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J Andersen  N Delihas  J S Hanas  C W Wu 《Biochemistry》1984,23(24):5752-5759
The structure of Xenopus laevis oocyte (Xlo) 5S ribosomal RNA has been probed with single-strand-specific ribonucleases T1, T2, and A with double-strand-specific ribonuclease V1 from cobra venom. The digestion of 5'- or 3'-labeled renatured 5S RNA samples followed by gel purification of the digested samples allowed the determination of primary cleavage sites. Results of these ribonuclease digestions provide support for the generalized 5S RNA secondary structural model derived from comparative sequence analysis. However, three putative single-stranded regions of the molecule exhibited unexpected V1 cuts, found at C36, U73, U76, and U102. These V1 cuts reflect additional secondary structural features of the RNA including A.G base pairs and support the extended base pairing in the stem containing helices IV and V which was proposed by Stahl et al. [Stahl, D. A., Luehrsen, K. R., Woese, C. R., & Pace, N. R. (1981) Nucleic Acids Res. 9, 6129-6137]. A conserved structure for helix V having a common unpaired uracil residue at Xlo position 84 is proposed for all eukaryotic 5S RNAs. Our results are compared with nuclease probes of other 5S RNAs.  相似文献   

4.
The attachment sites of the primary binding proteins L1, L2 and L23 on 23 S ribosomal RNA of Escherichia coli were examined by a chemical and ribonuclease footprinting method using several probes with different specificities. The results show that the sites are confined to localized RNA regions within the large ribonuclease-protected ribonucleoprotein fragments that were characterized earlier. They are as follows: (1) L1 recognizes a tertiary structural motif in domain V centred on two interacting internal loops; the main protein interaction sites occur at the internal loop/helix junctions. (2) The L2 site constitutes a single irregular stem/loop structure in the centre of domain IV where non-Watson-Crick pairing is likely to occur. (3) L23 recognizes a tertiary structural motif involving a single terminal loop structure and part of an adjacent internal loop at the centre of domain III. Each of the three primary binding proteins, whose presence is essential for ribosomal assembly, has been associated with important ribosomal functions: L1 lies in the E-site for deacylated tRNA binding while L2 and L23 have been implicated in the P and A substrate sites, respectively, of the peptidyl transferase centre. Moreover, each of the protein sites, but particularly those of L2 and L23, lies at the centre of RNA domains where they can maximally influence both the assembly of secondary binding proteins and the function of the RNA region.  相似文献   

5.
Beginning with the framework that has been developed for the assembly of the 30 S ribosomal subunit, we have identified a series of RNAs that are minimal binding sites for proteins S15, S6, S18, and S11 in the central domain from Thermus thermophilus. The minimal binding RNA for proteins S15, S6, and S18 consists of helix 22 and three-way junctions at both ends composed of portions of helices 20, 21, and 23. Addition of the remaining portion of helix 23 to this construct results in the minimal site for S11. Surprisingly, almost half of the central domain (helices 24, 25, and 26) is dispensable for binding the central domain proteins. Thus, at least two classes of RNA elements can be identified in ribosomal RNA. A protein-binding core element (such as helices 20, 21, 22, and 23) is required for the association of ribosomal proteins, whereas secondary binding elements (such as helices 24, 25, and 26) associate only with the preformed core RNP complex. Apparently, there may be a hierarchy of ribosomal RNA elements similar to the hierarchy of primary, secondary, and tertiary binding ribosomal proteins.  相似文献   

