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1.
Most archaea and bacteria use a modified C in the anticodon wobble position of isoleucine tRNA to base pair with A but not with G of the mRNA. This allows the tRNA to read the isoleucine codon AUA without also reading the methionine codon AUG. To understand why a modified C, and not U or modified U, is used to base pair with A, we mutated the C34 in the anticodon of Haloarcula marismortui isoleucine tRNA (tRNA2Ile) to U, expressed the mutant tRNA in Haloferax volcanii, and purified and analyzed the tRNA. Ribosome binding experiments show that although the wild-type tRNA2Ile binds exclusively to the isoleucine codon AUA, the mutant tRNA binds not only to AUA but also to AUU, another isoleucine codon, and to AUG, a methionine codon. The G34 to U mutant in the anticodon of another H. marismortui isoleucine tRNA species showed similar codon binding properties. Binding of the mutant tRNA to AUG could lead to misreading of the AUG codon and insertion of isoleucine in place of methionine. This result would explain why most archaea and bacteria do not normally use U or a modified U in the anticodon wobble position of isoleucine tRNA for reading the codon AUA. Biochemical and mass spectrometric analyses of the mutant tRNAs have led to the discovery of a new modified nucleoside, 5-cyanomethyl U in the anticodon wobble position of the mutant tRNAs. 5-Cyanomethyl U is present in total tRNAs from euryarchaea but not in crenarchaea, eubacteria, or eukaryotes.  相似文献   

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In the bacterial decoding system, the AUA codon is deciphered as isoleucine by tRNAIle bearing lysidine (L, 2-lysyl-cytidine) at the wobble position. Lysidine is an essential modification that determines both the codon and amino acid specificities of tRNAIle. We identified an enzyme named tRNAIle lysidine synthetase (TilS) that catalyzes lysidine formation by using lysine and ATP as substrates. Biochemical studies revealed a molecular mechanism of lysidine formation that consists of two consecutive reactions involving the adenylated tRNA intermediate. In addition, we deciphered how Escherichia coli TilS specifically discriminates between tRNAIle and the structurally similar tRNAMet, which bears the same anticodon loop. Recent structural studies unveiled tRNA recognition by TilS, and a molecular basis of lysidine formation at atomic resolution.  相似文献   

4.
Translation termination at UAG is influenced by the nature of the 5′ flanking codon inEscherichia coli. Readthrough of the stop codon is always higher in a strain with mutant (prfA1) as compared to wild-type (prfA+) release factor one (RF1). Isocodons, which differ in the last base and are decoded by the same tRNA species, affect termination at UAG differently in strains with mutant or wild-type RF1. No general preference of the last codon base to favour readthrough or termination can be found. The data suggest that RF1 is sensitive to the nature of the wobble base anticodon-codon interaction at the ribosomal peptidyl-tRNA binding site (P-site). For some isoaccepting P-site tRNAs (tRNA3ProversustRNA2Pro, tRNA4ThrversustRNA1,3Thr) the effect is different on mutant and wild-type RF1, suggesting an interaction between RF1 at the aminoacyl-tRNA acceptor site (A-site) and the P-site tRNA itself. The glycine codons GGA (tRNA2Gly) and GGG (tRNA2,3Gly) at the ribosomal P-site are associated with an almost threefold higher readthrough of UAG than any of the other 42 codons tested, including the glycine codons GGU/C, in a strain with wild-type RF1. This differential response to the glycine codons is lost in the strain with the mutant form of RF1 since readthrough is increased to a similar high level for all four glycine codons. High α-helix propensity of the last amino acid residue at the C-terminal end of the nascent peptide is correlated with an increased termination at UAG. The effect is stronger on mutant compared to wild-type RF1. The data suggest that RF1-mediated termination at UAG is sensitive to the nature of the codon-anticodon interaction of the wobble base, the last amino acid residue of the nascent peptide chain, and the tRNA at the ribosomal P-site.  相似文献   

