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1.
C S Chow  J K Barton 《Biochemistry》1992,31(24):5423-5429
The coordination complex tris(4,7-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline)rhodium(III) [Rh(DIP)3(3+)], which promotes RNA cleavage upon photoactivation, has been shown to target specifically guanine-uracil (G-U) mismatches in double-helical regions of folded RNAs. Photoactivated cleavage by Rh(DIP)3(3+) has been examined on a series of RNAs that contain G-U mismatches, yeast tRNA(Phe) and yeast tRNA(Asp), as well as on 5S rRNAs from Xenopus oocytes and Escherichia coli. In addition, a "microhelix" was synthesized, which consists of seven base pairs of the acceptor stem of yeast tRNA(Phe) connected by a six-nucleotide loop and contains a mismatch involving residues G4 and U69. A U4.G69 variant of this sequence was also constructed, and cleavage by Rh(DIP)3(3+) was examined. In each of these cases, specific cleavage is observed at the residue which lies to the 3'-side of the wobble-paired U; some cleavage by the rhodium complex is also evident in several structured RNA loops. The remarkable site selectivity for G-U mismatches within double-helical regions is attributed to shape-selective binding by the rhodium complex. This binding furthermore depends upon the orientation of the G-U mismatch, which produces different stacking interactions between the G-U base pair with the Watson-Crick base pair following it on the 5'-side of U compared to the Watson-Crick pair preceding it on the 3'-side of U. Rh(DIP)3(3+) therefore serves as a unique probe of G-U mismatches and may be useful both as a model and in probing RNA-protein interactions as well as in identifying G-U mismatches within double-helical regions of folded RNAs.  相似文献   

2.
One of the most prevalent base modifications involved in decoding is uridine 5-oxyacetic acid at the wobble position of tRNA. It has been known for several decades that this modification enables a single tRNA to decode all four codons in a degenerate codon box. We have determined structures of an anticodon stem-loop of tRNA(Val) containing the modified uridine with all four valine codons in the decoding site of the 30S ribosomal subunit. An intramolecular hydrogen bond involving the modification helps to prestructure the anticodon loop. We found unusual base pairs with the three noncomplementary codon bases, including a G.U base pair in standard Watson-Crick geometry, which presumably involves an enol form for the uridine. These structures suggest how a modification in the uridine at the wobble position can expand the decoding capability of a tRNA.  相似文献   

3.
Two alternative hypotheses aim to predict the wobble nucleotide of tRNA anticodons in mitochondrion. The codon-anticodon adaptation hypothesis predicts that the wobble nucleotide of tRNA anticodon should evolve toward maximizing the Watson-Crick base pairing with the most frequently used codon within each synonymous codon family. In contrast, the wobble versatility hypothesis argues that the nucleotide at the wobble site should be occupied by a nucleotide most versatile in wobble pairing, i.e., the wobble site of the tRNA anticodon should be G for NNY codon families and U for NNR and NNN codon families (where Y stands for C or U, R for A or G, and N for any nucleotide). We examined codon usage and anticodon wobble sites in 36 fungal genomes to evaluate these two alternative hypotheses and identify exceptional cases that deserve new explanations. While the wobble versatility hypothesis is generally supported, there are interesting exceptions involving tRNA(Arg) translating the CGN codon family, tRNA(Trp) translating the UGR codon family, and tRNA(Met) translating the AUR codon family. Our results suggest that the potential to suppress stop codons, the historical inertia, and the conflict between translation initiation and elongation can all contribute to determining the wobble nucleotide of tRNA anticodons.  相似文献   

4.
By utilizing an enzymatically reconstructed tRNA variant containing an altered anticodon sequence, we have examined the different biochemical behavior of translation between the Watson-Crick type and the wobble type base pair interactions at the first anticodon position. We have found that the Watson-Crick type base pair has an advantage in translation in contrast to the wobble type base pair by comparing the efficiency of transpeptidation of native tRNA(Phe) (anticodon; GmAA) with its variant tRNA (anticodon; AAA) in the poly(U)-programmed ribosome system. Thomas et al. [Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S. (1988) 85, 4242-4246] showed that the wobble codon at the ribosomal A-site accepted its cognate tRNA less efficiently than the Watson-Crick base pairing codon. We report here that the wobble interaction at the ribosomal P-site also affected the rate of translation. This variable translational rate may be a mechanism of gene regulation through preferential codon usage.  相似文献   

