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1.
Hematopoiesis and the inosine modification in transfer RNA   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Human promyelocytic leukemia (HL-60) cells were used to begin to evaluate the role in hematopoiesis of inosine biosynthesis in the tRNA anticodon wobble position; a reaction involving the enzymatic insertion of performed hypoxanthine. Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and hypoxanthine were found to induce the differentiation of HL-60 cells in a synergistic manner, and the induced differentiation was independent of changes in the purine catabolic enzymes adenosine deaminase and purine nucleoside phosphorylase. The short-term exposure of HL-60 cells to DMSO plus hypoxanthine resulted in enhanced leucine incorporation, and a model is presented showing how the inosine modification reaction in tRNA may be involved. A means by which hypoxanthine insertion into tRNA may modulate the synthesis of regulatory proteins (e.g., lymphokines and cell surface receptors) is also outlined.  相似文献   

2.
An enzyme was discovered which incorporates hypoxanthine into mature tRNA macromolecules. This enzyme is postulated to be similar to tRNA-guanine ribosyltransferase which inserts 7-(3,4-trans-4,5-cis-dihydroxy-1-cyclopenten-3-ylaminomethyl )-7-deazaguanine into the first position of the anticodon of four tRNAs. The hypoxanthine-incorporating enzyme has been assayed in extracts of rat liver and cultured human leukemia cells and it has been resolved from tRNA-guanine ribosyltransferase by DEAE-cellulose column chromatography. The enzyme assay is based on the incorporation of radiolabeled hypoxanthine into unfractionated heterologous tRNA and the reaction rate is proportional to the amount of added enzyme extract. Hydrolysis of the radiolabeled tRNA and analysis of the nucleoside composition yields inosine (the nucleoside of hypoxanthine) as the only radiolabeled product. It is proposed that the enzyme, a tRNA-hypoxanthine ribosyltransferase, is responsible for the biosynthesis of inosine in the anticodon wobble position of specific tRNAs, resulting in greatly expanded codon recognition by these tRNAs.  相似文献   

3.
L Droogmans  H Grosjean 《Biochimie》1991,73(7-8):1021-1025
Four variants of yeast tRNA-Phe in which the anticodon and 3'-adjacent nucleotide (GmAAY) have been replaced by synthetic tetranucleotides NAAG (where N is each of the four canonical nucleosides G, C, U or A) are substrates for a yeast tRNA modification enzyme which catalyses the S-adenosyl-L-methionine dependent formations of Gm-34, Cm-34, Um-34, Am-34 and Im-34 (where Nm represents a 2'-O-methylnucleoside and I inosine). The kinetics of these nucleosides-34 2'-O-methylations reveal that yeast tRNA-Phe with G-34 (the natural substrate) is less efficiently modified than variants of the same tRNA containing U-34 and C-34. The formation of Am-34 in the tRNA containing A-34 was found to be particularly inefficient. However, in this tRNA, we observed the formation of I-34 followed by a 2'-O-methylation (giving rise to Im-34). In the yeast in vitro system described here, inosine formation is not dependent on the addition of any cofactor including hypoxanthine; the mechanism of inosine formation in yeast tRNA might therefore be distinct from that found in higher eukaryotes.  相似文献   

