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1.
2.
Phylogenetic comparisons and site-directed mutagenesis indicate that group I introns are composed of a catalytic core that is universally conserved and peripheral elements that are conserved only within intron subclasses. Despite this low overall conservation, peripheral elements are essential for efficient splicing of their parent introns. We have undertaken an in-depth structure-function analysis to investigate the role of one of these elements, P5abc, using the well-characterized ribozyme derived from the Tetrahymena group I intron. Structural comparisons using solution-based free radical cleavage revealed that a ribozyme lacking P5abc (E(DeltaP5abc)) and E(DeltaP5abc) with P5abc added in trans (E(DeltaP5abc).P5abc) adopt a similar global tertiary structure at Mg(2+) concentrations greater than 20 mM [Doherty, E. A., et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 2982-90]. However, free E(DeltaP5abc) is greatly compromised in overall oligonucleotide cleavage activity, even at Mg(2+) concentrations as high as 100 mM. Further characterization of E(DeltaP5abc) via DMS modification revealed local structural differences at several positions in the conserved core that cluster around the substrate binding sites. Kinetic and thermodynamic dissection of individual reaction steps identified defects in binding of both substrates to E(DeltaP5abc), with > or =25-fold weaker binding of a guanosine nucleophile and > or =350-fold weaker docking of the oligonucleotide substrate into its tertiary interactions with the ribozyme core. These defects in binding of the substrates account for essentially all of the 10(4)-fold decrease in overall activity of the deletion mutant. Together, the structural and functional observations suggest that the P5abc peripheral element not only provides stability but also positions active site residues through indirect interactions, thereby preferentially stabilizing the active ribozyme structure relative to alternative less active states. This is consistent with the view that peripheral elements engage in a network of mutually reinforcing interactions that together ensure cooperative folding of the ribozyme to its active structure.  相似文献   

3.
Large RNAs collapse into compact intermediates in the presence of counterions before folding to the native state. We previously found that collapse of a bacterial group I ribozyme correlates with the formation of helices within the ribozyme core, but occurs at Mg2+ concentrations too low to support stable tertiary structure and catalytic activity. Here, using small-angle X-ray scattering, we show that Mg2+-induced collapse is a cooperative folding transition that can be fit by a two-state model. The Mg2+ dependence of collapse is similar to the Mg2+ dependence of helix assembly measured by partial ribonuclease T1 digestion and of an unfolding transition measured by UV hypochromicity. The correspondence between multiple probes of RNA structure further supports a two-state model. A mutation that disrupts tertiary contacts between the L9 tetraloop and its helical receptor destabilized the compact state by 0.8 kcal/mol, while mutations in the central triplex were less destabilizing. These results show that native tertiary interactions stabilize the compact folding intermediates under conditions in which the RNA backbone remains accessible to solvent.  相似文献   

4.
The hammerhead ribozyme is a small catalytic RNA motif capable of endonucleolytic (self-) cleavage. It is composed of a catalytic core of conserved nucleotides flanked by three helices, two of which form essential tertiary interactions for fast self-scission under physiological conditions. Originally discovered in subviral plant pathogens, its presence in several eukaryotic genomes has been reported since. More recently, this catalytic RNA motif has been shown to reside in a large number of genomes. We review the different approaches in discovering these new hammerhead ribozyme sequences and discuss possible biological functions of the genomic motifs.  相似文献   

5.
Although the Hammerhead ribozyme (HHRz) has long been used as a model system in the field of ribozyme enzymology, several details of its mechanism are still not well understood. In particular, significant questions remain concerning the disposition and role of catalytic metals in the HHRz. Previous metal-rescue experiments using a "minimal" HHRz resulted in prediction of a catalytic metal that is bound in the A9/G10.1 site in the ground state of the reaction and that bridges to the scissile phosphate further along the reaction pathway. "Native" or extended HHRz constructs contain tertiary contacts that stabilize a more compact structure at moderate ionic strength. We performed Cd(2+) rescue experiments on an extended HHRz from Schistosoma mansoni using stereo-pure scissile phosphorothioate-substituted substrates in order to determine whether a metal ion makes contact with the scissile phosphate in the ground state or further along the reaction coordinate. Inhibition in Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) and rescue by thiophilic Cd(2+) was specific for the R(p)-S stereoisomer of the scissile phosphate. The affinity of the rescuing Cd(2+), measured in two different ionic strength backgrounds, increased fourfold to 17-fold when the pro-R(p) oxygen is replaced by sulfur. These data support a model in which the rescuing metal ion makes a ground-state interaction with the scissile phosphate in the native HHRz. The resulting model for Mg(2+) activation in the HHRz places a metal ion in contact with the scissile phosphate, where it may provide ground-state electrostatic activation of the substrate.  相似文献   