5.
The Crick wobble hypothesis attributes the phenomenon of codon degeneracy to a certain impreciseness of pairing between the third base of the codon and the first base of the anticodon. This theoretical study investigates the pairing properties of some wobble bases, including both, observed and unobserved pairs. Some wobble base-pairs are predicted to follow the Watson-Crick pairs in configuration and pairing facility, while others deviate from this norm. The observed U:V pair is unique in that a pairing configuration may be suggested for it wherein the hydrogen-bonding involves the exocyclic 5-carboxymethoxy group of V. By comparing the theoretical data on the configurations of these pairs with the evidence for their existence/non-existence in nature, some guidelines emerge for differentiating between observed and unobserved base pairs on the basis of the pairing configuration.  相似文献   

6.
The G x U wobble base pair is a fundamental unit of RNA secondary structure that is present in nearly every class of RNA from organisms of all three phylogenetic domains. It has comparable thermodynamic stability to Watson-Crick base pairs and is nearly isomorphic to them. Therefore, it often substitutes for G x C or A x U base pairs. The G x U wobble base pair also has unique chemical, structural, dynamic and ligand-binding properties, which can only be partially mimicked by Watson-Crick base pairs or other mispairs. These features mark sites containing G x U pairs for recognition by proteins and other RNAs and allow the wobble pair to play essential functional roles in a remarkably wide range of biological processes.  相似文献   

7.
Kothe U  Rodnina MV 《Molecular cell》2007,25(1):167-174
tRNAs reading four-codon families often have a modified uridine, cmo(5)U(34), at the wobble position of the anticodon. Here, we examine the effects on the decoding mechanism of a cmo(5)U modification in tRNA(1B)(Ala), anticodon C(36)G(35)cmo(5)U(34). tRNA(1B)(Ala) reads its cognate codons in a manner that is very similar to that of tRNA(Phe). As Ala codons are GC rich and Phe codons AU rich, this similarity suggests a uniform decoding mechanism that is independent of the GC content of the codon-anticodon duplex or the identity of the tRNA. The presence of cmo(5)U at the wobble position of tRNA(1B)(Ala) permits fairly efficient reading of non-Watson-Crick and nonwobble bases in the third codon position, e.g., the GCC codon. The ribosome accepts the C-cmo(5)U pair as an almost-correct base pair, unlike third-position mismatches, which lead to the incorporation of incorrect amino acids and are efficiently rejected.  相似文献   

8.
Transfer RNA molecules translate the genetic code by recognizing cognate mRNA codons during protein synthesis. The anticodon wobble at position 34 and the nucleotide immediately 3' to the anticodon triplet at position 37 display a large diversity of modified nucleosides in the tRNAs of all organisms. We show that tRNA species translating 2-fold degenerate codons require a modified U(34) to enable recognition of their cognate codons ending in A or G but restrict reading of noncognate or near-cognate codons ending in U and C that specify a different amino acid. In particular, the nucleoside modifications 2-thiouridine at position 34 (s(2)U(34)), 5-methylaminomethyluridine at position 34 (mnm(5)U(34)), and 6-threonylcarbamoyladenosine at position 37 (t(6)A(37)) were essential for Watson-Crick (AAA) and wobble (AAG) cognate codon recognition by tRNA(UUU)(Lys) at the ribosomal aminoacyl and peptidyl sites but did not enable the recognition of the asparagine codons (AAU and AAC). We conclude that modified nucleosides evolved to modulate an anticodon domain structure necessary for many tRNA species to accurately translate the genetic code.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Three glutamine tRNA isoacceptors are known in Tetrahymena thermophila. One of these has the anticodon UmUG which reads the two normal glutamine codons CAA and CAG, whereas the two others with CUA and UmUA anticodons recognize UAG and UAA, respectively, which serve as termination codons in other organisms. We have employed these tRNA(Gln)-isoacceptors as tools for studying unconventional base interactions in a mRNA- and tRNA-dependent wheat germ extract. We demonstrate here (i) that tRNA(Gln)UmUG suppresses the UAA as well as the UAG stop codon, involving a single G:U wobble pair at the third anticodon position and two simultaneous wobble base pairings at the first and third position, respectively, and (ii) that tRNA(Gln)CUA, in addition to its cognate codon UAG, reads the UAA stop codon which necessitates a C:A mispairing in the first anticodon position. These unorthodox base interactions take place in a codon context which favours readthrough in tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) or tobacco rattle virus (TRV) RNA, but are not observed in a context that terminates zein and globin protein synthesis. Furthermore, our data reveal that wobble or mispairing in the middle position of anticodon-codon interactions is precluded in either context. The suppressor activities of tRNAs(Gln) are compared with those of other known naturally occurring suppressor tRNAs, i.e., tRNA(Tyr)G psi A and tRNA(Trp)CmCA. Our results indicate that a 'leaky' context is neither restricted to a single stop codon nor to a distinct tRNA species.  相似文献   