6.
We have examined the effect of binding ribosomal protein S4 to 16 S rRNA on the susceptibility of the RNA to a variety of chemical and enzymatic probes. We have used dimethyl sulfate to probe unpaired adenines (at N-1) and cytosines (at N-3), kethoxal to probe unpaired guanines (at N-1 and N-2) and cobra venom (V1) ribonuclease as a probe of base-paired regions of 16 S rRNA. Sites of attack by the probes were identified by primer extension using synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides. Comparison of probing results for naked and S4-bound rRNA shows: Protein S4 protects a relatively compact region of the 5' domain of 16 S rRNA from chemical and enzymatic attack. This region is bounded by nucleotides 27 to 47 and 394 to 556, and has a secondary structure characterized by the junction of five helical elements. Phylogenetically conserved irregular features (bulged nucleotides, internal loops and flanking unpaired nucleotides) and helical phosphodiester bonds of four of the helices are specifically protected in the S4-RNA complex. We conclude that this is the major, and possibly sole region of contact between 16 S rRNA and S4. Many of the S4-dependent changes mimic those observed on assembly of 16 S rRNA into 30 S ribosomal subunits. Binding of S4 causes enhanced chemical reactivity coupled with protection from V1 nuclease outside the S4 junction region in the 530, 720 and 1140 loops. We interpret these results as indicative of loss of structure, and suggest that S4 binding causes disruption of adventitious pairing in these regions, possibly by stabilizing the geometry of the RNA such that these interactions are prevented from forming.  相似文献   

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J M Kean  D E Draper 《Biochemistry》1985,24(19):5052-5061
A technique for isolating defined fragments of a large RNA has been developed and applied to a ribosomal RNA. A section of the Escherichia coli rrnB cistron corresponding to the S8/S15 protein binding domain of 16S ribosomal RNA was cloned into a single-stranded DNA phage; after hybridization of the phage DNA with 16S RNA and digestion with T1 ribonuclease, the protected RNA was separated from the DNA under denaturing conditions to yield a 345-base RNA fragment with unique ends (bases 525-869 in the 16S sequence). The secondary structure of this fragment was determined by mapping the cleavage sites of enzymes specific for single-stranded or double-helical RNA. The fragment structure is almost identical with that proposed for the corresponding region of intact 16S RNA on the basis of phylogenetic comparisons [Woese, C. R., Gutell, R., Gupta, R., & Noller, H. (1983) Microbiol. Rev. 47, 621-669]. We conclude that this section of RNA constitutes an independently folding domain that may be studied in isolation from the rest of the 16S RNA. The structure mapping experiments have indicated several interesting features in the RNA structure. (i) The largest bulge loop in the molecule (20 bases) contains specific tertiary structure. (ii) A region of long-range secondary structure, pairing bases about 200 residues apart in the sequence, can hydrogen bond in two different mutually exclusive schemes. Both appear to exist simultaneously in the RNA fragment under our conditions. (iii) The long-range secondary structure and one adjacent helix melt between 37 and 60 degrees C in the absence of Mg2+, while the rest of the structure is quite stable.  相似文献   

8.
An experimental approach was used to determine and compare the highest order structure within the 150 to 200 nucleotides at the 3'-ends of the RNAs from the small ribosomal subunits of Escherichia coli, Bacillus stearothermophilus and Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Chemical reagents were employed to establish the degree of stacking and/or accessibility of each adenosine, guanosine and cytidine. The double helices were probed with a cobra venom ribonuclease from Naja naja oxiana, and the relatively unstructured and accessible sequences were localized with the single strand-specific ribonucleases A, T1, T2 and S1. The data enabled the various minimal secondary structural models, proposed for the 3'-regions of the E. coli and S. cerevisiae RNAs, to be critically examined, and to demonstrate that the main common features of these models are correct. The results also reveal the presence and position of additional higher order structure in the renatured free RNA. It can be concluded that a high level of conservation of higher order structure has occurred during the evolution of the gram negative and gram positive eubacteria and the eukaryote in both the double helical regions and the "unstructured" regions. Several unusual structural features were detected. Multiple G X A pairings in two of the putative helices, which are compatible with phylogenetic sequence comparisons, are strongly supported by the occurrence of cobra venom ribonuclease cuts adjacent to, and in one case between, these pairings. Evidence is also provided for the stacking of an A X A pair within a double helix of the yeast RNA. Other special structural features include adenosines bulged out from double helices; such nucleotides, which are hyper-reactive, have been implicated in protein recognition in 5 S ribosomal RNA. The 3'-terminal regions of the RNAs are particularly important for the functioning of the ribosome. They are involved in mRNA, tRNA and ribosomal factor binding. The results reveal that while the functionally important RNA sequences tend to be conserved, they are not always accessible in the free RNA; the pyrimidine-rich "Shine and Dalgarno" sequence, for example, which is involved in mRNA recognition, occurs in a double helix in both eubacterial RNAs.  相似文献   