6.
Klostermeier D  Millar DP 《Biochemistry》2001,40(37):11211-11218
The hairpin catalytic motif in tobacco ringspot virus satellite RNA consists of two helix-loop-helix elements on two adjacent arms of a four-way helical junction. The bases essential for catalytic activity are located in the loops that are brought into proximity by a conformational change as a prerequisite for catalysis. The two loops interact via a ribose zipper motif involving the 2'-hydroxyls of A10, G11, A24, and C25 [Rupert, P. B., and Ferre d'Amare, A. R. (2001) Nature 401, 780-786]. To quantify the energetic importance of the ribose zipper hydrogen bonds, we have incorporated deoxy modifications at these four positions and determined the resulting destabilization of the docked conformer by means of time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer. In a minimal form of the ribozyme, in which the loops are placed on the arms of a two-way helical junction, all modifications lead to a significant loss in tertiary structure stability and altered Mg2+ binding. Surprisingly, no significant destabilization was seen with the natural four-way junction ribozyme, suggesting that hydrogen bonding interactions involving the 2'-hydroxyls do not contribute to the stability of the docked conformer. These results suggest that the energetic contributions of ribose zipper hydrogen bonds are highly context dependent and differ significantly for the minimal and natural forms of the ribozyme.  相似文献   

7.
The P4-P6 domain serves as a scaffold against which the periphery and catalytic core organize and fold during Mg2+-mediated folding of the Tetrahymena thermophila ribozyme. The most prominent structural motif of the P4-P6 domain is the tetraloop-tetraloop receptor interaction which "clamps" the distal parts of its hairpin-like structure. Destabilization of the tertiary structure of the P4-P6 domain by perturbation of the tetraloop-tetraloop receptor interaction alters the Mg2+-mediated folding pathway. The folding hierarchy of P5c approximately P4-P6 > periphery > catalytic core that is a striking attribute of the folding of the wild-type RNA is abolished. The initial steps in folding of the mutant RNA are > or =50-fold faster than those of the wild-type ribozyme with the earliest observed tertiary contacts forming around regions known to specifically bind Mg2+. The interaction between the mutant tetraloop and the tetraloop receptor appears coincidently with slowly forming catalytic core tertiary contacts. Thus, the stability conferred upon the P4-P6 domain by the tetraloop-tetraloop receptor interaction dictates the preferred folding pathway by stabilizing an early intermediate. A sub-denaturing concentration of urea diminishes the early barrier to folding the wild-type ribozyme along with complex effects on the subsequent steps of folding the wild-type and mutant RNA.  相似文献   

8.
Benz-Moy TL  Herschlag D 《Biochemistry》2011,50(40):8733-8755
The conserved catalytic core of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme is encircled by peripheral elements. We have conducted a detailed structure-function study of the five long-range tertiary contacts that fasten these distal elements together. Mutational ablation of each of the tertiary contacts destabilizes the folded ribozyme, indicating a role of the peripheral elements in overall stability. Once folded, three of the five tertiary contact mutants exhibit defects in overall catalysis that range from 20- to 100-fold. These and the subsequent results indicate that the structural ring of peripheral elements does not act as a unitary element; rather, individual connections have distinct roles as further revealed by kinetic and thermodynamic dissection of the individual reaction steps. Ablation of P14 or the metal ion core/metal ion core receptor (MC/MCR) destabilizes docking of the substrate-containing P1 helix into tertiary interactions with the ribozyme's conserved core. In contrast, ablation of the L9/P5 contact weakens binding of the guanosine nucleophile by slowing its association, without affecting P1 docking. The P13 and tetraloop/tetraloop receptor (TL/TLR) mutations had little functional effect and small, local structural changes, as revealed by hydroxyl radical footprinting, whereas the P14, MC/MCR, and L9/P5 mutants show structural changes distal from the mutation site. These changes extended into regions of the catalytic core involved in docking or guanosine binding. Thus, distinct allosteric pathways couple the long-range tertiary contacts to functional sites within the conserved core. This modular functional specialization may represent a fundamental strategy in RNA structure-function interrelationships.  相似文献   