4.
Mutants of the Escherichia coli initiator tRNA (tRNA(fMet)) have been used to examine the role of the anticodon and discriminator base in in vivo aminoacylation of tRNAs by cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase. Substitution of the methionine anticodon CAU with the cysteine anticodon GCA was found to allow initiation of protein synthesis by the mutant tRNA from a complementary initiation codon in a reporter protein. Sequencing of the protein revealed that cysteine comprised about half of the amino acid at the N terminus. An additional mutation, converting the discriminator base of tRNA(GCAfMet) from A73 to the base present in tRNA(Cys) (U73), resulted in a 6-fold increase in the amount of protein produced and insertion of greater than or equal to 90% cysteine in response to the complementary initiation codon. Substitution of C73 or G73 at the discriminator position led to insertion of little or no cysteine, indicating the importance of U73 for recognition of the tRNA by cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase. Single base changes in the anticodon of tRNA(GCAfMet) containing U73 from GCA to UCA, GUA, GCC, and GCG (changes underlined) eliminated or dramatically reduced cysteine insertion by the mutant initiator tRNA indicating that all three cysteine anticodon bases are essential for specific aminoacylation of the tRNA with cysteine in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
Wolf J  Gerber AP  Keller W 《The EMBO journal》2002,21(14):3841-3851
We report the characterization of tadA, the first prokaryotic RNA editing enzyme to be identified. Escherichia coli tadA displays sequence similarity to the yeast tRNA deaminase subunit Tad2p. Recombinant tadA protein forms homodimers and is sufficient for site-specific inosine formation at the wobble position (position 34) of tRNA(Arg2), the only tRNA having this modification in prokaryotes. With the exception of yeast tRNA(Arg), no other eukaryotic tRNA substrates were found to be modified by tadA. How ever, an artificial yeast tRNA(Asp), which carries the anticodon loop of yeast tRNA(Arg), is bound and modified by tadA. Moreover, a tRNA(Arg2) minisubstrate containing the anticodon stem and loop is sufficient for specific deamination by tadA. We show that nucleotides at positions 33-36 are sufficient for inosine formation in mutant Arg2 minisubstrates. The anticodon is thus a major determinant for tadA substrate specificity. Finally, we show that tadA is an essential gene in E.coli, underscoring the critical function of inosine at the wobble position in prokaryotes.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The ability of mitogen-stimulated human T cells or rapidly dividing human B lymphoblastoid cells to drive their total purine requirements from inosine 5'-monophosphate, inosine, or hypoxanthine was compared. Inosine 5'-monophosphate first must be converted to inosine by the action of the enzyme ecto-5'-nucleotidase before it can be transported into the cell; inosine and hypoxanthine, however, can be transported directly. Mitogen-stimulated human peripheral blood T cells were treated with aminopterin to inhibit purine synthesis de novo and to make the cells dependent on an exogenous purine source. Thymidine was added as a source of pyrimidines. Under these conditions, 30 microM inosine 5'-monophosphate, inosine, and hypoxanthine showed comparable abilities to support [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA or [3H]leucine incorporation into protein at rates equal to that of untreated control cultures. Similar results were found when azaserine was used to inhibit purine synthesis de novo, and thus DNA synthesis. In parallel experiments with the rapidly dividing human B lymphoblastoid cell line WI-L2, treatment with aminopterin (plus thymidine) inhibited the growth rate by greater than 95%. The normal growth rate was restored by the addition of 30 microM inosine 5'-monophosphate, inosine, or hypoxanthine to the medium. However, in similar experiments with cell line 1254, a derivative of WI-L2 which lacks detectable ecto-5'-nucleotidase activity, inosine and hypoxanthine (plus thymidine), but not inosine 5'-monophosphate (and thymidine) were able to restore the growth inhibition due to aminopterin. These results show that the catalytic activity of ecto-5'-nucleotidase is sufficient to meet the total purine requirements of mitogen-stimulated human T cells or rapidly dividing human B lymphoblastoid cells, and suggest that this enzyme may be important for purine salvage when rates of purine synthesis de novo are limited and/or an extracellular source of purine nucleotides is available.  相似文献   

