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1.
Several molecular dynamics simulations of S. aureus Tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (TyrRS) in its free form and complexed with Tyr, ATP, tyrosyl adenylate and inhibitor respectively have been carried out to investigate the ligand-linked conformational stability changes associated with its catalytic cycle. The results show that unliganded S. aureus TyrRS samples a more relaxed conformational space than substrate-bound TyrRS. There are three high flexibility regions encompassing residues 114–118, 128–133, and 226–238 respectively. The region which includes the KMSKS motif (KFGKS in S. aureus TyrRS) shows the highest difference in fluctuations. Hydrogen bond network formed by Tyr, ATP, tyrosyl adenylate and inhibitor with S. aureus TyrRS is discussed. Our simulations suggest the induced-fit conformational changes of the KMSKS loop as follows: the KMSKS loop of substrate-free S. aureus TyrRS adopts an open conformation. The tyrosine binds in the pocket with the KMSKS loop balancing between semi-open and open forms. The ATP binding induces the KMSKS loop to the open form. After the Tyr-AMP is formed, the first two residues of KMSKS loop twists in an anticlockwise direction and drives the loop in a conformation similar to the closed one, while those of the last three GKS residues adopt a conformation between semi-open and open conformation. This conformational change may probably be involved in the initial tRNA binding. Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

2.
The Methanococcus jannaschii tRNA(Tyr)/TyrRS pair has been engineered to incorporate unnatural amino acids into proteins in E. coli. To reveal the structural basis for the altered specificity of mutant TyrRS for O-methyl-L-tyrosine (OMeTyr), the crystal structures for the apo wild-type and mutant M. jannaschii TyrRS were determined at 2.66 and 3.0 A, respectively, for comparison with the published structure of TyrRS complexed with tRNA(Tyr) and substrate tyrosine. A large conformational change was found for the anticodon recognition loop 257-263 of wild-type TyrRS upon tRNA binding in order to facilitate recognition of G34 of the anticodon loop through pi-stacking and hydrogen bonding interactions. Loop 133-143, which is close to the tRNA acceptor stem-binding site, also appears to be stabilized by interaction with the tRNA(Tyr). Binding of the substrate tyrosine results in subtle and cooperative movements of the side chains within the tyrosine-binding pocket. In the OMeTyr-specific mutant synthetase structure, the signature motif KMSKS loop and acceptor stem-binding loop 133-143 were surprisingly ordered in the absence of bound ATP and tRNA. The active-site mutations result in altered hydrogen bonding and steric interactions which favor binding of OMeTyr over L-tyrosine. The structure of the mutant and wild-type TyrRS now provide a basis for generating new active-site libraries to evolve synthetases specific for other unnatural amino acids.  相似文献   

3.
Tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (TyrRS) has been studied extensively by mutational and structural analyses to elucidate its catalytic mechanism. TyrRS has the HIGH and KMSKS motifs that catalyze the amino acid activation with ATP. In the present study, the crystal structures of the Escherichia coli TyrRS catalytic domain, in complexes with l-tyrosine and a l-tyrosyladenylate analogue, Tyr-AMS, were solved at 2.0A and 2.7A resolution, respectively. In the Tyr-AMS-bound structure, the 2'-OH group and adenine ring of the Tyr-AMS are strictly recognized by hydrogen bonds. This manner of hydrogen-bond recognition is conserved among the class I synthetases. Moreover, a comparison between the two structures revealed that the KMSKS loop is rearranged in response to adenine moiety binding and hydrogen-bond formation, and the KMSKS loop adopts the more compact ("semi-open") form, rather than the flexible, open form. The HIGH motif initially recognizes the gamma-phosphate, and then the alpha and gamma-phosphates of ATP, with a slight rearrangement of the residues. The other residues around the substrate also accommodate the Tyr-AMS. This induced-fit form presents a novel "snapshot" of the amino acid activation step in the aminoacylation reaction by TyrRS. The present structures and the T.thermophilus TyrRS ATP-free and bound structures revealed that the extensive induced-fit conformational changes of the KMSKS loop and the local conformational changes within the substrate binding site form the basis for driving the amino acid activation step: the KMSKS loop adopts the open form, transiently shifts to the semi-open conformation according to the adenosyl moiety binding, and finally assumes the rigid ATP-bound, closed form. After the amino acid activation, the KMSKS loop adopts the semi-open form again to accept the CCA end of tRNA for the aminoacyl transfer reaction.  相似文献   

