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1.
Protein biosynthesis requires aminoacyl-transfer RNA (tRNA) synthetases to provide aminoacyl-tRNA substrates for the ribosome. Most bacteria and all archaea lack a glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS); instead, Gln-tRNA(Gln) is produced via an indirect pathway: a glutamyl-tRNA synthetase (GluRS) first attaches glutamate (Glu) to tRNA(Gln), and an amidotransferase converts Glu-tRNA(Gln) to Gln-tRNA(Gln). The human pathogen Helicobacter pylori encodes two GluRS enzymes, with GluRS2 specifically aminoacylating Glu onto tRNA(Gln). It was proposed that GluRS2 is evolving into a bacterial-type GlnRS. Herein, we have combined rational design and directed evolution approaches to test this hypothesis. We show that, in contrast to wild-type (WT) GlnRS2, an engineered enzyme variant (M110) with seven amino acid changes is able to rescue growth of the temperature-sensitive Escherichia coli glnS strain UT172 at its non-permissive temperature. In vitro kinetic analyses reveal that WT GluRS2 selectively acylates Glu over Gln, whereas M110 acylates Gln 4-fold more efficiently than Glu. In addition, M110 hydrolyzes adenosine triphosphate 2.5-fold faster in the presence of Glu than Gln, suggesting that an editing activity has evolved in this variant to discriminate against Glu. These data imply that GluRS2 is a few steps away from evolving into a GlnRS and provides a paradigm for studying aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase evolution using directed engineering approaches.  相似文献   

2.
Interaction between Escherichia coli glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS) and its substrates have been studied by fluorescence quenching. In the absence of other substrates, glutamine, tRNA(Gln) and ATP bind with dissociation constants of 460, 0.22 and 180 microM, respectively. The presence of other substrates has either no effect or, at best a weak effect, on binding of ligands. Attempts to isolate enzyme-bound aminoacyl adenylate did not succeed. Binding of the phosphodiester, 5'-(methyl)adenosine monophosphate (MeAMP), to GlnRS was studied by fluorescence quenching and radioactive-ligand binding. tRNA also only has a weak effect on phosphodiester binding. Selectively pyrene-labeled GlnRS was used to obtain shape and size information for free GlnRS. A comparison with the GlnRS shape in the GlnRS/tRNA(Gln) crystal structure indicates that no major change in shape and size occurs upon tRNA(Gln) binding to GlnRS. 5,5'-Bis(8-anilino-1-naphthalene sulfonate) (bis-ANS), a non-covalent fluorescent probe, was also used to probe for conformational changes in GlnRS. This probe also indicated that no major conformational change occurs upon tRNA(Gln) binding. We conclude that lack of tRNA-independent pyrophosphate-exchange activity in this enzyme is not a result of either lack of glutamine or ATP binding in the absence of tRNA, or formation of aminoacyl adenylate and slow release of pyrophosphate. A conformational change is implied upon tRNA binding, which promotes pyrophosphate exchange. Fluorescence studies indicate that this conformational change must be limited and local in nature.  相似文献   

3.
The order of interaction of substrates and products with human placental glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase was investigated in the aminoacylation reaction by using the steady-state kinetic methods. The initial velocity patterns obtained from both the glutamine-ATP and glutamine-tRNA substrate pairs were intersecting, whereas ATP and tRNA showed double competitive substrate inhibition. Dead-end inhibition studies with an ATP analog, tripolyphosphate, showed uncompetitive inhibition when tRNA was the variable substrate. The product inhibition studies revealed that PPi was an uncompetitive inhibitor with respect to tRNA. The noncompetitive inhibition by AMP versus tRNA was converted to uncompetitive by increasing the concentration of glutamine from 0.05 to 0.5 mM. These and other kinetic patterns obtained from the present study, together with our earlier finding that this human enzyme catalyzed the ATP-PPi exchange reaction in the absence of tRNA, enable us to propose a unique two-step, partially ordered sequential mechanism, with tRNA as the leading substrate, followed by random addition of ATP and glutamine. The products may be released in the following order: AMP, PPi and then glutaminyl-tRNA. The proposed mechanism involves both a quarternary complex including all three substrates and the intermediary formation of an enzyme-bound aminoacyl adenylate, common to the usual sequential and ping-pong mechanisms, respectively, for other aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases.  相似文献   

4.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase mutants were isolated through systematic screening of tight Gln- derivatives of a leaky glutamine auxotroph. These mutations define a single nuclear gene, GLN4. The gln4-1 mutation is specific for Gln-tRNA synthetase and shows a dosage effect in heterozygous diploids. The wild-type Gln-tRNA synthetase exhibits a Km for glutamine of 25 microM; the gln4-1 mutation increases this value 20-fold. These observations strongly suggest that GLN4 encodes the Gln-tRNA synthetase.  相似文献   

