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1.
The function of group II introns depends on positively charged divalent metal ions that stabilize the ribozyme structure and may be directly involved in catalysis. We investigated Mn2+- and Zn2+-induced site-specific RNA cleavage to identify metal ions that fit into binding pockets within the structurally conserved bI1 group II intron domains (DI-DVI), which might fulfill essential roles in intron function. Ten cleavage sites were identified in DI, two sites in DIII and two in DVI. All cleavage sites are located in the center or close to single-stranded and flexible RNA structures. Strand scissions mediated by Mn2+/Zn2+ are competed for by Mg2+, indicating the existence of Mg2+ binding pockets in physical proximity to the observed Mn2+-/Zn2+-induced cleavage positions. To distinguish between metal ions with a role in structure stabilization and those that play a more specific and critical role in the catalytic process of intron splicing, we combined structural and functional assays, comparing wild-type precursor and multiple splicing-deficient mutants. We identified six regions with binding pockets for Mg2+ ions presumably playing an important role in bI1 structure stabilization. Remarkably, assays with DI deletions and branch point mutants revealed the existence of one Mg2+ binding pocket near the branching A, which is involved in first-step catalysis. This pocket formation depends on precise interaction between the branching nucleotide and the 5' splice site, but does not require exon-binding site 1/intron binding site 1 interaction. This Mg2+ ion might support the correct placing of the branching A into the 'first-step active site'.  相似文献   

2.
Shih Ih  Been MD 《The EMBO journal》2001,20(17):4884-4891
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozymes employ multiple catalytic strategies to achieve overall rate enhancement of RNA cleavage. These strategies include general acid-base catalysis by a cytosine side chain and involvement of divalent metal ions. Here we used a trans-acting form of the antigenomic ribozyme to examine the contribution of the 5' sequence in the substrate to HDV ribozyme catalysis. The cleavage rate constants increased for substrates with 5' sequence alterations that reduced ground-state binding to the ribozyme. Quantitatively, a plot of activation free energy of chemical conversion versus Gibb's free energy of substrate binding revealed a linear relationship with a slope of -1. This relationship is consistent with a model in which components of the substrate immediately 5' to the cleavage site in the HDV ribozyme-substrate complex destabilize ground-state binding. The intrinsic binding energy derived from the ground-state destabilization could contribute up to 2 kcal/mol toward the total 8.5 kcal/mol reduction in activation free energy for RNA cleavage catalyzed by the HDV ribozyme.  相似文献   

3.
Synthetic metallonucleases are versatile metal ion catalysts that use multiple catalytic strategies for the cleavage of RNA. Recent work in the design of more active metallonucleases combines a single metal ion with functional groups that interact with RNA, including amino acid fragments or additional metal ions. Rate enhancements by multifunctional catalysts for cleavage of simple model substrates with good leaving groups are as high as 10(6) but somewhat lower (10(5)) for real RNA. However, cleavage of RNA substrates is complicated by different binding modes and steric interactions that can interfere with catalysis. Antisense oligonucleotides, peptides and small molecules that act as RNA recognition agents increase the strength of substrate binding, but not necessarily the catalytic rate constant. In general, catalytic strategies used by synthetic metallonucleases are probably not optimized. A better grasp of the mechanism of RNA cleavage by metal ions and more effort on positioning the metal ion complex with respect to the cleavage site may lead to improved catalysts.  相似文献   

4.
Hou YM  Gu SQ  Zhou H  Ingerman L 《Biochemistry》2005,44(38):12849-12859
The CCA-adding enzymes [ATP(CTP):tRNA nucleotidyl transferases] catalyze synthesis of the conserved and essential CCA sequence to the tRNA 3' end. These enzymes are divided into two classes of distinct structures that differ in the overall orientation of the head to tail domains. However, the catalytic core of the two classes is conserved and contains three carboxylates in a geometry commonly found in DNA and RNA polymerases that use the two-metal-ion mechanism for phosphoryl transfer. Two important aspects of the two-metal-ion mechanism are tested here for CCA enzymes: the dependence on metal ions for catalysis and for specificity of nucleotide addition. Using the archaeal Sulfolobus shibabae enzyme as an example of the class I, and the bacterial Escherichia coli enzyme as an example of the class II, we show that both enzymes depend on metal ions for catalysis, and that both use primarily Mg2+ and Mn2+ as the "productive" metal ions, but several other metal ions such as Ca2+ as the "nonproductive" metal ions. Of the two productive metal ions, Mg2+ specifically promotes synthesis of the correct CCA, whereas Mn2+ preferentially accelerates synthesis of the noncognate CCC and poly(C). Thus, despite evolution of structural diversity of two classes, both classes use metal ions to determine catalysis and specificity. These results provide critical insights into the catalytic mechanism of CCA synthesis to allow the two classes to be related to each other, and to members of the larger family of DNA and RNA polymerases.  相似文献   

