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1.
2.
Selmer M  Su XD 《The EMBO journal》2002,21(15):4145-4153
SelB is an elongation factor needed for the co-translational incorporation of selenocysteine. Selenocysteine is coded by a UGA stop codon in combination with a specific downstream mRNA hairpin. In bacteria, the C-terminal part of SelB recognizes this hairpin, while the N-terminal part binds GTP and tRNA in analogy with elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu). We present the crystal structure of a C-terminal fragment of SelB (SelB-C) from Moorella thermoacetica at 2.12 A resolution, solved by a combination of selenium and yttrium multiwavelength anomalous dispersion. This 264 amino acid fragment contains the entire C-terminal extension beginning after the EF-Tu-homologous domains. SelB-C consists of four similar winged-helix domains arranged into the shape of an L. This is the first example of winged-helix domains involved in RNA binding. The location of conserved basic amino acids, together with data from the literature, define the position of the mRNA-binding site. Steric requirements indicate that a conformational change may occur upon ribosome interaction. Structural observations and data in the literature suggest that this change happens upon mRNA binding.  相似文献   

3.
SelB is a specialized translation factor that binds GTP and GDP and delivers selenocysteyl-tRNA (Sec-tRNA(Sec)) to the ribosome. By analogy to elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu), SelB is expected to control the delivery and release of Sec-tRNA(Sec) to the ribosome by the structural switch between GTP- and GDP-bound conformations. However, crystal structures of SelB suggested a similar domain arrangement in the apo form and GDP- and GTP-bound forms of the factor, raising the question of how SelB can fulfill its delivery function. Here, we studied the thermodynamics of guanine nucleotide binding to SelB by isothermal titration calorimetry in the temperature range between 10 and 25 °C using GTP, GDP, and two nonhydrolyzable GTP analogs, guanosine 5'-O-(γ-thio)triphosphate (GTPγS) and guanosine 5'-(β,γ-imido)-triphosphate (GDPNP). The binding of SelB to either guanine nucleotide is characterized by a large heat capacity change (-621, -467, -235, and -275 cal × mol(-1) × K(-1), with GTP, GTPγS, GDPNP, and GDP, respectively), associated with compensatory changes in binding entropy and enthalpy. Changes in heat capacity indicate a large decrease of the solvent-accessible surface area in SelB, amounting to 43 or 32 amino acids buried upon binding of GTP or GTPγS, respectively, and 15-19 amino acids upon binding GDP or GDPNP. The similarity of the GTP and GDP forms in the crystal structures can be attributed to the use of GDPNP, which appears to induce a structure of SelB that is more similar to the GDP than to the GTP-bound form.  相似文献   

4.
The cotranslational incorporation of selenocysteine into proteins is mediated by a specialized elongation factor, named SelB. Its amino-terminal three domains show homology to elongation factor EF-Tu and accordingly bind GTP and selenocysteyl-tRNASec. In addition, SelB exhibits a long carboxy-terminal extension that interacts with a secondary structure of selenoprotein mRNAs (SECIS element) positioned immediately downstream of the in-frame UGA codons specifying the sites of selenocysteine insertion. In this report, a fast and efficient method for the purification of large amounts of hexahistidine-tagged SelB is presented. After two chromatographic steps, 10 mg pure protein was isolated from 12 g wet cell pellet. Biochemical analysis of the purified protein showed that the tag does not influence the interaction of SelB with guanine nucleotides, SECIS elements, and selenocysteyl-tRNASec. In addition, the fusion protein is fully functional in mediating UGA read-through in vivo. It therefore represents an excellent model for studying the function of SelB and the mechanisms of selenocysteine incorporation.  相似文献   