9.
The conformation of Escherichia coli 5 S rRNA was investigated using chemical and enzymatic probes. The four bases were monitored at one of their Watson-Crick positions with dimethylsulfate (at C(N-3) and A(N-1], with a carbodiimide derivative (at G(N-1) and U(N-3] and with kethoxal (at G(N-1, N-2]. Position N-7 of purine was probed with diethylpyrocarbonate (at A(N-7] and dimethylsulfate (at G(N-7]. Double-stranded or stacked regions were tested with RNase V1 and unpaired guanine residues with RNase T1. We also used lead(II) that has a preferential affinity for interhelical and loop regions and a high sensitivity for flexible regions. Particular care was taken to use uniform conditions of salt, magnesium, pH and temperature for the different enzymatic chemical probes. Derived from these experimental data, a three dimensional model of the 5 S rRNA was built using computer modeling which integrates stereochemical constraints and phylogenetic data. The three domains of 5 S rRNA secondary structure fold into a Y-shaped structure that does not accommodate long-range tertiary interactions between domains. The three domains have distinct structural and dynamic features as revealed by the chemical reactivity and the lead(II)-induced hydrolysis: domain 2 (loop B/helix III/loop C) displays a rather weak structure and possesses dynamic properties while domain 3 (helix V/region E/helix IV/loop D) adopts a highly structured and overall helical conformation. Conserved nucleotides are not crucial for the tertiary folding but maintain an intrinsic structure in the loop regions, especially via non-canonical pairing (A.G, G.U, G.G, A.C, C.C), which can close the loops in a highly specific fashion. In particular, nucleotides in the large external loop C fold into an organized conformation leading to the formation of a five-membered loop motif. Finally, nucleotides at the hinge region of the Y-shape are involved in a precise array of hydrogen bonds based on a triple interaction between U14, G69 and G107 stabilizing the quasi-colinearity of helices II and V. The proposed tertiary model is consistent with the localization of the ribosomal protein binding sites and possesses strong analogy with the model proposed for Xenopus laevis 5 S rRNA, indicating that the Y-shape model can be generalized to all 5 S rRNAs.  相似文献   

10.
RNA junctions are common secondary structural elements present in a wide range of RNA species. They play crucial roles in directing the overall folding of RNA molecules as well as in a variety of biological functions. In particular, there has been great interest in the dynamics of RNA junctions, including conformational pathways of fully base-paired 4-way (4H) RNA junctions. In such constructs, all nucleotides participate in one of the four double-stranded stem regions, with no connecting loops. Dynamical aspects of these 4H RNAs are interesting because frequent interchanges between parallel and antiparallel conformations are thought to occur without binding of other factors. Gel electrophoresis and single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments have suggested two possible pathways: one involves a helical rearrangement via disruption of coaxial stacking, and the other occurs by a rotation between the helical axes of coaxially stacked conformers. Employing molecular dynamics simulations, we explore this conformational variability in a 4H junction derived from domain 3 of the foot-and-mouth disease virus internal ribosome entry site (IRES); this junction contains highly conserved motifs for RNA-RNA and RNA-protein interactions, important for IRES activity. Our simulations capture transitions of the 4H junction between parallel and antiparallel conformations. The interconversion is virtually barrier-free and occurs via a rotation between the axes of coaxially stacked helices with a transient perpendicular intermediate. We characterize this transition, with various interhelical orientations, by pseudodihedral angle and interhelical distance measures. The high flexibility of the junction, as also demonstrated experimentally, is suitable for IRES activity. Because foot-and-mouth disease virus IRES structure depends on long-range interactions involving domain 3, the perpendicular intermediate, which maintains coaxial stacking of helices and thereby consensus primary and secondary structure information, may be beneficial for guiding the overall organization of the RNA system in domain 3.  相似文献   