8.
Initiation of in vivo protein synthesis with non-methionine amino acids   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Methionine is the universal amino acid for initiation of protein synthesis in all known organisms. The amino acid is coupled to a specific initiator methionine tRNA by methionyl-tRNA synthetase. In Escherichia coli, attachment of methionine to the initiator tRNA (tRNA(fMet)) has been shown to be dependent on synthetase recognition of the methionine anticodon CAU (complementary to the initiation codon AUG), [Schulman, L. H., & Pelka, H. (1983) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 80, 6755-6759]. We show here that alteration of the anticodon of tRNA(fMet) to GAC or GAA leads to aminoacylation of the initiator tRNA with valine or phenylalanine. In addition, tRNA(fMet) carrying these amino acids initiates in vivo protein synthesis when provided with initiation codons complementary to the modified anticodons. These results indicate that the sequence of the anticodon of tRNA(fMet) dictates the identity of the amino acid attached to the initiator tRNA in vivo and that there are no subsequent steps which prevent initiation of E. coli protein synthesis by valine and phenylalanine. The methods described here also provide a convenient in vivo assay for further examination of the role of the anticodon in tRNA amino acid acceptor identity.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Sera of some patients afflicted with the inflammatory disease myositis contain antibodies of the anti-PL-12 type. A fraction of these polyclonal autoantibodies specifically precipitates the fully matured human tRNA(Ala) bearing the anticodon IGC (PL-12 antigen). Earlier work (Bunn & Mathews, 1987, Science 238:116-119) had shown that the epitopes are located entirely within the anticodon stem-loop of the tRNA(Ala). Here we demonstrate that human anti-tRNA(Ala) autoantibodies immunoprecipitate a synthetic polyribonucleotide containing inosine (I) and N1-methylinosine (m1I) separated by 2 nt as in the anticodon stem-loop of human tRNA(Ala). The shortest polyribonucleotide that can be immunoprecipitated corresponds to the pentanucleotide IpGpCpm1IpUp, which corresponds to part of the anticodon loop of human tRNA(Ala) and lacks the stem-loop structure. The efficiency of immunoprecipitation was about four times greater with longer polyribonucleotides capable of forming a stem-loop structure, and was abolished by altering the relative positions of I and m1I within the synthetic polynucleotide. Synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotide analogs of the tRNA(Ala) stem-loop, containing the sequence dIpdGdCdm1Ip, are not antigenic. Our results show that human anti-tRNA(Ala) autoantibodies selectively recognize chemical details of modified nucleotides (the 6-keto group of inosine-34 and the 6-keto group and the N1-methyl groups of N1-methylinosine-37) within an anticodon loop structure of a tRNA molecule. We also describe the chemical synthesis of the phosphoramidite derivatives corresponding to N1-methylinosine and N1-methyl-2'-deoxyinosine for use in the automatic chemical synthesis of oligonucleotides containing N1-methylinosine and N1-methyl-2'-deoxyinosine.  相似文献   

11.
M Pak  L Pallanck  L H Schulman 《Biochemistry》1992,31(13):3303-3309
The role of the anticodon and discriminator base in aminoacylation of tRNAs with tryptophan has been explored using a recently developed in vivo assay based on initiation of protein synthesis by mischarged mutants of the Escherichia coli initiator tRNA. Substitution of the methionine anticodon CAU with the tryptophan anticodon CCA caused tRNA(fMet) to be aminoacylated with both methionine and tryptophan in vivo, as determined by analysis of the amino acids inserted by the mutant tRNA at the translational start site of a reporter protein containing a tryptophan initiation codon. Conversion of the discriminator base of tRNA(CCA)fMet from A73 to G73, the base present in tRNA(Trp), eliminated the in vivo methionine acceptor activity of the tRNA and resulted in complete charging with tryptophan. Single base changes in the anticodon of tRNA(CCA)fMet containing G73 from CCA to UCA, GCA, CAA, and CCG (changes underlined) essentially abolished tryptophan insertion, showing that all three anticodon bases specify the tryptophan identity of the tRNA. The important role of G73 in tryptophan identity was confirmed using mutants of an opal suppressor derivative of tRNA(Trp). Substitution of G73 with A73, C73, or U73 resulted in a large loss of the ability of the tRNA to suppress an opal stop codon in a reporter protein. Base pair substitutions at the first three positions of the acceptor stem of the suppressor tRNA caused 2-12-fold reductions in the efficiency of suppression without loss of specificity for aminoacylation of the tRNA with tryptophan.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The ability of inosine 5'-monophosphate vs inosine or hypoxanthine to supply the total purine requirements of mitogen-stimulated human T cells or rapidly dividing human B lymphoblastoid cells was evaluated. Mitogen-stimulated human peripheral blood T cells were treated with aminopterin to inhibit purine synthesis de novo and make the cells dependent upon an exogenous purine source. Thymidine was added as a source of pyrimidines. Under these conditions, 25 microM inosine 5'-monophosphate, inosine, and hypoxanthine showed comparable abilities to support [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA at rates equal to that of untreated control cultures. In parallel experiments with the rapidly dividing human B lymphoblastoid cell line, WI-L2, treatment with aminopterin (plus thymidine) inhibited the growth rate by greater than 95%. The normal growth rate was restored by the addition of 30 microM inosine 5'-monophosphate, inosine, or hypoxanthine to the medium. However, in similar experiments with cell line No. 1254, a derivative of WI-L2 which lacks detectable ecto-5'-nucleotidase activity, only inosine and hypoxanthine (plus thymidine), but not inosine 5'-monophosphate (and thymidine) were able to restore the growth inhibition due to aminopterin. These results show that the catalytic activity of ecto-5'-nucleotidase is sufficient to meet the total purine requirements of mitogen-stimulated human T cells or rapidly dividing human B lymphoblastoid cells and suggest that this enzyme may have functional significance when rates of purine synthesis de novo are limited and/or an extracellular source of purine nucleotides is available.  相似文献   