5.
Decoding of UGA selenocysteine codons in eubacteria is mediated by the specialized elongation factor SelB, which conveys the charged tRNA(Sec) to the A site of the ribosome, through binding to the SECIS mRNA hairpin. In an attempt to isolate the eukaryotic homolog of SelB, a database search in this work identified a mouse expressed sequence tag containing the complete cDNA encoding a novel protein of 583 amino acids, which we called mSelB. Several lines of evidence enabled us to establish that mSelB is the bona fide mammalian elongation factor for selenoprotein translation: it binds GTP, recognizes the Sec-tRNA(Sec) in vitro and in vivo, and is required for efficient selenoprotein translation in vivo. In contrast to the eubacterial SelB, the recombinant mSelB alone is unable to bind specifically the eukaryotic SECIS RNA hairpin. However, complementation with HeLa cell extracts led to the formation of a SECIS-dependent complex containing mSelB and at least another factor. Therefore, the role carried out by a single elongation factor in eubacterial selenoprotein translation is devoted to two or more specialized proteins in eukaryotes.  相似文献   

6.
Elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) promotes the binding of aminoacyl-tRNA (aa-tRNA) to the acceptor site of the ribosome. During the elongation cycle, EF-Tu interacts with guanine nucleotides, aa-tRNA and its nucleotide exchange factor (EF-Ts). Quantitative determination of the equilibrium dissociation constants that govern the interactions of mammalian mitochondrial EF-Tu (EF-Tu(mt)) with guanine nucleotides was the focus of the work reported here. Equilibrium dialysis with [3H]GDP was used to measure the equilibrium dissociation constant of the EF-Tu(mt) x GDP complex (K(GDP) = 1.0 +/- 0.1 microM). Competition of GTP with a fluorescent derivative of GDP (mantGDP) for binding to EF-Tu(mt) was used to measure the dissociation constant of the EF-Tu(mt) x GTP complex (K(GTP) = 18 +/- 9 microM). The analysis of these data required information on the dissociation constant of the EF-Tu(mt) x mantGDP complex (K(mGDP) = 2.0 +/- 0.5 microM), which was measured by equilibrium dialysis. Both K(GDP) and K(GTP) for EF-Tu(mt) are quite different (about two orders of magnitude higher) than the dissociation constants of the corresponding complexes formed by Escherichia coli EF-Tu. The forward and reverse rate constants for the association and dissociation of the EF-Tu(mt) x GDP complex were determined using the change in the fluorescence of mantGDP upon interaction with EF-Tu(mt). These values are in agreement with a simple equilibrium binding interaction between EF-Tu(mt) and GDP. The results obtained are discussed in terms of the recently described crystal structure of the EF-Tu(mt) x GDP complex.  相似文献   

7.
In all three kingdoms of life, SelB is a specialized translation elongation factor responsible for the cotranslational incorporation of selenocysteine into proteins by recoding of a UGA stop codon in the presence of a downstream mRNA hairpin loop. Here, we present the X-ray structures of SelB from the archaeon Methanococcus maripaludis in the apo-, GDP- and GppNHp-bound form and use mutational analysis to investigate the role of individual amino acids in its aminoacyl-binding pocket. All three SelB structures reveal an EF-Tu:GTP-like domain arrangement. Upon binding of the GTP analogue GppNHp, a conformational change of the Switch 2 region in the GTPase domain leads to the exposure of SelB residues involved in clamping the 5' phosphate of the tRNA. A conserved extended loop in domain III of SelB may be responsible for specific interactions with tRNA(Sec) and act as a ruler for measuring the extra long acceptor arm. Domain IV of SelB adopts a beta barrel fold and is flexibly tethered to domain III. The overall domain arrangement of SelB resembles a 'chalice' observed so far only for initiation factor IF2/eIF5B. In our model of SelB bound to the ribosome, domain IV points towards the 3' mRNA entrance cleft ready to interact with the downstream secondary structure element.  相似文献   