11.
A ribonuclease extracted from the venom of the cobra Naja oxiana, which shows an unusual specificity for double-stranded RNA regions, was used to obtain new insight on the topography of Escherichia coli ribosomal 16 S RNA in the 30 S subunit and in the 70 S couple. 32P-labeled 30 S subunits or reconstituted 70 S tight couples containing 32P-labeled 16 S RNA have been digested under progressively stronger conditions. The cleavage sites have been precisely localized and the chronology of the hydrolysis process studied.The enzyme cleaves the 16 S RNA within 30 S subunits at 21 different sites, which are not uniformly distributed along the molecule. These results provide valuable information on the 16 S RNA topography and evidence for secondary structure features.The binding of the 50 S subunit markedly reduces the rate of the 16 S RNA hydrolysis and provides protection for several cleavage sites. Four of them are clustered in the 3′-terminal 200 nucleotides of the molecule, one in the middle (at position 772) and one in the 5′ domain (at position 336). Our results provide further evidence that the 3′-terminal and central regions of the RNA chain are close to each other in the ribosome structure and lie at the interface of the two subunits. They also suggest that the 5′ domain is probably not involved exclusively in structure and assembly.  相似文献   

12.
Selected groups of isolated 14C-labelled proteins from E. coli 30S ribosomal subunits were reconstituted with 32P-labelled 16S RNA, and the reconstituted complexes were partially digested with ribonuclease A. RNA fragments protected by the proteins were separated by gel electrophoresis and subjected to sequence analysis. Complexes containing proteins S7 and S19 protected an RNA region comprising helices 29 to 32, part of helix 41, and helices 42 and 43 of the 16S RNA secondary structure. Addition of protein S9 had no effect. When compared with previous data for proteins S7, S9, S14 and S19, these results suggest that S14 interacts with helix 33, and that S9 and S14 together interact with the loop-end of helix 41. Complexes containing proteins S8, S15 and S17 protected helices 7 to 10 as well as the "S8-S15 binding site" (helices 20, 22 and parts of helices 21 and 23). When protein S15 was omitted, S8 and S18 showed protection of part of helix 44 in addition to the latter regions. The results are discussed in terms of our model for the detailed arrangement of proteins and RNA in the 30S subunit.  相似文献   

13.
More than 50% of RNA secondary structure is estimated to be A-form helices, which are linked together by various junctions. Here we describe a protocol for computing three interhelical Euler angles describing the relative orientation of helices across RNA junctions. 5' and 3' helices, H1 and H2, respectively, are assigned based on the junction topology. A reference canonical helix is constructed using an appropriate molecular builder software consisting of two continuous idealized A-form helices (iH1 and iH2) with helix axis oriented along the molecular Z-direction running toward the positive direction from iH1 to iH2. The phosphate groups and the carbon and oxygen atoms of the sugars are used to superimpose helix H1 of a target interhelical junction onto the corresponding iH1 of the reference helix. A copy of iH2 is then superimposed onto the resulting H2 helix to generate iH2'. A rotation matrix R is computed, which rotates iH2' into iH2 and expresses the rotation parameters in terms of three Euler angles α(h), β(h) and γ(h). The angles are processed to resolve a twofold degeneracy and to select an overall rotation around the axis of the reference helix. The three interhelical Euler angles define clockwise rotations around the 5' (-γ(h)) and 3' (α(h)) helices and an interhelical bend angle (β(h)). The angles can be depicted graphically to provide a 'Ramachandran'-type view of RNA global structure that can be used to identify unusual conformations as well as to understand variations due to changes in sequence, junction topology and other parameters.  相似文献   