5.
Ribonuclease P (RNase P) is a ribonucleoprotein that requires magnesium ions to catalyze the 5' maturation of transfer RNA. To identify interactions essential for catalysis, the properties of RNase P containing single sulfur substitutions for nonbridging phosphodiester oxygens in helix P4 of Bacillus subtilis RNase P were analyzed using transient kinetic experiments. Sulfur substitution at the nonbridging oxygens of the phosphodiester bond of nucleotide U51 only modestly affects catalysis. However, phosphorothioate substitutions at A49 and G50 decrease the cleavage rate constant enormously (300-4,000-fold for P RNA and 500-15,000-fold for RNase P holoenzyme) in magnesium without affecting the affinity of pre-tRNA(Asp), highlighting the importance of this region for catalysis. Furthermore, addition of manganese enhances pre-tRNA cleavage catalyzed by B. subtilis RNase P RNA containing an Sp phosphorothioate modification at A49, as observed for Escherichia coli P RNA [Christian et al., RNA, 2000, 6:511-519], suggesting that an essential metal ion may be coordinated at this site. In contrast, no manganese rescue is observed for the A49 Sp phosphorothioate modification in RNase P holoenzyme. These differential manganese rescue effects, along with affinity cleavage, suggest that the protein component may interact with a metal ion bound near A49 in helix P4 of P RNA.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The discovery of RNA catalysis provided a paradigm shift in biology, insight into the evolution of life on the planet and a challenge to understand its mechanistic origins. RNA has limited catalytic resources that must be used to maximal effect. Consequently, RNA catalysis tends to be multifactorial, with several processes contributing to an overall significant enhancement of reaction rate. These include general acid-base catalysis, electrostatic effects, and substrate orientation and proximity. The main players are the RNA nucleobases and bound metal ions. Although most ribozymes carry out phosphoryl transfer, the same considerations appear to apply to peptidyl transfer in the ribosome.  相似文献   

8.
It is becoming increasingly clear that RNA is more than a passive carrier of genetic information. Folded RNA molecules play key roles in almost every aspect of cellular metabolism, including protein transport, RNA splicing, peptide bond formation, and translational regulation. This is facilitated by the multifunctional nature of RNA biopolymers which can serve as rigid structural scaffolds, conformational switches, and catalysts for chemical reactions. In all cases, metal ions play a crucial role in RNA function. For folded RNA molecules, the pathway for adopting proper tertiary structure, and the stabilization of that structure, depends on specific and nonspecific interactions with certain classes of metal ions. There is a rapidly expanding repertoire of RNA structural motifs that typically sequester metal ions, and these are being studied using new spectroscopic and chemical methodologies. Many ribozymes (catalytic RNA molecules) depend on metal ions as cofactors that are explicitly involved in the chemical mechanism of catalysis. All of these functions are exemplified by recent studies of group II introns, which are among the largest ribozymes found in Nature. In this case, there are specific roles for metal ions in the folding pathway, the tertiary structure and the chemical mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
OAS1 is the small form and OAS2 is the medium form of the human interferon-induced 2'-5' oligoadenylate synthetases. The p42 isoform of OAS1 and the p69 isoform of OAS2 have been expressed in insect cells and purified to give pure, highly active 2'-5' oligoadenylate synthetase. The catalysis of 2'-5' oligoadenylate synthesis is strictly dependent on double-stranded RNA and magnesium ions. We have examined the effect of a series of divalent metal ions: copper, iron and zinc ions strongly inhibited the enzymatic activity, cobalt and nickel ions were partly inhibitory whereas calcium and manganese ions were without effect. However, manganese ions can replace magnesium ions as activator. The inhibitory effect of zinc ions was characterised in detail. The inhibitory constants of Zn(2+) were estimated to be 0.10 mM for OAS1p42 and to 0.02 mM for OAS2p69. Cross-linking experiments showed that zinc ions can control the oligomerisation by enhancing the formation of tetrameric forms of OAS1p42  相似文献   