8.
The interaction of Escherichia coli elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) with elongation factor Ts (EF-Ts) and guanine nucleotides was studied by the stopped-flow technique, monitoring the fluorescence of tryptophan 184 in EF-Tu or of the mant group attached to the guanine nucleotide. Rate constants of all association and dissociation reactions among EF-Tu, EF-Ts, GDP, and GTP were determined. EF-Ts enhances the dissociation of GDP and GTP from EF-Tu by factors of 6 x 10(4) and 3 x 10(3), respectively. The loss of Mg(2+) alone, without EF-Ts, accounts for a 150-300-fold acceleration of GDP dissociation from EF-Tu.GDP, suggesting that the disruption of the Mg(2+) binding site alone does not explain the EF-Ts effect. Dissociation of EF-Ts from the ternary complexes with EF-Tu and GDP/GTP is 10(3)-10(4) times faster than from the binary complex EF-Tu.EF-Ts, indicating different structures and/or interactions of the factors in the binary and ternary complexes. Rate constants of EF-Ts binding to EF-Tu in the free or nucleotide-bound form or of GDP/GTP binding to the EF-Tu.EF-Ts complex range from 0.6 x 10(7) to 6 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1). At in vivo concentrations of nucleotides and factors, the overall exchange rate, as calculated from the elemental rate constants, is 30 s(-1), which is compatible with the rate of protein synthesis in the cell.  相似文献   

9.
Selenocysteine (Sec) is the "21st" amino acid and is genetically encoded by an unusual incorporation system. The stop codon UGA becomes a Sec codon when the selenocysteine insertion sequence (SECIS) exists downstream of UGA. Sec incorporation requires a specific elongation factor, SelB, which recognizes tRNA(Sec) via use of an EF-Tu-like domain and the SECIS mRNA hairpin via use of a C-terminal domain (SelB-C). SelB functions in multiple translational steps: binding to SECIS mRNA and tRNA(Sec), delivery of tRNA(Sec) onto an A site, GTP hydrolysis, and release from tRNA and mRNA. However, this dynamic mechanism remains to be revealed. Here, we report a large domain rearrangement in the structure of SelB-C complexed with RNA. Surprisingly, the interdomain region forms new interactions with the phosphate backbone of a neighboring RNA, distinct from SECIS RNA binding. This SelB-RNA interaction is sequence independent, possibly reflecting SelB-tRNA/-rRNA recognitions. Based on these data, the dynamic SelB-ribosome-mRNA-tRNA interactions will be discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Structural model for the selenocysteine-specific elongation factor SelB   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A structural model was established for the N-terminal part of translation factor SelB which shares sequence similarity with EF-Tu, taking into account the coordinates of the EF-Tu 3D structure and the consensus of SelB sequences from four bacteria. The model showed that SelB is homologous in its N-terminal domains over all three domains of EF-Tu. The guanine nucleotide binding site and the residues involved in GTP hydrolysis are similar to those of EF-Tu, but with some subtle differences possibly responsible for the higher affinity of SelB for GTP compared to GDP. In accordance, the EF-Tu epitopes interacting with EF-Ts are lacking in SelB. Information on the formation of the selenocysteyl-binding pocket is presented. A phylogenetic comparison of the SelB domains homologous to EF-Tu with those from EF-Tu and initiation factor 2 indicated that SelB forms a separate class of translation factors.  相似文献   

