the viscogenic agents glycerol and ficoll on the RNase T1 catalyzed turnover of GpA, GpC, GpU, and Torula yeast RNA. For wild-type enzyme, we find that the kcat/Km values for the transesterification of GpC and GpA as well as for the cleavage of RNA are inversely proportional to the relative viscosity of glycerol-containing buffers; no such effect is observed for the conversion of GpU to cGMP and U. The second-order rate constants for His40Ala and Glu46Ala RNase T1, two mutants with a drastically reduced kcat/km ratio, are independent of the microviscosity, indicating that glycerol does not affect the intrinsic kinetic parameters. Consistent with the notion that molecular diffusion rates are unaffected by polymeric viscogens, addition of ficoll has no effect on the kcat/Km for GpC transesterification by wild-type enzyme. The data indicate that the second-order rate constants for GpC, GpA, and Torula yeast RNA are at least partly limited by the diffusion-controlled association rate of substrate and active site; RNase T1 obeys Briggs-Haldane kinetics for these substrates (Km greater than Ks). Calculations suggest that the equilibrium dissociation constants (Ks) for the various GpN-wild-type enzyme complexes are virtually independent of N whereas the measured kcat values follow the order GpC greater than GpA greater than GpU. This is also revealed by the steady-state kinetic parameters of Tyr38Phe and His40Ala RNase T1, two mutants that follow simple Michaelis-Menten kinetics because of a dramatically reduced kcat value (i.e., Km = Ks).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Ribonuclease T1 (RNase T1) cleaves the phosphodiester bond of RNA specifically at the 3'-end of guanosine. 2'-guanosinemonophosphate (2'-GMP) acts as inhibitor for this reaction and was cocrystallized with RNase T1. X-Ray analysis provided insight in the geometry of the active site and in the parts of the enzyme involved in the recognition of guanosine. RNase T1 is globular in shape and consists of a 4.5 turns alpha-helix lying "below" a four-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet containing recognition center as well as active site. The latter is indicated by the position of phosphate and sugar residues of 2'-GMP and shows that Glu58, His92 and Arg77 are active in phosphodiester hydrolysis. Guanine is recognized by a stretch of protein from Tyr42 to Tyr45. Residues involved in recognition are peptide NH and C = O, guanine O6 and N1H which form hydrogen bonds and a stacking interaction of Tyr45 on guanine. Although, on a theoretical basis, many specific amino acid-guanine interactions are possible, none is employed in the RNase T1.guanine recognition.  相似文献   

14.
On the basis of molecular dynamics and free-energy perturbation approaches, the Glu46Gln (E46Q) mutation in the guanine-specific ribonuclease T1 (RNase T1) was predicted to render the enzyme specific for adenine. The E46Q mutant was genetically engineered and characterized biochemically and crystallographically by investigating the structures of its two complexes with 2'AMP and 2'GMP. The ribonuclease E46Q mutant is nearly inactive towards dinucleoside phosphate substrates but shows 17% residual activity towards RNA. It binds 2'AMP and 2'GMP equally well with dissociation constants of 49 microM and 37 microM, in contrast to the wild-type enzyme, which strongly discriminates between these two nucleotides, yielding dissociation constants of 36 microM and 0.6 microM. These data suggest that the E46Q mutant binds the nucleotides not to the specific recognition site but to the subsite at His92. This was confirmed by the crystal structures, which also showed that the Gln46 amide is hydrogen bonded to the Phe100 N and O atoms, and tightly anchored in this position. This interaction may either have locked the guanine recognition site so that 2'AMP and 2'GMP are unable to insert, or the contribution to guanine recognition of Glu46 is so important that the E46Q mutant is unable to function in recognition of either guanine and adenine.  相似文献   