10.
Vaidya A  Suga H 《Biochemistry》2001,40(24):7200-7210
The dependence on metal ions for catalysis is one of the hallmark characteristics of ribozymes. Yet despite this universal reliance, the functional role of divalent ions in promoting RNA catalysis is manifold. In this study we elucidate some different roles metal ions play as catalytic cofactors, by comparing two functionally co-evolved acyl-transferase ribozymes. Earlier studies performed on the in vitro selected acyl-transferase ribozyme, E18 [Suga, H., Cowan, J. A., and Szostak, J. W. (1998) Biochemistry 28, 10118-10125], revealed the requirement of a fully hydrated (outer-sphere) Mg2+ ion for catalytic activity. Interestingly, one class of acyl-transferase ribozymes isolated from the same RNA pool as E18 displays a unique metal dependency and is believed to be interacting with inner-sphere coordinated Mg2+ ions. New results show that one of these inner-sphere coordinating ribozymes, HS01, assumes a cloverleaf secondary structure closely resembling E18, yet apparently facilitates a distinct catalytic mechanism. Furthermore, the nature of the RNA-metal interaction(s) in HS01 seems to be dictating a unique reaction mechanism that exhibits a titratable moiety at a near-neutral pK(a). In light of the critical role metal ions play in biochemistry and the proper function of RNAs, these results compare two distinct manners by which metals serve to promote the catalysis of the same reaction.  相似文献   

11.
Lead cleavage sites in the core structure of group I intron-RNA.   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Self-splicing of group I introns requires divalent metal ions to promote catalysis as well as for the correct folding of the RNA. Lead cleavage has been used to probe the intron RNA for divalent metal ion binding sites. In the conserved core of the intron, only two sites of Pb2+ cleavage have been detected, which are located close to the substrate binding sites in the junction J8/7 and at the bulged nucleotide in the P7 stem. Both lead cleavages can be inhibited by high concentrations of Mg2+ and Mn2+ ions, suggesting that they displace Pb2+ ions from the binding sites. The RNA is protected from lead cleavage by 2'-deoxyGTP, a competitive inhibitor of splicing. The two major lead induced cleavages are both located in the conserved core of the intron and at phosphates, which had independently been demonstrated to interact with magnesium ions and to be essential for splicing. Thus, we suggest that the conditions required for lead cleavage occur mainly at those sites, where divalent ions bind that are functionally involved in catalysis. We propose lead cleavage analysis of functional RNA to be a useful tool for mapping functional magnesium ion binding sites.  相似文献   

12.
Group II introns are catalytic RNA molecules that require divalent metal ions for folding, substrate binding, and chemical catalysis. Metal ion binding sites in the group II core have now been elucidated by monitoring the site-specific RNA hydrolysis patterns of bound ions such as Tb(3+) and Mg(2+). Major sites are localized near active site elements such as domain 5 and its surrounding tertiary interaction partners. Numerous sites are also observed at intron substructures that are involved in binding and potentially activating the splice sites. These results highlight the locations of specific metal ions that are likely to play a role in ribozyme catalysis.  相似文献   