13.
RNA editing by adenosine deaminases generates RNA and protein diversity   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Schaub M  Keller W 《Biochimie》2002,84(8):791-803
  相似文献   

14.

Background

Transfer RNA (tRNA) is the means by which the cell translates DNA sequence into protein according to the rules of the genetic code. A credible proposition is that tRNA was formed from the duplication of an RNA hairpin half the length of the contemporary tRNA molecule, with the point at which the hairpins were joined marked by the canonical intron insertion position found today within tRNA genes. If these hairpins possessed a 3'-CCA terminus with different combinations of stem nucleotides (the ancestral operational RNA code), specific aminoacylation and perhaps participation in some form of noncoded protein synthesis might have occurred. However, the identity of the first tRNA and the initial steps in the origin of the genetic code remain elusive.

Results

Here we show evidence that glycine tRNA was the first tRNA, as revealed by a vestigial imprint in the anticodon loop sequences of contemporary descendents. This provides a plausible mechanism for the missing first step in the origin of the genetic code. In 448 of 466 glycine tRNA gene sequences from bacteria, archaea and eukaryote cytoplasm analyzed, CCA occurs immediately upstream of the canonical intron insertion position, suggesting the first anticodon (NCC for glycine) has been captured from the 3'-terminal CCA of one of the interacting hairpins as a result of an ancestral ligation.

Conclusion

That this imprint (including the second and third nucleotides of the glycine tRNA anticodon) has been retained through billions of years of evolution suggests Crick's 'frozen accident' hypothesis has validity for at least this very first step at the dawn of the genetic code.

Reviewers

This article was reviewed by Dr Eugene V. Koonin, Dr Rob Knight and Dr David H Ardell.  相似文献   

15.
Ribosomes translate genetic information encoded by messenger RNAs (mRNAs) into proteins. Accurate decoding by the ribosome depends on the proper interaction between the mRNA codon and the anticodon of transfer RNA (tRNA). tRNAs from all kingdoms of life are enzymatically modified at distinct sites, particularly in and near the anticodon. Yet, the role of these naturally occurring tRNA modifications in translation is not fully understood. Here we show that modified nucleosides at the first, or wobble, position of the anticodon and 3'-adjacent to the anticodon are important for translocation of tRNA from the ribosome's aminoacyl site (A site) to the peptidyl site (P site). Thus, naturally occurring modifications in tRNA contribute functional groups and conformational dynamics that are critical for accurate decoding of mRNA and for translocation to the P site during protein synthesis.  相似文献   

16.
Protein synthesis is initiated universally with the amino acid methionine. In Escherichia coli, studies with anticodon sequence mutants of the initiator methionine tRNA have shown that protein synthesis can be initiated with several other amino acids. In eukaryotic systems, however, a yeast initiator tRNA aminoacylated with isoleucine was found to be inactive in initiation in mammalian cell extracts. This finding raised the question of whether methionine is the only amino acid capable of initiation of protein synthesis in eukaryotes. In this work, we studied the activities, in initiation, of four different anticodon sequence mutants of human initiator tRNA in mammalian COS1 cells, using reporter genes carrying mutations in the initiation codon that are complementary to the tRNA anticodons. The mutant tRNAs used are aminoacylated with glutamine, methionine, and valine. Our results show that in the presence of the corresponding mutant initiator tRNAs, AGG and GUC can initiate protein synthesis in COS1 cells with methionine and valine, respectively. CAG initiates protein synthesis with glutamine but extremely poorly, whereas UAG could not be used to initiate protein synthesis with glutamine. We discuss the potential applications of the mutant initiator tRNA-dependent initiation of protein synthesis with codons other than AUG for studying the many interesting aspects of protein synthesis initiation in mammalian cells.  相似文献   