11.
Several molecular mechanisms are involved in the genetic code interpretation during translation, as codon degeneration for the incorporation of rare amino acids. One mechanism that stands out is selenocysteine (Sec), which requires a specific biosynthesis and incorporation pathway. In Bacteria, the Sec biosynthesis pathway has unique features compared with the eukaryote pathway as Ser to Sec conversion mechanism is accomplished by a homodecameric enzyme (selenocysteine synthase, SelA) followed by the action of an elongation factor (SelB) responsible for delivering the mature Sec-tRNASec into the ribosome by the interaction with the Selenocysteine Insertion Sequence (SECIS). Besides this mechanism being already described, the sequential events for Sec-tRNASec and SECIS specific recognition remain unclear. In this study, we determined the order of events of the interactions between the proteins and RNAs involved in Sec incorporation. Dissociation constants between SelB and the native as well as unacylated-tRNASec variants demonstrated that the acceptor stem and variable arm are essential for SelB recognition. Moreover, our data support the sequence of molecular events where GTP-activated SelB strongly interacts with SelA.tRNASec. Subsequently, SelB.GTP.tRNASec recognizes the mRNA SECIS to deliver the tRNASec to the ribosome. SelB in complex with its specific RNAs were examined using Hydrogen/Deuterium exchange mapping that allowed the determination of the molecular envelopes and its secondary structural variations during the complex assembly. Our results demonstrate the ordering of events in Sec incorporation and contribute to the full comprehension of the tRNASec role in the Sec amino acid biosynthesis, as well as extending the knowledge of synthetic biology and the expansion of the genetic code.  相似文献   

12.
Elongation factor Tu from Thermus thermophilus was treated successively with periodate-oxidized GDP or GTP and cyanoborohydride. Covalently modified cyanogen bromide or trypsin fragments of the protein were isolated, and the position of their modification was determined. Lysine residues 52 and 137 were heavily labeled, lysine-137 being considerably more reactive in the GTP form as compared to the GDP form of the protein. These residues are in the proximity of the GDP/GTP binding site. Lys-325 was also labeled, but to a lower extent. The part of the EF-Tu containing residue 52 is missing in crystallized EF-Tu.GDP from Escherichia coli [Jurnak, F. (1985) Science (Washington, D.C.) 230, 32-36]. These results place the part of T. thermophilus EF-Tu corresponding to the missing fragment in E. coli EF-Tu in the vicinity of the nucleotide binding site and allow its role in the interaction with aminoacyl-tRNA and elongation factor Ts to be evaluated. Cross-linking of EF-Tu.GDP by irradiation at 257 nm showed that a sequence of 10 amino acids residues which is found in the Thermus thermophilus elongation factor Tu but not in other homologous bacterial proteins is located in the vicinity of the GDP/GTP binding site.  相似文献   

13.
Eukaryotic translation termination is mediated by two release factors: eRF1 recognizes stop codons and triggers peptidyl-tRNA hydrolysis, whereas eRF3 accelerates this process in a GTP-dependent manner. Here we report kinetic analysis of guanine nucleotide binding to eRF3 performed by fluorescence stopped-flow technique using GTP/GDP derivatives carrying the fluorescent methylanthraniloyl (mant-) group, as well as thermodynamic analysis of eRF3 binding to unlabeled guanine nucleotides. Whereas the kinetics of eRF3 binding to mant-GDP is consistent with a one-step binding model, the double-exponential transients of eRF3 binding to mant-GTP indicate a two-step binding mechanism, in which the initial eRF3.mant-GTP complex undergoes subsequent conformational change. The affinity of eRF3 for GTP (K(d), approximately 70 microM) is about 70-fold lower than for GDP (K(d), approximately 1 microM) and both nucleotides dissociate rapidly from eRF3 (k(-1)(mant-GDP) approximately 2.4 s(-1); k(-2)(mant-GTP) approximately 3.3 s(-1)). Whereas not influencing eRF3 binding to GDP, association of eRF3 with eRF1 at physiological Mg(2+) concentrations specifically changes the kinetics of eRF3/mant-GTP interaction and stabilizes eRF3.GTP binding by two orders of magnitude (K(d) approximately 0.7 microM) due to lowering of the dissociation rate constant approximately 24-fold (k(-1)(mant-GTP) approximately 0.14s(-1) approximately 0.14 s(-1)). Thus, eRF1 acts as a GTP dissociation inhibitor (TDI) for eRF3, promoting efficient ribosomal recruitment of its GTP-bound form. 80 S ribosomes did not influence guanine nucleotide binding/exchange on the eRF1 x eRF3 complex. Guanine nucleotide binding and exchange on eRF3, which therefore depends on stimulation by eRF1, is entirely different from that on prokaryotic RF3 and unusual among GTPases.  相似文献   