5.
Conformational changes that occur upon substrate binding are known to play crucial roles in the recognition and specific aminoacylation of cognate tRNA by glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase. In a previous study we had shown that glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase labeled selectively in a nonessential sulfhydryl residue by an environment sensitive probe, acrylodan, monitors many of the conformational changes that occur upon substrate binding. In this article we have shown that the conformational change that occurs upon tRNA(Gln) binding to glnRS/ATP complex is absent in a noncognate tRNA tRNA(Glu)-glnRS/ATP complex. CD spectroscopy indicates that this cognate tRNA(Gln)-induced conformational change may involve only a small change in secondary structure. The Van't Hoff plot of cognate and noncognate tRNA binding in the presence of ATP is similar, suggesting similar modes of interaction. It was concluded that the cognate tRNA induces a local conformational change in the synthetase that may be one of the critical elements that causes enhanced aminoacylation of the cognate tRNA over the noncognate ones.  相似文献   

6.
Uter NT  Perona JJ 《Biochemistry》2006,45(22):6858-6865
Structure-based mutational analysis was employed to probe an unusual intramolecular interaction between partially buried glutamate residues adjacent to the active site of Escherichia coli glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS). The crystal structures of unliganded GlnRS and the GlnRS-tRNA(Gln) complex reveal that the Glu34 and Glu73 side chain carboxylates contact each other only in the tRNA-bound state and that the interaction is formed via mutual induced-fit transitions that occur en route to the ground-state Michaelis complex. Steady-state and transient kinetic analysis of mutant enzymes suggest that the formation of this intermolecular contact is a key event that facilitates the proper formation of the active site. Mutants at both positions destabilize the binding of the substrate glutamine at the opposite side of the active-site cleft, whereas Glu73 appears to play an additional important role by promoting the correct binding of the 3'-acceptor end of tRNA adjacent to both ATP and glutamine. The data suggest the existence of multiple structural pathways by which the binding of tRNA propagates conformational transitions leading to the proper formation of the glutamine binding site. The single-turnover kinetic analysis also establishes that the Glu34 carboxylate does not play a direct enzymatic role as a catalytic base to help deprotonate the tRNA-A76 nucleophilic 2'-hydroxyl group. The elimination of this previously proposed mechanism, together with recent chemical modification experiments in the histidyl-tRNA synthetase system, emphasizes that substrate-assisted catalysis by the phosphate of the aminoacyl adenylate may be a common means by which all tRNA synthetases facilitate the aminoacyl transfer step of the reaction.  相似文献   

7.
This paper focuses on several aspects of the specificity of mutants of Escherichia coli glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS) and tRNAGln. Temperature-sensitive mutants located in glnS, the gene for GlnRS, have been described previously. The mutations responsible for the temperature-sensitive phenotype were analyzed, and pseudorevertants of these mutants isolated and characterized. The nature of these mutations is discussed in terms of their location in the three-dimensional structure of the tRNAGln: GlnRS complex. In order to characterize the specificity of the aminoacylation reaction, mutant tRNAGln species were synthesized with either a 2′-deoxy AMP or 3′-deoxy AMP as their 3′-terminal nucleotide. Subsequent assays for aminoacylation and ATP/PPi exchange activity established the esterification of glutamine to the 2′-hydroxyl of the terminal adenosine: there is no glutaminylation of the 3′-OH group. This correlates with the classification of GlnRS as a class I aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase. Mutations in tRNAGln are discussed which affect the recognition of GlnRS and the current concept of glutamine identity in E coli is reviewed.  相似文献   

8.
Natural evolution has resulted in protein molecules displaying a wide range of binding properties that include extremes of affinity and specificity. A detailed understanding of the principles underlying protein structure-function relationships, particularly with respect to binding properties, would greatly enhance molecular engineering and ligand design studies. Here, we have analyzed the interactions of an aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase for which strong evolutionary pressure has enforced high specificity for substrate binding and catalysis. Electrostatic interactions have been identified as one efficient mechanism for enhancing binding specificity; as such, the effects of charged and polar groups were the focus of this study. The binding of glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase from Escherichia coli to several ligands, including the natural substrates, was analyzed. The electrostatic complementarity of the enzyme to its ligands was assessed using measures derived from affinity optimization theory. The results were independent of the details of the calculational parameters, including the value used for the protein dielectric constant. Glutamine and ATP, two of the natural ligands, were found to be extremely complementary to their binding sites, particularly in regions seen to make electrostatic interactions in the structure. These data suggest that the optimization of electrostatic interactions has played an important role in guiding the evolution of this enzyme. The results also show that the enzyme is able to effectively select for high affinity and specificity for the same chemical moieties both in the context of smaller substrates, and in that of a larger reactive intermediate. The regions of greatest non-complementarity between the enzyme and ligands are the portions of the ligand that make few polar contacts with the binding site, as well as the sites of chemical reaction, where overly strong electrostatic binding interactions with the substrate could hinder catalysis. The results also suggest that the negative charge on the phosphorus center of glutaminyl-adenylate plays an important role in the tight binding of this intermediate, and thus that adenylate analogs that preserve the negative charge in this region may bind substantially tighter than analogs where this group is replaced with a neutral group, such as the sulfamoyl family, which can make similar hydrogen bonds but is uncharged.  相似文献   