17.
The three-nucleotide mRNA reading frame is tightly regulated during translation to ensure accurate protein expression. Translation errors that lead to aberrant protein production can result from the uncoupled movement of the tRNA in either the 5′ or 3′ direction on mRNA. Here, we report the biochemical and structural characterization of +1 frameshift suppressor tRNASufJ, a tRNA known to decode four, instead of three, nucleotides. Frameshift suppressor tRNASufJ contains an insertion 5′ to its anticodon, expanding the anticodon loop from seven to eight nucleotides. Our results indicate that the expansion of the anticodon loop of either ASLSufJ or tRNASufJ does not affect its affinity for the A site of the ribosome. Structural analyses of both ASLSufJ and ASLThr bound to the Thermus thermophilus 70S ribosome demonstrate both ASLs decode in the zero frame. Although the anticodon loop residues 34–37 are superimposable with canonical seven-nucleotide ASLs, the single C31.5 insertion between nucleotides 31 and 32 in ASLSufJ imposes a conformational change of the anticodon stem, that repositions and tilts the ASL toward the back of the A site. Further modeling analyses reveal that this tilting would cause a distortion in full-length A-site tRNASufJ during tRNA selection and possibly impede gripping of the anticodon stem by 16S rRNA nucleotides in the P site. Together, these data implicate tRNA distortion as a major driver of noncanonical translation events such as frameshifting.  相似文献   

18.
Bacterial tRNA adenosine deaminases (TadAs) catalyze the hydrolytic deamination of adenosine to inosine at the wobble position of tRNA(Arg2), a process that enables this single tRNA to recognize three different arginine codons in mRNA. In addition, inosine is also introduced at the wobble position of multiple eukaryotic tRNAs. The genes encoding these deaminases are essential in bacteria and yeast, demonstrating the importance of their biological activity. Here we report the crystallization and structure determination to 2.0 A of Staphylococcus aureus TadA bound to the anticodon stem-loop of tRNA(Arg2) bearing nebularine, a non-hydrolyzable adenosine analog, at the wobble position. The cocrystal structure reveals the basis for both sequence and structure specificity in the interactions of TadA with RNA, and it additionally provides insight into the active site architecture that promotes efficient hydrolytic deamination.  相似文献   

19.
The base at the first anticodon ("wobble") position of certain eukaryotic tRNA species is either guanine or the hypermodified base queuine. These tRNA species are synthesized with guanine in the wobble position (tRNAG); this guanine can then be replaced with queuine by the action of the enzyme tRNA-guanine ribosyltransferase. In the present report, we show that tRNAG levels increased in response to the induction of erythroid differentiation of murine erythroleukemia (MEL) cells. We also found that tRNA-guanine ribosyltransferase was significantly inhibited by tetrahydrobiopterin. MEL cells showed a transient threefold increase in tetrahydrobiopterin levels 6 to 12 h after exposure of the cells to inducers such as DMSO or tetramethylurea. The increase in tetrahydrobiopterin preceded the increase in tRNAG which in turn preceded the appearance of phenotypic changes characteristic of differentiation. By contrast, a mutant MEL cell line unable to differentiate in response to inducers showed no change in the level of tetrahydrobiopterin or of tRNAG upon exposure to DMSO. N-acetylserotonin, a well-characterized inhibitor of tetrahydrobiopterin synthesis, prevented the DMSO-mediated increase in tetrahydrobiopterin in normal MEL cells. N-acetylserotonin also inhibited the increase in tRNAG levels and the appearance of phenotypic differentiation in these cells.  相似文献   

20.
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