14.
Incorporation of the non-canonical amino acid selenocysteine into proteins requires the activity of the elongation factor SelB which substitutes for the function of EF-Tu. In contrast to EF-Tu, SelB binds selenocystylated tRNASecand an mRNA secondary structure adjacent to the UGA selenocysteine codon. To gain information on the domain structure of this specialized translation factor, theselBgenes from two bacteria unrelated toEscherichia coli(Clostridium thermoaceticumandDesulfomicrobium baculatum) were cloned and sequenced. The derived amino acid residue sequences were compared to those of SelB fromE. coliandHaemophilus influenzaeand to EF-Tu sequences. The alignment revealed that SelB contains all three domains characterized for EF-Tu. A fourth, C-terminally located domain shows only limited sequence conservation within the four SelB proteins. To elucidate the function of this C-terminal part a structure-function analysis of SelB fromE. coliwas performed. It showed that a C-terminal 17 kDa subdomain of the translation factor, when expressed separately, specifically binds the mRNA secondary structure. The recognition motif itself could be reduced to a 17 nucleotide minihelix without loss of binding affinity and specificity. A truncated SelB lacking the mRNA binding domain was still able to interact with selenocysteyl-tRNASec. Expression of the mRNA binding domain alone suppressed selenocysteine insertionin vivoby competing with SelB for its binding site at the mRNA. The results indicate that SelB can be considered as an EF-Tu homolog hooked to the mRNAviaits C-terminal domain.  相似文献   

15.
In prokaryotes, the recoding of a UGA stop codon as a selenocysteine codon requires a special elongation factor (EF) SelB and a stem-loop structure within the mRNA called a selenocysteine insertion sequence (SECIS). Here, we used NMR spectroscopy to determine the solution structure of the SECIS mRNA hairpin and characterized its interaction with the mRNA-binding domain of SelB. Our structural and biochemical data identified the conserved structural features important for binding to EF SelB within different SECIS RNA sequences. In the free SECIS mRNA structure, conserved nucleotides are strongly exposed for recognition by SelB. Binding of the C-terminal domain of SelB stabilizes the RNA secondary structure. In the protein-RNA complex, a Watson-Crick loop base-pair leaves a GpU sequence accessible for SelB recognition. This GpU sequence at the tip of the capping tetraloop and a bulge uracil five Watson-Crick base-pairs apart from the GpU are essential for interaction with SelB.  相似文献   

16.
In bacteria, UGA stop codons can be recoded to direct the incorporation of selenocysteine into proteins on the ribosome. Recoding requires a selenocysteine incorporation sequence (SECIS) downstream of the UGA codon, a specialized translation factor SelB, and the non-canonical Sec-tRNASec, which is formed from Ser-tRNASec by selenocysteine synthase, SelA, using selenophosphate as selenium donor. Here we describe a rapid-kinetics approach to study the mechanism of selenocysteine insertion into proteins on the ribosome. Labeling of SelB, Sec-tRNASec and other components of the translational machinery allows direct observation of the formation or dissociation of complexes by monitoring changes in the fluorescence of single dyes or fluorescence resonance energy transfer between two fluorophores. Furthermore, the structure of SelA was studied by electron cryomicroscopy (cryo-EM). We report that intact SelA from the thermophilic bacterium Moorella thermoacetica (mthSelA) can be vitrified for cryo-EM using a controlled-environment vitrification system. Two-dimensional image analysis of vitrified mthSelA images shows that SelA can adopt the wide range of orientations required for high-resolution structure determination by cryo-EM. The results indicate that mthSelA forms a homodecamer that has a ring-like structure with five bilobed wings, similar to the structure of the E. coli complex determined previously.  相似文献   