5.
Bacteria and archaea have 2-lysylcytidine (L or lysidine) and 2-agmatinylcytidine (agm2C or agmatidine), respectively, at the first (wobble) position of the anticodon of the AUA codon-specific tRNAIle. These lysine- or agmatine-conjugated cytidine derivatives are crucial for the precise decoding of the genetic code. L is synthesized by tRNAIle-lysidine synthetase (TilS), which uses l-lysine and ATP as substrates. Agm2C formation is catalyzed by tRNAIle-agm2C synthetase (TiaS), which uses agmatine and ATP for the reaction. Despite the fact that TilS and TiaS synthesize structurally similar cytidine derivatives, these enzymes belong to non-related protein families. Therefore, these enzymes modify the wobble cytidine by distinct catalytic mechanisms, in which TilS activates the C2 carbon of the wobble cytidine by adenylation, while TiaS activates it by phosphorylation. In contrast, TilS and TiaS share similar tRNA recognition mechanisms, in which the enzymes recognize the tRNA acceptor stem to discriminate tRNAIle and tRNAMet.  相似文献   

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Mitochondrial gene expression uses a non‐universal genetic code in mammals. Besides reading the conventional AUG codon, mitochondrial (mt‐)tRNAMet mediates incorporation of methionine on AUA and AUU codons during translation initiation and on AUA codons during elongation. We show that the RNA methyltransferase NSUN3 localises to mitochondria and interacts with mt‐tRNAMet to methylate cytosine 34 (C34) at the wobble position. NSUN3 specifically recognises the anticodon stem loop (ASL) of the tRNA, explaining why a mutation that compromises ASL basepairing leads to disease. We further identify ALKBH1/ABH1 as the dioxygenase responsible for oxidising m5C34 of mt‐tRNAMet to generate an f5C34 modification. In vitro codon recognition studies with mitochondrial translation factors reveal preferential utilisation of m5C34 mt‐tRNAMet in initiation. Depletion of either NSUN3 or ABH1 strongly affects mitochondrial translation in human cells, implying that modifications generated by both enzymes are necessary for mt‐tRNAMet function. Together, our data reveal how modifications in mt‐tRNAMet are generated by the sequential action of NSUN3 and ABH1, allowing the single mitochondrial tRNAMet to recognise the different codons encoding methionine.  相似文献   

10.
Codon-anticodon recognition and transfer RNA utilization for the leucine tRNA isoaccepting species of Escherichia coli have been studied by protein synthesis in vitro directed by sequenced bacteriophage MS2 RNA. We have added radioactive Leu-tRNALeu isoaccepting species as tracers, rather than use a tRNA-dependent system, since in the presence of an excess of non-radioactive leucine, there is no transfer of radioactive leucine from one isoaccepting species to another. MS2-specific peptides containing leucine residues encoded by known codons were isolated and identified, and the relative abilities of the Leu-tRNALeu isoaccepting species to transfer leucine into these peptides compared. Sequenced tRNA1Leu and sequenced tRNA3Leu are of roughly equal efficiency in their ability to recognize CUC and CUA codons, while tRNA3Leu is highly preferred for the CUU codon; tRNA4Leu and tRNA5Leu both recognize UUA and UUG codons, with tRNA4Leu slightly preferred for the UUA codon. We conclude that: (1) wobble is greater than permitted by the wobble hypothesis; (2) there is still some discrimination in the third code letter, and that the CUX4 (CUC, CUA, CUU, CUG) portion of the leucine family of six codons is not read by a simple “two out of three” mechanism; (3) a Watson-Crick pair (C · G) between codon and anticodon does not appear to be preferred over an unorthodox pair (C · C) in the wobble position; (4) a standard wobble pair (U · G) between codon and anticodon is preferred over an unorthodox pair (U · C); and (5) the extensive wobble observed in the CUX4 leucine codon series is not paralleled in the UUX4 leucine (UUG, UUA) and phenylalanine (UUU, UUC) codon series, where mistranslation would be the consequence of such wobble.  相似文献   