4.
Cytoplasmic tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (TyrRS) is one of the key enzymes of protein biosynthesis. TyrRSs of pathogenic organisms have gained attention as potential targets for drug development. Identifying structural differences between various TyrRSs will facilitate the development of specific inhibitors for the TyrRSs of pathogenic organisms. However, there is a deficiency in structural data for mammalian cytoplasmic TyrRS in complexes with substrates. In this work, we constructed spatial structure of full-length Bos taurus TyrRS (BtTyrRS) and its complexes with substrates using the set of computational modeling techniques. Special attention was paid to BtTyrRS complexes with substrates [L-tyrosine, K+ and ATP:Mg2+] and intermediate products [tyrosyl-adenylate (Tyr-AMP), K+ and PPi:Mg2+] with the different catalytic loop conformations. In order to analyze their dynamical properties, we performed 100 ns of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. MD simulations revealed new structural data concerning the tyrosine activation reaction in mammalian TyrRS. Formation of strong interaction between Lys154 and γ-phosphate suggests the additional role of CP1 insertion as an important factor for ATP binding. The presence of a potassium-binding pocket within the active site of mammalian TyrRS compensates the absence of the second lysine in the KMSKS motif. Our data provide new details concerning a role of K+ ions at different stages of the first step of the tyrosylation reaction, including the coordination of substrates and involvement in the PPi releasing. The results of this work suggest that differences between ATP-binding sites of mammalian and bacterial TyrRSs are meaningful and could be exploited in the drug design.  相似文献   

5.
Evolution of the tRNA(Tyr)/TyrRS aminoacylation systems   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The tRNA identity rules ensuring fidelity of translation are globally conserved throughout evolution except for tyrosyl-tRNA synthetases (TyrRSs) that display species-specific tRNA recognition. This discrimination originates from the presence of a conserved identity pair, G1-C72, located at the top of the acceptor stem of tRNA(Tyr) from eubacteria that is invariably replaced by an unusual C1-G72 pair in archaeal and eubacterial tRNA(Tyr). In addition to the key role of pair 1-72 in tyrosylation, discriminator base A73, the anticodon triplet and the large variable region (present in eubacterial tRNA(Tyr) but not found in eukaryal tRNA(Tyr)) contribute to tyrosylation with variable strengths. Crystallographic structures of two tRNA(Tyr)/TyrRS complexes revealed different interaction modes in accordance with the phylum-specificity. Recent functional studies on the human mitochondrial tRNA(Tyr)/TyrRS system indicates strong deviations from the canonical tyrosylation rules. These differences are discussed in the light of the present knowledge on TyrRSs.  相似文献   

6.
Sequence comparisons have been combined with mutational and kinetic analyses to elucidate how the catalytic mechanism of Bacillus stearothermophilus tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase evolved. Catalysis of tRNA(Tyr) aminoacylation by tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase involves two steps: activation of the tyrosine substrate by ATP to form an enzyme-bound tyrosyl-adenylate intermediate, and transfer of tyrosine from the tyrosyl-adenylate intermediate to tRNA(Tyr). Previous investigations indicate that the class I conserved KMSKS motif is involved in only the first step of the reaction (i.e. tyrosine activation). Here, we demonstrate that the class I conserved HIGH motif also is involved only in the tyrosine activation step. In contrast, one amino acid that is conserved in a subset of the class I aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, Thr40, and two amino acids that are present only in tyrosyl-tRNA synthetases, Lys82 and Arg86, stabilize the transition states for both steps of the tRNA aminoacylation reaction. These results imply that stabilization of the transition state for the first step of the reaction by the class I aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases preceded stabilization of the transition state for the second step of the reaction. This is consistent with the hypothesis that the ability of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases to catalyze the activation of amino acids with ATP preceded their ability to catalyze attachment of the amino acid to the 3' end of tRNA. We propose that the primordial aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases replaced a ribozyme whose function was to promote the reaction of amino acids and other small molecules with ATP.  相似文献   