9.
Human glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (QRS) is one of several mammalian aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (ARSs) that form a macromolecular protein complex. To understand the mechanism of QRS targeting to the multi-ARS complex, we analyzed both exogenous and endogenous QRSs by immunoprecipitation after overexpression of various Myc-tagged QRS mutants in human embryonic kidney 293 cells. Whereas a deletion mutant containing only the catalytic domain (QRS-C) was targeted to the multi-ARS complex, a mutant QRS containing only the N-terminal appended domain (QRS-N) was not. Deletion mapping showed that the ATP-binding Rossman fold was necessary for targeting of QRS to the multi-ARS complex. Furthermore, exogenous Myc-tagged QRS-C was co-immunoprecipitated with endogenous QRS. Since glutaminylation of tRNA was dramatically increased in cells transfected with the full-length QRS, but not with either QRS-C or QRS-N, both the QRS catalytic domain and the N-terminal appended domain were required for full aminoacylation activity. When QRS-C was overexpressed, arginyl-tRNA synthetase and p43 were released from the multi-ARS complex along with endogenous QRS, suggesting that the N-terminal appendix of QRS is required to keep arginyl-tRNA synthetase and p43 within the complex. Thus, the eukaryote-specific N-terminal appendix of QRS appears to stabilize the association of other components in the multi-ARS complex, whereas the C-terminal catalytic domain is necessary for QRS association with the multi-ARS complex.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Summary Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases are important components of the genetic apparatus. In spite of common catalytic properties, synthetases with different amino acid specificities are widely diverse in their primary structures, subunit sizes, and subunit composition. However, synthetases with given amino acid specificities are well conserved throughout evolution. We have been studying the human glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase possessing a sequence of about 400 amino acid residues (the core region) that is very similar to sequences in the corresponding enzymes from bacteria and yeast. The conserved sequence appears to be essential for the basic function of the enzyme, the charging of tRNA with glutamine. As a first step to a better understanding of the evolution of this enzyme, we determined the coding region for the conserved part of the human glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase. The coding region is composed of eight exons. It appears that individual exons encode defined secondary structural elements as parts of functionally important domains of the enzyme. Evolution of the gene by assembly of individual exons seems to be a viable hypothesis; alternative pathways are discussed. Offprint requests to: R. Knippers  相似文献   

12.
13.
It is well known that proteins undergo backbone as well as side chain conformational changes upon ligand binding, which is not necessarily confined to the active site. Both the local and the global conformational changes brought out by ligand-binding have been extensively studied earlier. However, the global changes have been reported mainly at the protein backbone level. Here we present a method that explicitly takes into account the side chain interactions, yet providing a global view of the ligand-induced conformational changes. This is achieved through the analysis of Protein Structure Networks (PSN), constructed from the noncovalent side chain interactions in the protein. Here, E. coli Glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS) in the ligand-free and different ligand-bound states is used as a case study to assess the effect of binding of tRNA, ATP, and the amino acid Gln to GlnRS. The PSNs are constructed on the basis of the strength of noncovalent interactions existing between the side chains of amino acids. The parameters like the size of the largest cluster, edge to node ratio, and the total number of hubs are used to quantitatively assess the structure network changes. These network parameters have effectively captured the ligand-induced structural changes at a global structure network level. Hubs, the highly connected amino acids, are also identified from these networks. Specifically, we are able to characterize different types of hubs based on the comparison of structure networks of the GlnRS system. The differences in the structure networks in both the presence and the absence of the ligands are reflected in these hubs. For instance, the characterization of hubs that are present in both the ligand-free and all the ligand-bound GlnRS (the invariant hubs) might implicate their role in structural integrity. On the other hand, identification of hubs unique to a particular ligand-bound structure (the exclusive hubs) not only highlights the structural differences mediated by ligand-binding at the structure network level, but also highlights significance of these amino acids hubs in binding to the ligand and catalyzing the biochemical function. Further, the hubs identified from this study could be ideal targets for mutational studies to ascertain the ligand-induced structure-function relationships in E. coli GlnRS. The formalism used in this study is simple and can be applied to other protein-ligands in general to understand the allosteric changes mediated by the binding of ligands.  相似文献   