17.
Aurodox is a member of the family of kirromycin antibiotics, which inhibit protein biosynthesis by binding to elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu). We have determined the crystal structure of the 1:1:1 complex of Thermus thermophilus EF-Tu with GDP and aurodox to 2.0-A resolution. During its catalytic cycle, EF-Tu adopts two strikingly different conformations depending on the nucleotide bound: the GDP form and the GTP form. In the present structure, a GTP complex-like conformation of EF-Tu is observed, although GDP is bound to the nucleotide-binding site. This is consistent with previous proposals that aurodox fixes EF-Tu on the ribosome by locking it in its GTP form. Binding of EF-Tu.GDP to aminoacyl-tRNA and mutually exclusive binding of kirromycin and elongation factor Ts to EF-Tu can be explained on the basis of the structure. For many previously observed mutations that provide resistance to kirromycin, it can now be understood how they prevent interaction with the antibiotic. An unexpected feature of the structure is the reorientation of the His-85 side chain toward the nucleotide-binding site. We propose that this residue stabilizes the transition state of GTP hydrolysis, explaining the acceleration of the reaction by kirromycin-type antibiotics.  相似文献   

18.
Selenocysteine-incorporating tRNA(Sec)(UCA), the product of selC, was isolated from E.coli and aminoacylated with serine. The equilibrium dissociation constant for the interaction of Ser-tRNA(Sec)(UCA) with elongation factor Tu.GTP was determined to be 5.0 +/- 2.5 x 10(-8) M. Compared with the dissociation constants of the two elongator Ser-tRNA(Ser) species (Kd = 7 x 10(-10) M), the selenocysteine-incorporating UGA suppressor tRNA has an almost hundred fold weaker affinity for EF-Tu.GTP. This suggests a mechanism by which the Ser-tRNA(Sec) is prevented in recognition of UGA codons. This tRNA is not bound to EF-Tu.GTP and is converted to selenocysteinyl-tRNA(Sec). We also demonstrate the lack of an efficient interaction of Sec-tRNA(Sec)(UCA) with EF-Tu.GTP. The results of this work are in support of a mechanism by which the selenocysteine incorporation at UGA nonsense codons is mediated by an elongation factor other than EF-Tu.GTP.  相似文献   

19.
Yu H  Kim KS 《FEBS letters》2011,585(12):1934-1940
Cytotoxic necrotizing factor 1 (CNF1) plays an important role in meningitis-causing Escherichia coli. Mini-Tn5 mutagenesis of meningitis-causing E. coli revealed that transposon mutants of selA and selB genes failed to express CNF1. We subsequently showed that SelB and selenocysteine, however, are not essential for the expression of CNF1, but the deletion of 47 amino acids of SelB at its C terminus has a dominant negative effect on CNF1 expression at the translational level. Bioinformatic analysis of the mRNA of cnf1 predicted two putative selenocysteine incorporation sequence (SECIS) elements, but we failed to detect any selenocysteine in CNF1 protein. These findings suggest that SelB is involved in translational regulation of CNF1 expression but without incorporation of selenocysteine in CNF1 protein.  相似文献   

20.
In bacteria, incorporation of selenocysteine, the 21(st) amino acid, into proteins requires elongation factor SelB, which has the unusual property of binding to both transfer RNA (tRNA) and mRNA. SelB binds to an mRNA hairpin formed by the selenocysteine insertion sequence (SECIS) with extremely high specificity, the molecular basis of which has been unknown. We have determined the crystal structure of the mRNA-binding domain of SelB in complex with SECIS RNA at a resolution of 2.3 A. This is the first example of a complex between an RNA and a winged-helix (WH) domain, a motif found in many DNA-binding proteins and recently discovered in RNA-binding proteins. Notably, RNA binding does not induce a major conformational change in the WH motif. The structure reveals a new mode of RNA recognition with a geometry that allows the complex to wrap around the small ribosomal subunit.  相似文献   

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