11.
P F Agris 《Biochimie》1991,73(11):1345-1349
While recognized that some wobble exists in the base pairing of the first base of the tRNA anticodon with the third of the codon, specific base modifications have evolved to select particular codons. This modified-wobble theory would be exemplified by a single codon recognition imposed on the anticodon by modification of the tRNA wobble position nucleoside.  相似文献   

12.
The tRNA1Ser (anticodon VGA, V=uridin-5-oxyacetic acid) is essential for translation of the UCA codon in Escherichia coli. Here, we studied the translational abilities of serine tRNA derivatives, which have different bases from wild type at the first positions of their anticodons, using synthetic mRNAs containing the UCN (N=A, G, C, or U) codon. The tRNA1Ser(G34) having the anticodon GGA was able to read not only UCC and UCU codons but also UCA and UCG codons. This means that the formation of G-A or G-G pair allowed at the wobble position and these base pairs are noncanonical. The translational efficiency of the tRNA1Ser(G34) for UCA or UCG codon depends on the 2'-O-methylation of the C32 (Cm). The 2'-O-methylation of C32 may give rise to the space necessary for G-A or G-G base pair formation between the first position of anticodon and the third position of codon.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
Mitochondrial (mt) tRNA(Trp), tRNA(Ile), tRNA(Met), tRNA(Ser)GCU, tRNA(Asn)and tRNA(Lys)were purified from Drosophila melanogaster (fruit fly) and their nucleotide sequences were determined. tRNA(Lys)corresponding to both AAA and AAG lysine codons was found to contain the anticodon CUU, C34 at the wobble position being unmodified. tRNA(Met)corresponding to both AUA and AUG methionine codons was found to contain 5-formylcytidine (f(5)C) at the wobble position, although the extent of modification is partial. These results suggest that both C and f(5)C as the wobble bases at the anticodon first position (position 34) can recognize A at the codon third position (position 3) in the fruit fly mt translation system. tRNA(Ser)GCU corresponding to AGU, AGC and AGA serine codons was found to contain unmodified G at the anticodon wobble position, suggesting the utilization of an unconventional G34-A3 base pair during translation. When these tRNA anticodon sequences are compared with those of other animal counterparts, it is concluded that either unmodified C or G at the wobble position can recognize A at the codon third position and that modification from A to t(6)A at position 37, 3'-adjacent to the anticodon, seems to be important for tRNA possessing C34 to recognize A3 in the mRNA in the fruit fly mt translation system.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

The ambivalent base analogue P was incorporated in the d(CGCGPG) hexamer to investigate the G.P base pair geometry by X-ray diffraction. Both Watson-Crick and wobble geometries have been found for the crystallographic independent G.P base pairs.  相似文献   

17.
Here we report the crystal structures of I.C and I.A wobble base pairs in the context of the ribosomal decoding center, clearly showing that the I.A base pair is of an I(anti).A(anti) conformation, as predicted by Crick. Additionally, the structures enable the observation of changes in the anticodon to allow purine-purine base pairing, the 'widest' base pair geometry allowed in the wobble position.  相似文献   