7.
Xin Y  Li W  First EA 《Biochemistry》2000,39(2):340-347
Variants at each position of the 'KMSKS' signature motif in tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase have been analyzed to test the hypothesis that this motif is involved in catalysis of the second step of the aminoacylation reaction (i.e., the transfer of tyrosine from the enzyme-bound tyrosyl-adenylate intermediate to the tRNA(Tyr) substrate). Pre-steady-state kinetic studies show that while the rate constants for tyrosine transfer (k(4)) are similar to the wild-type value for all of the mobile loop variants, the K230A and K233A variants have increased dissociation constants (K(d)(tRNA)( )()= 2.4 and 1.7 microM, respectively) relative to the wild-type enzyme (K(d)(tRNA)( )()= 0.39 microM). In contrast, the K(d)(tRNA) values for the F231L, G232A, and T234A variants are similar to that of the wild-type enzyme. The K(d)(tRNA) value for a loop deletion variant, Delta(227-234), is similar to that for the K230A/K233A double mutant variant (3.4 and 3.0 microM, respectively). Double mutant free energy cycle analysis indicates there is a synergistic interaction between the side chains of K230 and K233 during the initial binding of tRNA(Tyr) (DeltaDeltaG(int) = -0.74 kcal/mol). These results suggest that while the 'KMSKS' motif is important for the initial binding of tRNA(Tyr) to tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase, it does not play a catalytic role in the second step of the reaction. These studies provide the first kinetic evidence that the 'KMSKS' motif plays a role in the initial binding of tRNA(Tyr) to tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase.  相似文献   

8.
The archaeal/eukaryotic tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (TyrRS)-tRNA(Tyr) pairs do not cross-react with their bacterial counterparts. This 'orthogonal' condition is essential for using the archaeal pair to expand the bacterial genetic code. In this study, the structure of the Methanococcus jannaschii TyrRS-tRNA(Tyr)-L-tyrosine complex, solved at a resolution of 1.95 A, reveals that this archaeal TyrRS strictly recognizes the C1-G72 base pair, whereas the bacterial TyrRS recognizes the G1-C72 in a different manner using different residues. These diverse tRNA recognition modes form the basis for the orthogonality. The common tRNA(Tyr) identity determinants (the discriminator, A73 and the anticodon residues) are also recognized in manners different from those of the bacterial TyrRS. Based on this finding, we created a mutant TyrRS that aminoacylates the amber suppressor tRNA with C34 65 times more efficiently than does the wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
The specific aminoacylation of tRNA by tyrosyl-tRNA synthetases (TyrRSs) relies on the identity determinants in the cognate tRNATyrs. We have determined the crystal structure of Saccharomyces cerevisiae TyrRS (SceTyrRS) complexed with a Tyr-AMP analog and the native tRNATyr(GΨA). Structural information for TyrRS–tRNATyr complexes is now full-line for three kingdoms. Because the archaeal/eukaryotic TyrRSs–tRNATyrs pairs do not cross-react with their bacterial counterparts, the recognition modes of the identity determinants by the archaeal/eukaryotic TyrRSs were expected to be similar to each other but different from that by the bacterial TyrRSs. Interestingly, however, the tRNATyr recognition modes of SceTyrRS have both similarities and differences compared with those in the archaeal TyrRS: the recognition of the C1-G72 base pair by SceTyrRS is similar to that by the archaeal TyrRS, whereas the recognition of the A73 by SceTyrRS is different from that by the archaeal TyrRS but similar to that by the bacterial TyrRS. Thus, the lack of cross-reactivity between archaeal/eukaryotic and bacterial TyrRS-tRNATyr pairs most probably lies in the different sequence of the last base pair of the acceptor stem (C1-G72 vs G1-C72) of tRNATyr. On the other hand, the recognition mode of Tyr-AMP is conserved among the TyrRSs from the three kingdoms.  相似文献   