11.
Recognition strategies for tRNA aminoacylation are ancient and highly conserved, having been selected very early in the evolution of the genetic code. In most cases, the trinucleotide anticodons of tRNA are important identity determinants for aminoacylation by cognate aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. However, a degree of ambiguity exists in the recognition of certain tRNAIle isoacceptors that are initially transcribed with the methionine-specifying CAU anticodon. In most organisms, the C34 wobble position in these tRNAIle precursors is rapidly modified to lysidine to prevent recognition by methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MRS) and production of a chimeric Met-tRNAIle that would compromise translational fidelity. In certain bacteria, however, lysidine modification is not required for MRS rejection, indicating that this recognition strategy is not universally conserved and may be relatively recent. To explore the actual distribution of lysidine-dependent tRNAIle rejection by MRS, we have investigated the ability of bacterial MRSs from different clades to differentiate cognate tRNACAUMet from near-cognate tRNACAUIle. Discrimination abilities vary greatly and appear unrelated to phylogenetic or structural features of the enzymes or sequence determinants of the tRNA. Our data indicate that tRNAIle identity elements were established late and independently in different bacterial groups. We propose that the observed variation in MRS discrimination ability reflects differences in the evolution of genetic code machineries of emerging bacterial clades.  相似文献   

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Transfer RNA from Escherichia coli C6, a Met, Cys, relA mutant, was previously shown to contain an altered tRNAIle which accumulates during cysteine starvation (Harris, C.L., Lui, L., Sakallah, S. and DeVore, R. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 7676–7683). We now report the purification of this altered tRNAIle and a comparison of its aminoacylation and chromatographic behavior and modified nucleoside content to that of tRNAIle purified from cells of the same strain grown in the presence of cysteine. Sulfur-deficient tRNAIle (from cysteine-starved cells) was found to have a 5-fold increased Vmax in aminoacylation compared to the normal isoacceptor. However, rates or extents of transfer of isoleucine from the [isoleucyl ∼ AMP · Ile-tRNA synthetase] complex were identical with these two tRNAs. Nitrocellulose binding studies suggested that the sulfur-deficient tRNAIle bound more efficiently to its synthetase compared to normal tRNAIle. Modified nucleoside analysis showed that these tRNAs contained identical amounts of all modified bases except for dihydrouridine and 4-thiouridine. Normal tRNAIle contains 1 mol 4-thiouridine and dihydrouridine per mol tRNA, while cysteine-starved tRNAIle contains 2 mol dihydrouridine per mol tRNA and is devoid of 4-thiouridine. Several lines of evidence are presented which show that 4-thiouridine can be removed or lost from normal tRNAIle without a change in aminoacylation properties. Further, tRNA isolated from E. coli C6 grown with glutathione instead of cysteine has a normal content of 4-thiouridine, but its tRNAIle has an increased rate of aminoacylation. We conclude that the low content of dihydrouridine in tRNAIle from E. coli cells grown in cysteine-containing medium is most likely responsible for the slow aminoacylation kinetics observed with this tRNA. The possibility that specific dihydrouridine residues in this tRNA might be necessary in establishing the correct conformation of tRNAIle for aminoacylation is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
In most bacteria, two tRNAs decode the four arginine CGN codons. One tRNA harboring a wobble inosine (tRNAArgICG) reads the CGU, CGC and CGA codons, whereas a second tRNA harboring a wobble cytidine (tRNAArgCCG) reads the remaining CGG codon. The reduced genomes of Mycoplasmas and other Mollicutes lack the gene encoding tRNAArgCCG. This raises the question of how these organisms decode CGG codons. Examination of 36 Mollicute genomes for genes encoding tRNAArg and the TadA enzyme, responsible for wobble inosine formation, suggested an evolutionary scenario where tadA gene mutations first occurred. This allowed the temporary accumulation of non-deaminated tRNAArgACG, capable of reading all CGN codons. This hypothesis was verified in Mycoplasma capricolum, which contains a small fraction of tRNAArgACG with a non-deaminated wobble adenosine. Subsets of Mollicutes continued to evolve by losing both the mutated tRNAArgCCG and tadA, and then acquired a new tRNAArgUCG. This permitted further tRNAArgACG mutations with tRNAArgGCG or its disappearance, leaving a single tRNAArgUCG to decode the four CGN codons. The key point of our model is that the A-to-I deamination activity had to be controlled before the loss of the tadA gene, allowing the stepwise evolution of Mollicutes toward an alternative decoding strategy.  相似文献   