9.
Xiao M  Li T  Yuan X  Shang Y  Wang F  Chen S  Zhang Y 《Nucleic acids research》2005,33(14):4602-4611
The presence of non-conserved peripheral elements in all naturally occurring group I introns underline their importance in ensuring the natural intron function. Recently, we reported that some peripheral elements are conserved in group I introns of IE subgroup. Using self-splicing activity as a readout, our initial screening revealed that one such conserved peripheral elements, P2.1, is mainly required to fold the catalytically active structure of the Candida ribozyme, an IE intron. Unexpectedly, the essential function of P2.1 resides in a sequence-conserved short stem of P2.1 but not in a long-range interaction associated with the loop of P2.1 that stabilizes the ribozyme structure. The P2.1 stem is indispensable in folding the compact ribozyme core, most probably by forming a triple helical interaction with two core helices, P3 and P6. Surprisingly, although the ribozyme lacking the P2.1 stem renders a loosely folded core and the loss of self-splicing activity requires two consecutive transesterifications, the mutant ribozyme efficiently catalyzes the first transesterification reaction. These results suggest that the intron self-splicing demands much more ordered structure than does one independent transesterification, highlighting that the universally present peripheral elements achieve their functional importance by enabling the highly ordered structure through diverse tertiary interactions.  相似文献   

10.
B Laggerbauer  F L Murphy    T R Cech 《The EMBO journal》1994,13(11):2669-2676
The L-21 Tetrahymena ribozyme, an RNA molecule with sequence-specific endoribonuclease activity derived from a self-splicing group I intron, provides a model system for studying the RNA folding problem. A 160 nucleotide, independently folding domain of tertiary structure (the P4-P6 domain) comprises about half of the ribozyme. We now apply Fe(II)-EDTA cleavage to mutants of the ribozyme to explore the role of individual structural elements in tertiary folding of the RNA at equilibrium. Deletion of peripheral elements near the 3' end of the ribozyme destabilizes a region of the catalytic core (P3-P7) without altering the folding of the P4-P6 domain. Three different mutations within the P4-P6 domain that destabilize its folding also shift the folding of the P3-P7 region of the catalytic core to higher MgCl2 concentrations. We conclude that the role of the extended P4-P6 domain and of the 3'-terminal peripheral elements is at least in part to stabilize the catalytic core. The organization of RNA into independently folding domains of tertiary structure may be common in large RNAs, including ribosomal RNAs. Furthermore, the observation of domain-domain interactions in a catalytic RNA supports the feasibility of a primitive spliceosome without any proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Within the hairpin ribozyme, structural elements required for formation of the active tertiary structure are localized in two independently folding domains, each consisting of an internal loop flanked by helical elements. Here, we present results of a systematic examination of the relationship between the structure of the helical elements and the ability of the RNA to form the catalytically active tertiary structure. Deletions and mutational analyses indicate that helix 1 (H1) in domain A can be entirely eliminated, while segments of helices 2, 3, and 4 can also be deleted. From these results, we derive a new active minimal ribozyme that contains three helical elements, an internal loop, and a terminal loop. A three-dimensional model of this truncated ribozyme was generated using MC-SYM, and confirms that the catalytic core of the minimized construct can adopt a tertiary structure that is very similar to that of the nontruncated version. A new strategy is described to study the functional importance of various residues and chemical groups and to identify specific interdomain interactions. This approach uses two physically separated and truncated domains derived from the minimal motif.  相似文献   