10.
Aminoacylation of tRNA(Tyr) involves two steps: (1) tyrosine activation to form the tyrosyl-adenylate intermediate; and (2) transfer of tyrosine from the tyrosyl-adenylate intermediate to tRNA(Tyr). In Bacillus stearothermophilus tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase, Asp78, Tyr169, and Gln173 have been shown to form hydrogen bonds with the alpha-ammonium group of the tyrosine substrate during the first step of the aminoacylation reaction. Asp194 and Gln195 stabilize the transition state complex for the first step of the reaction by hydrogen bonding with the 2'-hydroxyl group of AMP and the carboxylate oxygen atom of tyrosine, respectively. Here, the roles that Asp78, Tyr169, Gln173, Asp194, and Gln195 play in catalysis of the second step of the reaction are investigated. Pre-steady-state kinetic analyses of alanine variants at each of these positions shows that while the replacement of Gln173 by alanine does not affect the initial binding of the tRNA(Tyr) substrate, it destabilizes the transition state complex for the second step of the reaction by 2.3 kcal/mol. None of the other alanine substitutions affects either the initial binding of the tRNA(Tyr) substrate or the stability of the transition state for the second step of the aminoacylation reaction. Taken together, the results presented here and the accompanying paper are consistent with a concerted reaction mechanism for the transfer of tyrosine to tRNA(Tyr), and suggest that catalysis of the second step of tRNA(Tyr) aminoacylation involves stabilization of a transition state in which the scissile acylphosphate bond of the tyrosyl-adenylate species is strained. Cleavage of the scissile bond on the breakdown of the transition state alleviates this strain.  相似文献   

11.
Tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (TyrRS) is able to catalyze the transfer of both l- and d-tyrosine to the 3' end of tRNA(Tyr). Activation of either stereoisomer by ATP results in formation of an enzyme-bound tyrosyl-adenylate intermediate and is accompanied by a blue shift in the intrinsic fluorescence of the protein. Single turnover kinetics for the aminoacylation of tRNA(Tyr) by D-tyrosine were monitored using stopped-flow fluorescence spectroscopy. Bacillus stearothermophilus tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase binds d-tyrosine with an 8.5-fold lower affinity than that of l-tyrosine (K (D-Tyr)(d) = 102 microm) and exhibits a 3-fold decrease in the forward rate constant for the activation reaction (k (D-Tyr)(3) = 13 s(-1)). Furthermore, as is the case for l-tyrosine, tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase exhibits "half-of-the-sites" reactivity with respect to the binding and activation of D-tyrosine. Surprisingly, pyrophosphate binds to the TyrRS.d-Tyr-AMP intermediate with a 14-fold higher affinity than it binds to the TyrRS.l-Tyr-AMP intermediate (K (PPi)(d) = 0.043 for TyrRS.d-Tyr-AMP.PP(i)). tRNA(Tyr) binds with a slightly (2.3-fold) lower affinity to the TyrRS.d-Tyr-AMP intermediate than it does to the TyrRS.l-Tyr-AMP intermediate. The observation that the K (Tyr)(d) and k(3) values are similar for l- and d-tyrosine suggests that their side chains bind to tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase in similar orientations and that at least one of the carboxylate oxygen atoms in d-tyrosine is properly positioned for attack on the alpha-phosphate of ATP.  相似文献   

12.
Human tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase is a homodimeric enzyme and each subunit is near 58 KD. It catalyzes the aminoacylation of tRNA(Tyr) by L-tyrosine. The His(6)-tagged human TyrS gene was obtained by RT-PCR from total RNA of human lung giant-cell cancer strain 95 D. It was confirmed by sequencing and cloned into the expression vector pET-24 a (+) to yield pET-24 a (+)-HTyrRS, which was transfected into Escherichia coli BL21-CodonPlus-RIL. The induced-expression level of His(6)-tagged human TyrRS was about 24% of total cell proteins under IPTG inducing. The recombinant protein was conveniently purified in a single step by metal (Ni(2+)) chelate affinity chromatography. About 22.3mg purified enzyme could be obtained from 1L cell culture. The k(cat) value of His(6)-tagged human TyrRS in the second step of tRNA(Tyr) aminoacylation was 1.49 s(-1). The K(m) values of tyrosine and tRNA(Tyr) were 0.3 and 0.9 microM. Six His residues at the C terminus of human TyrRS have little effect on the activities of the enzyme compared with other eukaryotic TyrRSs.  相似文献   