18.
The structure of helix I of the 5S rRNA from Escherichia coli has been determined using a nucleolytic digest fragment of the intact molecule. The fragment analyzed, which corresponds to bases (-1)-11 and 108-120 of intact 5S rRNA, contains a G-U pair and has unpaired bases at its termini. Its proton resonances were assigned by two-dimensional NMR methods, and both NOE distance and coupling constant information have been used to calculate structural models for it using the full relaxation matrix algorithm of the molecular dynamics program XPLOR. Helix I has A-type helical geometry, as expected. Its most striking departure from regular helical geometry occurs at its G-U, which stacks on the base pair to the 5' side of its G but not on the base pair to its 3' side. This stacking pattern maximizes interstrand guanine-guanine interactions and explains why the G-U in question fails to give imino proton NOE's to the base pair to 5' side of its G. These results are consistent with the crystal structures that have been obtained for wobble base pairs in tRNAPhe [Mizuno, H., & Sundaralingam, M. (1978) Nucleic Acids Res. 5, 4451-4461] and A-form DNA [Rabbinovich, D., Haran, T., Eisenstein, M., & Shakked, Z. (1988) J. Mol. Biol. 200, 151-161]. The conformations of the terminal residues of helix I, which corresponds to bases (-1)-11 and 108-120 of native 5S RNA, are less well-determined, and their sugar puckers are intermediate between C2' and C3'-endo, on average.  相似文献   

19.
Expression of the genetic code depends on precise tRNA aminoacylation by cognate aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase enzymes. The G.U wobble base-pair in the acceptor helix of Escherichia coli alanine tRNA is the primary aminoacylation determinant of this molecule. Previous work on the process of synthetase recognition of the G.U pair showed that replacing G.U by a G.C Watson-Crick base-pair inactivates alanine acceptance by the tRNA, but that C.A and G.A wobble pair replacements preserve acceptance. Work by another group reported that the effects of a G.C replacement were reversed by a distal wobble base-pair in the anticodon helix. This result is potentially interesting because it suggests that distant regions in alanine tRNA are functionally coupled during synthetase recognition and more generally because recognition determinants of many other tRNAs lie in both the acceptor helix and anticodon helix region. Here, we have conducted an extensive in vivo analysis of the distal wobble pair in alanine tRNA and report that it does not behave like a compensating mutation. Restoration of alanine acceptance was not detected even when the synthetase enzyme was overproduced. We discuss the previous experimental evidence and suggest how the distal wobble pair was incorrectly analyzed. The available data indicate that all principal recognition determinants of alanine tRNA lie in the molecule's acceptor helix.  相似文献   

20.
Decoding the genome: a modified view   总被引:10,自引:4,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Transfer RNA’s role in decoding the genome is critical to the accuracy and efficiency of protein synthesis. Though modified nucleosides were identified in RNA 50 years ago, only recently has their importance to tRNA’s ability to decode cognate and wobble codons become apparent. RNA modifications are ubiquitous. To date, some 100 different posttranslational modifications have been identified. Modifications of tRNA are the most extensively investigated; however, many other RNAs have modified nucleosides. The modifications that occur at the first, or wobble position, of tRNA’s anticodon and those 3′-adjacent to the anticodon are of particular interest. The tRNAs most affected by individual and combinations of modifications respond to codons in mixed codon boxes where distinction of the third codon base is important for discriminating between the correct cognate or wobble codons and the incorrect near-cognate codons (e.g. AAA/G for lysine versus AAU/C asparagine). In contrast, other modifications expand wobble codon recognition, such as U·U base pairing, for tRNAs that respond to multiple codons of a 4-fold degenerate codon box (e.g. GUU/A/C/G for valine). Whether restricting codon recognition, expanding wobble, enabling translocation, or maintaining the messenger RNA, reading frame modifications appear to reduce anticodon loop dynamics to that accepted by the ribosome. Therefore, we suggest that anticodon stem and loop domain nucleoside modifications allow a limited number of tRNAs to accurately and efficiently decode the 61 amino acid codons by selectively restricting some anticodon–codon interactions and expanding others.  相似文献   

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