15.
Ribonuclease MC1 (RNase MC1), isolated from bitter gourd seeds, is a uridine specific RNase belonging to the RNase T2 family. Mutations of Asn71 in RNase MC1 to the amino acids Thr (N71T) and Ser (N71S) in guanosine preferential RNases altered the substrate specificity from uridine specific to guanosine specific, as shown by the transphosphorylation of diribonucleoside monophosphates [Numata, T., et al. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 524-530]. To elucidate the structural basis for the alteration of substrate specificity, crystal structures of the RNase MC1 mutants N71T and N71S, free or complexed with 5'-GMP, were determined at resolutions higher than 2 A. In the N71T-5'-GMP and N71S-5'-GMP complexes, the guanine moiety was, as in the case of the uracil moiety bound to wild-type RNase MC1, firmly stabilized in the B2 site by an extensive network of hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic interactions. Structure comparisons showed that mutations of Asn71 to Thr or Ser cause an enlargement of the B2 site, which then make it feasible to insert a guanine base into the B2 site of mutants N71T and N71S. This binding further allows for hydrogen bonding interaction of the side chain hydroxyl groups of Thr71 or Ser71 with the N7 atom of the guanine base. The mode of guanine binding of mutants N71T and N71S was found to be essentially identical to that of a guanosine preferential RNase NW from Nicotiana glutinosa. In particular, hydrogen bonds between the N7 atom of the guanine base and the hydroxyl groups of the amino acids at position 71 (RNase MC1 numbering) were completely conserved in three guanosine preferential enzymes, thereby indicating that the hydrogen bond may play an essential role in guanine binding in guanosine preferential RNases in the RNase T2 family. Consequently, it can be concluded that amino acids at position 71 (RNase MC1 numbering) serve as one of the determinants for substrate specificity (or preference) in the RNase T2 fimily by changing the size and shape of the B2 site.  相似文献   

16.
Ribonuclease T1 contains a subsite which by interacting with the leaving nucleoside N of GpN dinucleoside phosphate substrates, contributes to catalysis [Steyaert, J., Wyns, L. & Stanssens, P. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 8661-8665]. The Asn36Ala and Asn98Ala mutations reduce the transesterification rates of GpA, GpC and GpU considerably whereas they have virtually no effect on the transesterification kinetics of the synthetic substrate guanosine 3'-(methyl phosphate) (GpMe) (in which the leaving nucleoside is replaced by methanol), indicating that the Asn36 and Asn98 side chains are part of the RNase T1 subsite [Steyaert, J., Haikal, A. F., Wyns, L. & Stanssens, P. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 8666-8670]. The kinetics of the Asn36Ala, Asn98Ala and wild-type catalyzed transesterification of guanosine 3'-(5'-D-ribosyl phosphate) (GpRib), another GpN analog in which the leaving groups is replaced by D-ribose, enables the mapping of the subsite interactions provided by Asn36 and Asn98. We find that the Asn36 amide function contributes 4.6 kJ/mol to catalysis through interactions with the ribose moiety of the leaving nucleoside. Asn98 is at least in part responsible for the subsite preference for cytidine; the Asn98 side chain preferentially binds cytosine as the leaving nucleoside base.  相似文献   

17.
The modes of binding of adenosine 2'-monophosphate (2'-AMP) to the enzyme ribonuclease (RNase) T1 were determined by computer modelling studies. The phosphate moiety of 2'-AMP binds at the primary phosphate binding site. However, adenine can occupy two distinct sites--(1) The primary base binding site where the guanine of 2'-GMP binds and (2) The subsite close to the N1 subsite for the base on the 3'-side of guanine in a guanyl dinucleotide. The minimum energy conformers corresponding to the two modes of binding of 2'-AMP to RNase T1 were found to be of nearly the same energy implying that in solution 2'-AMP binds to the enzyme in both modes. The conformation of the inhibitor and the predicted hydrogen bonding scheme for the RNase T1-2'-AMP complex in the second binding mode (S) agrees well with the reported x-ray crystallographic study. The existence of the first mode of binding explains the experimental observations that RNase T1 catalyses the hydrolysis of phosphodiester bonds adjacent to adenosine at high enzyme concentrations. A comparison of the interactions of 2'-AMP and 2'-GMP with RNase T1 reveals that Glu58 and Asn98 at the phosphate binding site and Glu46 at the base binding site preferentially stabilise the enzyme-2'-GMP complex.  相似文献   