14.
In all organisms, aminoacyl tRNA synthetases covalently attach amino acids to their cognate tRNAs. Many eukaryotic tRNA synthetases have acquired appended domains, whose origin, structure and function are poorly understood. The N-terminal appended domain (NTD) of glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS) is intriguing since GlnRS is primarily a eukaryotic enzyme, whereas in other kingdoms Gln-tRNAGln is primarily synthesized by first forming Glu-tRNAGln, followed by conversion to Gln-tRNAGln by a tRNA-dependent amidotransferase. We report a functional and structural analysis of the NTD of Saccharomyces cerevisiae GlnRS, Gln4. Yeast mutants lacking the NTD exhibit growth defects, and Gln4 lacking the NTD has reduced complementarity for tRNAGln and glutamine. The 187-amino acid Gln4 NTD, crystallized and solved at 2.3 Å resolution, consists of two subdomains, each exhibiting an extraordinary structural resemblance to adjacent tRNA specificity-determining domains in the GatB subunit of the GatCAB amidotransferase, which forms Gln-tRNAGln. These subdomains are connected by an apparent hinge comprised of conserved residues. Mutation of these amino acids produces Gln4 variants with reduced affinity for tRNAGln, consistent with a hinge-closing mechanism proposed for GatB recognition of tRNA. Our results suggest a possible origin and function of the NTD that would link the phylogenetically diverse mechanisms of Gln-tRNAGln synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Glutaminol adenylate 5 is a competitive inhibitor of glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase with respect to glutamine (Ki = 280 nM) and to ATP (Ki = 860 nM). The corresponding methyl phosphate ester 4 is a weaker inhibitor (Ki approximately 10 microM) with respect to glutamine.  相似文献   

16.
Glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase has been purified by a simple, two-column procedure from an Escherichia coli K12 strain carrying the glnS structural gene on plasmid pBR322. The primary sequence of this enzyme as derived from the DNA sequence (see accompanying paper) has been confirmed. Manual Edman degradation was used to identify the NH2-terminal sequence of the protein. Oligopeptides scattered throughout the primary sequence of glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase were sequenced by the gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric method and matched to the theoretical peptides derived from the translated DNA sequence. The expected carboxyl terminus at position 550 was verified by carboxypeptidase B digestion. The primary sequence of glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase contains no extensive sequence repeats. A search was made for sequence homologies between this enzyme and the few other aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases for which primary sequences are available. A single homologous region is shared by at least three of the synthetases examined here.  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
It has previously been shown that the single mutation E222K in glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS) confers a temperature-sensitive phenotype onEscherichia coli. Here we report the isolation of a pseudorevertant of this mutation, E222K/C171G, which was subsequently employed to investigate the role of these residues in substrate discrimination. The three-dimensional structure of the tRNAGln: GlnRS:ATP ternary complex revealed that both E222 and C171 are close to regions of the protein involved in interactions with both the acceptor stem and the 3′ end of tRNAGln. The potential involvement of E222 and C171 in these interactions was confirmed by the observation that GlnRS-E222K was able to mischargesupF tRNATyr considerably more efficiently than the wild-type enzyme, whereas GlnRS-E222K/C171G could not. These differences in substrate specificity also extended to anticodon recognition, with the double mutant able to distinguishsupE tRNA CUA Gln from tRNA 2 Gln considerably more efficiently than GlnRS E222K. Furthermore, GlnRS-E222K was found to have a 15-fold higher Km for glutamine than the wild-type enzyme, whereas the double mutant only showed a 7-fold increase. These results indicate that the C171G mutation improves both substrate discrimination and recognition at three domains in GlnRS-E222K, confirming recent proposals that there are extensive interactions between the active site and regions of the enzyme involved in tRNA binding.  相似文献   

20.
Bis-ANS binds to native glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS) with a fast and a slow phase. The rate constant of the slow phase is independent of bis-ANS concentration suggesting a slow conformational change in the pathway of bis-ANS binding. Aging of GlnRS causes a large decrease of the slow phase amplitude with concomitant increase of the fast phase amplitude. Several other large, multi-domain proteins show similar patterns upon aging. The near UV-CD spectra of the native and the aged GlnRS remain similar. Significant changes in far UV-CD, acrylamide quenching and sulfhydryl reactivity, are seen upon aging, suggesting disruptions in native interactions. Refolding of GlnRS from the urea-denatured state rapidly produces a state that is very similar to the equilibrium molten globule state. Bis-ANS binds to the molten globule state with kinetics similar to that of the aged state and unlike that of the native state. This suggests that the slow binding phase of bis-ANS, seen in native proteins, originate from relatively high energy barriers between the native and the more open states. Thus bis-ANS can be used as a powerful probe for large amplitude, low-frequency motions of proteins.  相似文献   

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