13.
Froelich CA  First EA 《Biochemistry》2011,50(33):7132-7145
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disorder (CMT) is the most common inherited peripheral neuropathy, afflicting 1 in every 2500 Americans. One form of this disease, Dominant Intermediate Charcot-Marie-Tooth disorder type C (DI-CMTC), is due to mutation of the gene encoding the cytoplasmic tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (TyrRS). Three different TyrRS variants have been found to give rise to DI-CMTC: replacing glycine at position 41 by arginine (G41R), replacing glutamic acid at position 196 by lysine (E196K), and deleting amino acids 153-156 (Δ(153-156)). To test the hypothesis that DI-CMTC is due to a defect in the ability of tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase to catalyze the aminoacylation of tRNA(Tyr), we have expressed each of these variants as recombinant proteins and used single turnover kinetics to characterize their abilities to catalyze the activation of tyrosine and its subsequent transfer to the 3' end of tRNA(Tyr). Two of the variants, G41R and Δ(153-156), display a substantial decrease in their ability to bind tyrosine (>100-fold). In contrast, the E196K substitution does not significantly affect the kinetics for formation of the tyrosyl-adenylate intermediate and actually increases the rate at which the tyrosyl moiety is transferred to tRNA(Tyr). The observation that the E196K substitution does not decrease the rate of catalysis indicates that DI-CMTC is not due to a catalytic defect in tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase.  相似文献   

14.
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, essential components of the cytoplasmic translation apparatus, also have nuclear functions that continue to be elucidated. However, little is known about how the distribution between cytoplasmic and nuclear compartments is controlled. Using a combination of methods, here we showed that human tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (TyrRS) distributes to the nucleus and that the nuclear import of human TyrRS is regulated by its cognate tRNA(Tyr). We identified a hexapeptide motif in the anticodon recognition domain that is critical for nuclear import of the synthetase. Remarkably, this nuclear localization signal (NLS) sequence motif is also important for interacting with tRNA(Tyr). As a consequence, mutational alteration of the hexapeptide simultaneously attenuated aminoacylation and nuclear localization. Because the NLS is sterically blocked when the cognate tRNA is bound to TyrRS, we hypothesized that the nuclear distribution of TyrRS is regulated by tRNA(Tyr). This expectation was confirmed by RNAi knockdown of tRNA(Tyr) expression, which led to robust nuclear import of TyrRS. Further bioinformatics analysis showed that to have nuclear import of TyrRS directly controlled by tRNA(Tyr) in higher organisms, the NLS of lower eukaryotes was abandoned, whereas the new NLS was evolved from an anticodon-binding hexapeptide motif. Thus, higher organisms developed a strategy to make tRNA a regulator of the nuclear trafficking of its cognate synthetase. The design in principle should coordinate nuclear import of a tRNA synthetase with the demands of protein synthesis in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

15.
The mitochondrial tyrosyl-tRNA synthetases (mt TyrRSs) of Pezizomycotina fungi are bifunctional proteins that aminoacylate mitochondrial tRNA(Tyr) and are structure-stabilizing splicing cofactors for group I introns. Studies with the Neurospora crassa synthetase (CYT-18 protein) showed that splicing activity is dependent upon Pezizomycotina-specific structural adaptations that form a distinct group I intron-binding site in the N-terminal catalytic domain. Although CYT-18's C-terminal domain also binds group I introns, it has been intractable to X-ray crystallography in the full-length protein. Here, we determined an NMR structure of the isolated C-terminal domain of the Aspergillus nidulans mt TyrRS, which is closely related to but smaller than CYT-18's. The structure shows an S4 fold like that of bacterial TyrRSs, but with novel features, including three Pezizomycontia-specific insertions. (15)N-(1)H two-dimensional NMR showed that C-terminal domains of the full-length A. nidulans and Geobacillus stearothermophilus synthetases do not tumble independently in solution, suggesting restricted orientations. Modeling onto a CYT-18/group I intron cocrystal structure indicates that the C-terminal domains of both subunits of the homodimeric protein bind different ends of the intron RNA, with one C-terminal domain having to undergo a large shift on its flexible linker to bind tRNA(Tyr) or the intron RNA on either side of the catalytic domain. The modeling suggests that the C-terminal domain acts together with the N-terminal domain to clamp parts of the intron's catalytic core, that at least one C-terminal domain insertion functions in group I intron binding, and that some C-terminal domain regions bind both tRNA(Tyr) and group I intron RNAs.  相似文献   