12.
Canny MD  Jucker FM  Pardi A 《Biochemistry》2007,46(12):3826-3834
The hammerhead ribozyme from Schistosoma mansoni is the best characterized of the natural hammerhead ribozymes. Biophysical, biochemical, and structural studies have shown that the formation of the loop-loop tertiary interaction between stems I and II alters the global folding, cleavage kinetics, and conformation of the catalytic core of this hammerhead, leading to a ribozyme that is readily cleaved under physiological conditions. This study investigates the ligation kinetics and the internal equilibrium between cleavage and ligation for the Schistosoma hammerhead. Single turnover kinetic studies on a construct where the ribozyme cleaves and ligates substrate(s) in trans showed up to 23% ligation when starting from fully cleaved products. This was achieved by an approximately 2000-fold increase in the rate of ligation compared to a minimal hammerhead without the loop-loop tertiary interaction, yielding an internal equilibrium that ranges from 2 to 3 at physiological Mg2+ ion concentrations (0.1-1 mM). Thus, the natural Schistosoma hammerhead ribozyme is almost as efficient at ligation as it is at cleavage. The results here are consistent with a model where formation of the loop-loop tertiary interaction leads to a higher population of catalytically active molecules and where formation of this tertiary interaction has a much larger effect on the ligation than the cleavage activity of the Schistosoma hammerhead ribozyme.  相似文献   

13.
The time-course of monovalent cation-induced folding of the L-21 Sca1 Tetrahymena thermophila ribozyme and a selected mutant was quantitatively followed using synchrotron X-ray (.OH) footprinting. Initiating folding by increasing the concentration of either Na+ or K+ to 1.5M from an initial condition of approximately 0.008 M Na+ at 42 degrees C resulted in the complete formation of tertiary contacts within the P5abc subdomain and between the peripheral helices within the dead time of our measurements (k>50 s(-1)). These results contrast with folding rates of 2-0.2 s(-1) previously observed for formation of these contacts in 10mM Mg2+ from the same initial condition. Thus, the initial formation of native tertiary contacts is inhibited by divalent but not monovalent cations. The native contacts within the catalytic core form without a detectable burst phase at rates of 0.4-1.0 s(-1) in a manner reminiscent of the Mg2+-dependent folding behavior, although tenfold faster. The tertiary interactions stabilizing the catalytic core interaction with P4-P6 and P2.1, as well as one of the protections internal for the P4-P6 domain, display progress curves with appreciable burst amplitudes and a phase comparable in rate to that of the catalytic core. That the slow folding of the ribozyme's core is a consequence of the alt-P3 secondary structure is shown by the 100% burst phase amplitudes that are observed for folding of the U273A mutant ribozyme within which the native secondary structure (P3) is strengthened. Thus, formation of a misfolded intermediate(s) resulting from the alt-P3 secondary structure is independent of ion valency while the rate at which the respective intermediates are resolved is sensitive to ion valency. The overall portrait painted by these results is that ion valency differentially affects steps in the folding process and that folding in monovalent ion alone for the U273A mutant Tetrahymena ribozyme is fast and direct.  相似文献   

14.
Edwards TE  Sigurdsson ST 《Biochemistry》2005,44(38):12870-12878
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy was used to examine changes in internal structure and dynamics of the hammerhead ribozyme upon metal ion induced folding, changes in pH, and the presence and absence of ribozyme inhibitors. A nitroxide spin-label was attached to nucleotide U7 of the HH16 catalytic core, and this modified ribozyme was observed to retain catalytic activity. U7 was shown by EPR spectroscopy to be more mobile in the ribozyme-product complex than in either the unfolded ribozyme or the ribozyme-substrate complex. A two-step divalent metal ion dependent folding pathway was observed for the ribozyme-substrate complex with a weak first transition observed at 0.25 mM Mg2+ and a strong second transition observed around 10 mM Mg2+, in agreement with studies using other biophysical and biochemical techniques. Previously, ribozyme activity was observed in the absence of divalent metal ions and the presence of high concentrations of monovalent metal ions, although the activity was less than that observed in the presence of divalent metal ions. Here, we observed similar dynamics for U7 in the presence of 4 M Na+ or Li+, which were distinctively different than that observed in the presence of 10 mM Mg2+, indicating that U7 of the catalytic core forms a different microenvironment under monovalent versus divalent metal ion conditions. Interestingly, the catalytically efficient microenvironment of U7 was similar to that observed in a solution containing 1 M Na+ upon addition of one divalent metal ion per ribozyme. In summary, these results demonstrate that changes in local dynamics, as detected by EPR spectroscopy, can be used to study conformational changes associated with RNA folding and function.  相似文献   