15.
The tRNA specific for methionine (tRNAMet) of human mitochondria contains a formyl‐cytosine at the wobble position of the anticodon to facilitate its binding to AUG, AUA and (in one instance) to AUU. In this issue of The EMBO Journal, Haag et al identify a two‐step enzyme pathway facilitating the modification of the tRNA. Sequential reactions of the methyltransferase NSUN3 and the dioxygenase ALKBH1/ABH1 are important to render the tRNA as able to recognize the non‐canonical methionine codons AUA and AUUs, a property critical for efficient protein synthesis in human mitochondria.  相似文献   

16.
Conformational preferences of modified nucleoside, N(4)-acetylcytidine, ac4C have been investigated using quantum chemical semi-empirical RM1 method. Automated geometry optimization using PM3 method along with ab initio methods HF SCF (6-31G**), and density functional theory (DFT; B3LYP/6-31G**) have also been made to compare the salient features. The most stable conformation of N(4)-acetyl group of ac4C prefers “proximal” orientation. This conformation is stabilized by intramolecular hydrogen bonding between O(7)···HC(5), O(2)···HC2′, and O4′···HC(6). The “proximal” conformation of N(4)-acetyl group has also been observed in another conformational study of anticodon loop of E. coli elongator tRNAMet. The solvent accessible surface area (SASA) calculations revealed the role of ac4C in anticodon loop. The explicit molecular dynamics simulation study also shows the “proximal” orientation of N(4)-acetyl group. The predicted “proximal” conformation would allow ac4C to interact with third base of codon AUG/AUA whereas the ‘distal’ orientation of N(4)-acetyl cytidine side-chain prevents such interactions. Single point energy calculation studies of various models of anticodon–codon bases revealed that the models ac4C(34)(Proximal):G3, and ac4C(34)(Proximal):A3 are energetically more stable as compared to models ac4C(34)(Distal):G3, and ac4C(34)(Distal):A3, respectively. MEPs calculations showed the unique potential tunnels between the hydrogen bond donor–acceptor atoms of ac4C(34)(Proximal):G3/A3 base pairs suggesting role of ac4C in recognition of third letter of codons AUG/AUA. The “distal” conformation of ac4C might prevent misreading of AUA codon. Hence, this study could be useful to understand the role of ac4C in the tertiary structure folding of tRNA as well as in the proper recognition of codons during protein biosynthesis process.  相似文献   

17.
Transfer RNAs (tRNA) are important molecules that involved in protein translation machinery and acts as a bridge between the ribosome and codon of the mRNA. The study of tRNA is evolving considerably in the fields of bacteria, plants, and animals. However, detailed genomic study of the cyanobacterial tRNA is lacking. Therefore, we conducted a study of cyanobacterial tRNA from 61 species. Analysis revealed that; cyanobacteria contain thirty-six to seventy-eight tRNA gens per genome that encodes for 20 tRNA isotypes. The number of iso-acceptors (anti-codons) ranged from thirty-two to forty-three per genome. tRNAIle with anti-codon AAU, GAU, and UAU was reported to be absent from the genome of Gleocapsa PCC 73,106 and Xenococcus sp. PCC 7305. Instead, they were contained anti-codon CAU that is common to tRNAMet and tRNAIle as well. The iso-acceptors ACA (tRNACys), ACC (tRNAGly), AGA, ACU (tRNASer), AAA (tRNAPhe), AGG (tRNAPro), AAC (tRNAVal), GCG (tRNAArg), AUG (tRNAHis), and AUC (tRNAAsp) were absent from the genome of cyanobacterial lineages studied so far. A few of the cyanobacterial species encode suppressor tRNAs, whereas none of the species were found to encode a selenocysteine iso-acceptor. Cyanobacterial species encode a few putative novel tRNAs whose functions are yet to be elucidated.  相似文献   