16.
Derivatives of yeast tRNA(Tyr) lacking in the anticodon-arm (and D-arm) were constructed by a combination of partial digestion with RNase T1 and joining with T4 RNA ligase. Aminoacylation analyses of these derivatives ("3/4 molecule" or "1/2 molecule") showed that sufficient information for binding to TyrRS is contained mainly in the aminoacyl-stem (and T psi C-arm) of yeast tRNA(Tyr), but further information, possibly in the anticodon-arm, is necessary for efficient acceptance of tyrosine.  相似文献   

17.
An auxiliary tryptophanyl tRNA synthetase (drTrpRS II) that interacts with nitric-oxide synthase in the radiation-resistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans charges tRNA with tryptophan and 4-nitrotryptophan, a specific nitration product of nitric-oxide synthase. Crystal structures of drTrpRS II, empty of ligands or bound to either Trp or ATP, reveal that drTrpRS II has an overall structure similar to standard bacterial TrpRSs but undergoes smaller amplitude motions of the helical tRNA anti-codon binding (TAB) domain on binding substrates. TAB domain loop conformations that more closely resemble those of human TrpRS than those of Bacillus stearothermophilus TrpRS (bsTrpRS) indicate different modes of tRNA recognition by subclasses of bacterial TrpRSs. A compact state of drTrpRS II binds ATP, from which only minimal TAB domain movement is necessary to bring nucleotide in contact with Trp. However, the signature KMSKS loop of class I synthetases does not completely engage the ATP phosphates, and the adenine ring is not well ordered in the absence of Trp. Thus, progression of the KMSKS loop to a high energy conformation that stages acyl-adenylation requires binding of both substrates. In an asymmetric drTrpRS II dimer, the closed subunit binds ATP, whereas the open subunit binds Trp. A crystallographically symmetric dimer binds no ligands. Half-site reactivity for Trp binding is confirmed by thermodynamic measurements and explained by an asymmetric shift of the dimer interface toward the occupied active site. Upon Trp binding, Asp68 propagates structural changes between subunits by switching its hydrogen bonding partner from dimer interface residue Tyr139 to active site residue Arg30. Since TrpRS IIs are resistant to inhibitors of standard TrpRSs, and pathogens contain drTrpRS II homologs, the structure of drTrpRS II provides a framework for the design of potentially useful antibiotics.  相似文献   

18.
Hydroxyl radical, generated by reduction of hydrogen peroxide by Fe(II)-EDTA, was used to investigate the contact sites of yeast tRNA(Tyr) with its cognate tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (TyrRS). Exposure of free tRNA(Tyr) to this reagent gave cleavage patterns consistent with the tertiary structure of yeast tRNA(Phe) established by X-ray crystallography. When the probing reaction was performed under the conditions which stabilized complex formation between tRNA(Tyr) and TyrRS, aminoacyl-stem region of the tRNA was protected from cleavage. This result supports our earlier finding that the information for binding to TyrRS would reside mainly in the aminoacyl-stem of tRNA(Tyr).  相似文献   

19.
Human tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase from mitochondria (mt-TyrRS) presents dual sequence features characteristic of eubacterial and archaeal TyrRSs, especially in the region containing amino acids recognizing the N1-N72 tyrosine identity pair. This would imply that human mt-TyrRS has lost the capacity to discriminate between the G1-C72 pair typical of eubacterial and mitochondrial tRNATyr and the reverse pair C1-G72 present in archaeal and eukaryal tRNATyr. This expectation was verified by a functional analysis of wild-type or mutated tRNATyr molecules, showing that mt-TyrRS aminoacylates with similar catalytic efficiency its cognate tRNATyr with G1-C72 and its mutated version with C1-G72. This provides the first example of a TyrRS lacking specificity toward N1-N72 and thus of a TyrRS disobeying the identity rules. Sequence comparisons of mt-TyrRSs across phylogeny suggest that the functional behavior of the human mt-TyrRS is conserved among all vertebrate mt-TyrRSs.  相似文献   

20.
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