18.
The three-dimensional X-ray structure of the RNase T1[EC 3.1.27.3]-2'GMP complex crystallized at low pH value (4.0) was determined, and refined to 1.9 A resolution to give a final R value of 0.203. The refined model includes 781 protein atoms, 24 inhibitor atoms, and 43 solvent molecules. The imidazole rings of His27 and His40 interact with the carboxyl side chains of Glu82 and Glu58, respectively, whereas that of His92 is in contact with the main chain carbonyl oxygen of Ala75. In the complex, the ribose ring of the 2'GMP molecule adopts a C2'-endo puckering, and the exocyclic conformation is gauche(-)-gauche(+). The glycosyl torsion angle is in the syn range with an intramolecular hydrogen bond between N3 and O5', and the 2'-phosphate orientation is trans-gauche(-). The guanine base of the inhibitor is tightly bound to the base recognition site with five hydrogen bonds (N1--Glu46O epsilon 2, N2---Asn98O,O6---Asn44N, and N7 ---Asn43N delta 2/Asn43N) and is sandwiched between the phenolic ring portions of Tyr42 and Tyr45 by stacking interactions. The 2'-phosphate group interacts with Arg77N eta 2, Glu58O episilon 2, and Tyr 38O eta but not with any of the histidine residues. Arg77N eta 2 also interacts with Tyr38O eta. There is no interaction between the ribose moiety of the inhibitor and the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Zhao G  Song H  Chen ZW  Mathews FS  Jorns MS 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):9751-9764
Conservative mutation of His269 (to Asn, Ala, or Gln) does not-significantly affect the expression of monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX), covalent flavinylation, the physicochemical properties of bound FAD, or the overall protein structure. Turnover with sarcosine and the limiting rate of the reductive half-reaction with L-proline at pH 8.0 are, however, nearly 2 orders of magnitude slower than that with with wild-type MSOX. The crystal structure of the His269Asn complex with pyrrole-2-carboxylate shows that the pyrrole ring of the inhibitor is displaced as compared with wild-type MSOX. The His269 mutants all form charge-transfer complexes with pyrrole-2-carboxylate or methylthioacetate, but the charge-transfer bands are shifted to shorter wavelengths (higher energy) as compared with wild-type MSOX. Both wild-type MSOX and the His269Asn mutant bind the zwitterionic form of L-proline. The E(ox).L-proline complex formed with the His269Asn mutant or wild-type MSOX contains an ionizable group (pK(a) = 8.0) that is required for conversion of the zwitterionic L-proline to the reactive anionic form, indicating that His269 is not the active-site base. We propose that the change in ligand orientation observed upon mutation of His269 results in a less than optimal overlap of the highest occupied orbital of the ligand with the lowest unoccupied orbital of the flavin. The postulated effect on orbital overlap may account for the increased energy of charge-transfer bands and the slower rates of electron transfer observed for mutant enzyme complexes with charge-transfer ligands and substrates, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
The crystal structure of a mutant ribonuclease T1 (Y45W) complexed with a non-cognizable ribonucleotide, 2'AMP, has been determined and refined to an R-factor of 0.159 using X-ray diffraction data at 1.7 A resolution. A specific complex of the enzyme with 2'GMP was also determined and refined to an R-factor of 0.173 at 1.9 A resolution. The adenine base of 2'AMP was found at a base-binding site that is far apart from the guanine recognition site, where the guanine base of 2'GMP binds. The binding of the adenine base is mediated by a single hydrogen bond and stacking interaction of the base with the imidazole ring of His92. The mode of stacking of the adenine base with His92 is similar to the stacking of the guanine base observed in complexes of ribonuclease T1 with guanylyl-2',5'-guanosine, reported by Koepke et al., and two guanosine bases, reported by Lenz et al., and in the complex of barnase with d(GpC), reported by Baudet & Janin. These observations suggest that the site is non-specific for base binding. The phosphate group of 2'AMP is tightly locked at the catalytic site with seven hydrogen bonds to the enzyme in a similar manner to that of 2'GMP. In addition, two hydrogen bonds are formed between the sugar moiety of 2'AMP and the enzyme. The 2'AMP molecule adopts the anti conformation of the glycosidic bond and C-3'-exo sugar pucker, whereas 2'GMP is in the syn conformation with C-3'-endo-C'-2'-exo pucker. The mutation enhances the binding of 2'GMP with conformational changes of the sugar ring and displacement of the phosphate group towards the interior of the catalytic site from the corresponding position in the wild-type enzyme complex. Comparison of two crystal structures obtained provides a solution to the problem that non-cognizable nucleotides exhibit unexpectedly strong binding to the enzyme, compared with high specificity in nucleolytic activity. The results indicate that the discrimination of the guanine base from the other nucleotide bases at the guanine recognition site is more effective than that estimated from nucleotide-binding experiments so far.  相似文献   

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