18.
In order to learn about the effect of the G:U wobble interaction we characterized the codon:anticodon binding between triplets: UUC, UUU and yeast tRNAPhe (anticodon GmAA) as well as the anticodon:anticodon binding between Escherichia coli tRNAGlu2, E. coli tRNALys (anticodons: mam5s2UUC, and mam5s2UUU, respectively) and tRNAPhe from yeast and E. coli (anticodon GAA) using equilibrium fluorescence titrations and temperature jump measurements with fluorescence and absorption detection. The difference in stability constants between complexes involving a G:U pair rather than a usual G:C basepair is in the range of one order of magnitude and is mainly due to the shorter lifetime of the complex involving G:U in the wobble position. This difference is more pronounced when the codon triplet is structured, i.e., is built in the anticodon loop of a tRNA. The reaction enthalpies of the anticodon:anticodon complexes involving G:U mismatching were found to be about 4 kcal/mol smaller, and the melting temperatures more than 20°C lower, than those of the corresponding complexes with the G:C basepair. The results are discussed in terms of different strategies that might be used in the cell in order to minimize the effect of different lifetimes of codon-tRNA complexes. Differences in these lifetimes may be used for the modulation of the translation efficiency.  相似文献   

19.
The human mitochondrial genome encodes 22 tRNAs interspersed among the two rRNAs and 11 mRNAs, often without spacers, suggesting that tRNAs must be efficiently excised. Numerous maternally transmitted diseases and syndromes arise from mutations in mitochondrial tRNAs, likely due to defect(s) in tRNA metabolism. We have systematically explored the effect of pathogenic mutations on tRNAIle precursor 3′ end maturation in vitro by 3′-tRNase. Strikingly, four pathogenic tRNAIle mutations reduce 3′-tRNase processing efficiency (Vmax / KM) to ~10-fold below that of wild-type, principally due to lower Vmax. The structural impact of mutations was sought by secondary structure probing and wild-type tRNAIle precursor was found to fold into a canonical cloverleaf. Among the mutant tRNAIle precursors with the greatest 3′ end processing deficiencies, only G4309A displays a secondary structure substantially different from wild-type, with changes in the T domain proximal to the substitution. Reduced efficiency of tRNAIle precursor 3′ end processing, in one case associated with structural perturbations, could thus contribute to human mitochondrial diseases caused by mutant tRNAs.  相似文献   

20.
Yu H  Li Q 《PloS one》2011,6(1):e16147

Background

Animal mitochondrial genomes typically encode one tRNA for each synonymous codon family, so that each tRNA anticodon essentially has to wobble to recognize two or four synonymous codons. Several factors have been hypothesized to determine the nucleotide at the wobble site of a tRNA anticodon in mitochondrial genomes, such as the codon-anticodon adaptation hypothesis, the wobble versatility hypothesis, the translation initiation and elongation conflict hypothesis, and the wobble cost hypothesis.

Principal Findings

In this study, we analyzed codon usage and tRNA anticodon wobble sites of 29 marine bivalve mitochondrial genomes to evaluate features of the wobble nucleotides in tRNA anticodons. The strand-specific mutation bias favors G and T on the H strand in all the 29 marine bivalve mitochondrial genomes. A bias favoring G and T is also visible in the third codon positions of protein-coding genes and the wobble sites of anticodons, rejecting that codon usage bias drives the wobble sites of tRNA anticodons or tRNA anticodon bias drives the evolution of codon usage. Almost all codon families (98.9%) from marine bivalve mitogenomes support the wobble versatility hypothesis. There are a few interesting exceptions involving tRNATrp with an anticodon CCA fixed in Pectinoida species, tRNASer with a GCU anticodon fixed in Mytiloida mitogenomes, and the uniform anticodon CAU of tRNAMet translating the AUR codon family.

Conclusions/Significance

These results demonstrate that most of the nucleotides at the wobble sites of tRNA anticodons in marine bivalve mitogenomes are determined by wobble versatility. Other factors such as the translation initiation and elongation conflict, and the cost of wobble translation may contribute to the determination of the wobble nucleotide in tRNA anticodons. The finding presented here provides valuable insights into the previous hypotheses of the wobble nucleotide in tRNA anticodons by adding some new evidence.  相似文献   

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