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The signal recognition particle (SRP) is a ribonucleoprotein particle involved in GTP-dependent translocation of secretory proteins across membranes. In Archaea and Eukarya, SRP19 binds to 7SL RNA and promotes the incorporation of SRP54, which contains the binding sites for GTP, the signal peptide, and the membrane-bound SRP receptor. We have determined the crystal structure of Methanococcus jannaschii SRP19 bound to the S domain of human 7SL RNA at 2.9 A resolution. SRP19 clamps the tetraloops of two branched helices (helices 6 and 8) and allows them to interact side by side. Helix 6 acts as a splint for helix 8 and partially preorganizes the binding site for SRP54 in helix 8, thereby facilitating the binding of SRP54 in assembly.  相似文献   

16.
Protein L23 from the ribosome of Escherichia coli is the primary ribosomal product cross-linked to affinity-labelled puromycin; it lies, therefore, within the A-site domain of the peptidyl transferase centre on the 50 S subunit. We have characterized this functional domain by isolating and sequencing the RNA binding site of protein L23; it consists of two main fragments of 25 and 105 nucleotides that strongly interact and are separated by 172 nucleotides in the primary sequence. The higher-order structure of the RNA moiety was probed by chemical reagents, and by single-strand and double-strand-specific ribonucleases; a secondary structural model and a tertiary structural interaction are proposed on the basis of these data that are compatible with phylogenetic sequence comparisons.Several nucleotides exhibited altered chemical reactivity, both lower and higher, in the presence of protein L23, thereby implicating a large proportion of the RNA structure in the protein binding. The sites were located mainly at the extremities of the helices and at nucleotides that were putatively bulged out from the helices.The RNA moiety and an adjacent excised fragment contain several highly conserved sequences and a modified adenosine. Such sequences constitute important functional domains of the RNA and may contribute to the putative role of this RNA region in the peptidyl transferase centre.  相似文献   

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S4 is one of the first proteins to bind to 16S RNA during assembly of the prokaryotic ribosome. Residues 43-200 of S4 from Bacillus stearothermophilus (S4 Delta41) bind specifically to both 16S rRNA and to a pseudoknot within the alpha operon mRNA. As a first step toward understanding how S4 recognizes and organizes RNA, we have solved the structure of S4 Delta41 in solution by multidimensional heteronuclear nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The fold consists of two globular subdomains, one comprised of four helices and the other comprised of a five-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet and three helices. Although cross-linking studies suggest that residues between helices alpha2 and alpha3 are close to RNA, the concentration of positive charge along the crevice between the two subdomains suggests that this could be an RNA-binding site. In contrast to the L11 RNA-binding domain studied previously, S4 Delta41 shows no fast local motions, suggesting that it has less capacity for refolding to fit RNA. The independently determined crystal structure of S4 Delta41 shows similar features, although there is small rotation of the subdomains compared with the solution structure. The relative orientation of the subdomains in solution will be verified with further study.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Fox and Woese (1975a) have shown that a model of 5S RNA secondary structure similar to the one originally derived forChlorella 5S RNA can be generalized with relatively minor variations to all sequenced 5S RNA molecules, i.e. that corresponding base paired regions can be formed at approximately the same positions. We present experimental data in favour of this hypothesis and show that the points at which ribonucleases T1, T2 and pancreatic ribonuclease cleave six different 5S RNA molecules under mild conditions (high ionic strength, low temperature, low RNAase concentration) nearly always fall in the proposed single-stranded regions. We conclude that this model is a good approximation to the conformation of 5S RNA in solution.  相似文献   

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