15.
The hairpin ribozyme is a small catalytic RNA comprised of two internal loops carried on two adjacent arms of a four-way helical junction (4WJ). To achieve catalytic activity, the ribozyme folds into a compact conformation that facilitates the formation of tertiary interactions between the two loops. We have investigated the folding kinetics of the natural 4WJ form of the hairpin ribozyme, as well as a minimal construct consisting of just the two loop-containing duplexes, by means of stopped-flow fluorescence resonance energy transfer between donor and acceptor probes attached to the ends of the loop-bearing arms. Folding was initiated by the addition of Mg(2+) ions or a pseudosubstrate strand to the ribozyme, and the ensuing changes in the emission of both donor and acceptor were monitored over time. Both ribozyme constructs exhibited slow, biphasic kinetic behavior, attributed to two parallel folding pathways leading to compact, docked structures. Two distinct folding rates were observed across a range of Mg(2+) concentrations, and increasing amounts of Mg(2+) accelerated both rates. Notably, both rates were essentially independent of temperature, indicating that the corresponding activation enthalpies were negligible, in contrast to the large activation enthalpies generally observed for RNA folding processes. Instead, the slow folding was due to unfavorable entropy changes in reaching the transition state, indicating that the ribozyme tertiary structure forms through a slow conformational search. These features were observed in both forms of the ribozyme, indicating that the conformational search is confined to the two loop regions and is largely independent of the overall ribozyme architecture. Conformational search may be a general mechanism of tertiary structure formation in RNA.  相似文献   

16.
Many RNAs contain tertiary interactions that contribute to folding the RNA into its functional 3D structure. In the VS ribozyme, a tertiary loop-loop kissing interaction involving stem-loops I and V is also required to rearrange the secondary structure of stem-loop I such that nucleotides at the base of stem I, which contains the cleavage-ligation site, can adopt the conformation required for activity. In the current work, we have used mutants that constitutively adopt the catalytically permissive conformation to search for additional roles of the kissing interaction in vitro. Using mutations that disrupt or restore the kissing interaction, we find that the kissing interaction contributes ~1000-fold enhancement to the rates of cleavage and ligation. Large Mg(2+)-dependent effects on equilibrium were also observed: in the presence of the kissing interaction cleavage is favored >10-fold at micromolar concentrations of Mg(2+); whereas ligation is favored >10-fold at millimolar concentrations of Mg(2+). In the absence of the kissing interaction cleavage exceeds ligation at all concentrations of Mg(2+). These data provide evidence that the kissing interaction strongly affects the observed cleavage and ligation rate constants and the cleavage-ligation equilibrium of the ribozyme.  相似文献   

17.
We have used in vitro genetics to evaluate the function and interactions of the conserved base G8 in the hairpin ribozyme catalytic RNA. Second site revertant selection for a G8X mutant, where X is any of the other three natural nucleobases, yielded a family of second site suppressors of the G8U mutant, but not of G8C or G8A, indicating that only G and U can be tolerated at position 8 of the ribozyme. This result is consistent with recent observations that point to the functional importance of G8 N-1 in the chemistry of catalysis by this ribozyme reaction. Suppression of the G8U mutation was observed when changes were made directly across loop A from the mutated base at substrate position +2 or positions +2 and +3 in combination. The same changes made in the context of the natural G8 sequence resulted in a very large drop in activity. Thus, the G8U mutation results in a change in specificity of the ribozyme from 5'-N / GUC-3' to 5'-N / GCU-3'. The results presented imply that G8 interacts directly with U+2 during catalysis. We propose that this interaction favors the correct positioning of the catalytic determinants of G8. The implications for the folding of the ribozyme and the catalytic mechanism are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Enzymes generally are thought to derive their functional activity from conformational motions. The limited chemical variation in RNA suggests that such structural dynamics may play a particularly important role in RNA function. Minimal hammerhead ribozymes are known to cleave efficiently only in ~ 10-fold higher than physiologic concentrations of Mg(2+) ions. Extended versions containing native loop-loop interactions, however, show greatly enhanced catalytic activity at physiologically relevant Mg(2+) concentrations, for reasons that are still ill-understood. Here, we use Mg(2+) titrations, activity assays, ensemble, and single molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) approaches, combined with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, to ask what influence the spatially distant tertiary loop-loop interactions of an extended hammerhead ribozyme have on its structural dynamics. By comparing hammerhead variants with wild-type, partially disrupted, and fully disrupted loop-loop interaction sequences we find that the tertiary interactions lead to a dynamic motional sampling that increasingly populates catalytically active conformations. At the global level the wild-type tertiary interactions lead to more frequent, if transient, encounters of the loop-carrying stems, whereas at the local level they lead to an enrichment in favorable in-line attack angles at the cleavage site. These results invoke a linkage between RNA structural dynamics and function and suggest that loop-loop interactions in extended hammerhead ribozymes-and Mg(2+) ions that bind to minimal ribozymes-may generally allow more frequent access to a catalytically relevant conformation(s), rather than simply locking the ribozyme into a single active state.  相似文献   

19.
The glmS ribozyme is a riboswitch class that occurs in certain Gram-positive bacteria, where it resides within mRNAs encoding glucosamine 6-phosphate synthase. Members of this self-cleaving ribozyme class rapidly catalyze RNA transesterification upon binding GlcN6P, and genetic evidence suggests that this cleavage event is important for down-regulating GlmS protein expression. In this report, we present a refined secondary structure model of the glmS ribozyme and determine the importance of a conserved pseudoknot structure for optimal ribozyme function. Analyses of deletion constructs demonstrate that the pseudoknot, together with other structural elements, permits the ribozyme to achieve maximum rate constants for RNA cleavage at physiologically relevant Mg2+ concentrations. In addition, we show that substantial rate enhancements are supported by an exchange-inert cobalt (III) complex and by molar concentrations of monovalent ions. Our findings indicate that the glmS ribozyme forms a complex structure to employ catalytic strategies that do not require the direct participation of divalent metal ions.  相似文献   

20.
Hampel KJ  Burke JM 《Biochemistry》2003,42(15):4421-4429
Tertiary folding of the hammerhead ribozyme has been analyzed by hydroxyl radical footprinting. Three hammerhead constructs with distinct noncore sequences, connectivities, and catalytic properties show identical protection patterns, in which conserved core residues (G5, A6, U7, G8, and A9) and the cleavage site (C17, G1.1, and U1.2) become reproducibly protected from nucleolytic attack by radicals. Metal ion titrations show that all protections appear together, suggesting a single folding event to a common tertiary structure, rather than an ensemble of different folds. The apparent binding constants for folding and catalysis by Mg(2+) are lower than those for Li(+) by 3 orders of magnitude, but in each case the protected sites are identical. For both Mg(2+) and Li(+), the ribozyme folds into the protected tertiary structure at significantly lower cation concentrations than those required for cleavage. The sites of protection include all of the sites of reduced solvent accessibility calculated from two different crystal structures, including both core and noncore nucleotides. In addition, experimentally observed protected sites include additional sequences adjacent to those predicted by the crystal structures, suggesting that the solution structure may be folded into a more compact shape. A 2'-deoxy substitution at G5 abolishes all protection, indicating that the 2'-OH is essential for folding. Together, these results support a model in which low concentrations of metal ions fold the ribozyme into a stable ground state tertiary structure that is similar to the crystallographic structures, and higher concentrations of metal ions support a transient conformational change into the transition state for catalysis. These data do not themselves address the issue as to whether a large- or small-scale conformational change is required for catalysis.  相似文献   

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