13.
Many enzymes use metal ions within their active sites to achieve enormous rate acceleration. Understanding how metal ions mediate catalysis requires elucidation of metal ion interactions with both the enzyme and the substrate(s). The three-dimensional arrangement determined by X-ray crystallography provides a powerful starting point for identifying ground state interactions, but only functional studies can establish and interrogate transition state interactions. The Tetrahymena group I ribozyme is a paradigm for the study of RNA catalysis, and previous work using atomic mutagenesis and quantitative analysis of metal ion rescue behavior identified catalytic metal ions making five contacts with the substrate atoms. Here, we have combined atomic mutagenesis with site-specific phosphorothioate substitutions in the ribozyme backbone to establish transition state ligands on the ribozyme for one of the catalytic metal ions, referred to as M A. We identified the pro-S P oxygen atoms at nucleotides C208, A304, and A306 as ground state ligands for M A, verifying interactions suggested by the Azoarcus crystal structures. We further established that these interactions are present in the chemical transition state, a conclusion that requires functional studies, such as those carried out herein. Elucidating these active site connections is a crucial step toward an in-depth understanding of how specific structural features of the group I intron lead to catalysis.  相似文献   

14.
N Lee  H Suga 《Biochemistry》2001,40(45):13633-13643
Numerous studies on naturally occurring ribozymes have shown that the functional roles of metal ions in promoting RNA catalysis are diverse. Earlier studies performed on the in vitro selected aminoacyl-transferase ribozyme (ATRib) have revealed that a fully hydrated Mg2+ ion plays an essential role in catalysis [Suga, H., Cowan, J. A., and Szostak, J. W. (1998) Biochemistry 28, 10118-10125]. More recently, we have evolved this ATRib into a bifunctional ribozyme, called AD02 [Lee, N., et al. (2000) Nat. Struct. Biol. 7, 28-33]. This new ribozyme consists of two catalytic domains, the original ATRib domain and a new glutamine-recognition (QR) domain, and exhibits a function of charging glutamine to tRNA. Here we elucidate crucial roles of metal ions involved in the QR domain, that are distinct from those in the ATRib domain. The metal ions in the QR domain require innersphere coordinations, and both Mg2+ and Ca2+ can support catalysis. Extensive Tb3+-Mg2+ and Tb3+-Co(NH3)6(3+) competition cleavage experiments have shown that the QR domain has high and low affinity metal binding sites, which are involved in the Mg2+-dependent structural alteration to form the glutamine binding site [Lee, N., and Suga, H. (2001) RNA 7, 1043-1051]. Kinetic studies in the presence of divalent and monovalent ions have suggested that the essential role of the metal ions in the QR domain is most likely structural.  相似文献   

15.
A synaptic complex of Tn5 transposase with an extended outside end DNA duplex was prepared and crystallized, and its crystal structure was determined in an effort to reveal the role of metal ions in catalysis. Two Mn2+ ions bound to the active site when a single nucleotide of donor DNA was added to the 3' end of the transferred strand. Marked conformational changes were observed in the DNA bases closest to the active site. The position of the metal ions and the conformational changes of the DNA provide insight into the mechanism of hairpin formation and cleavage, and is consistent with a two-metal model for catalysis.  相似文献   

16.
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozyme catalyzes viral RNA self-cleavage through general acid-base chemistry in which an active-site cytidine and at least one metal ion are involved. Monovalent metal ions support slow catalysis and were proposed to substitute for structural, but not catalytic, divalent metal ions in the RNA. To investigate the role of monovalent cations in ribozyme structure and function, we determined the crystal structure of the precursor HDV ribozyme in the presence of thallium ions (Tl(+)). Two Tl(+) ions can occupy a previously observed divalent metal ion hexahydrate-binding site located near the scissile phosphate, but are easily competed away by cobalt hexammine, a magnesium hexahydrate mimic and potent reaction inhibitor. Intriguingly, a third Tl(+) ion forms direct inner-sphere contacts with the ribose 2'-OH nucleophile and the pro-S(p) scissile phosphate oxygen. We discuss possible structural and catalytic implications of monovalent cation binding for the HDV ribozyme mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
C A Grosshans  T R Cech 《Biochemistry》1989,28(17):6888-6894
A shortened form of the self-splicing intervening sequence RNA of Tetrahymena thermophila acts as an enzyme, catalyzing sequence-specific cleavage of RNA substrates. We have now examined the metal ion requirements of this reaction. Mg2+ and Mn2+ are the only metal ions that by themselves give RNA enzyme activity. Atomic absorption spectroscopy indicates that Zn, Cu, Co, and Fe are not present in amounts equimolar to the RNA enzyme and when added to reaction mixtures do not facilitate cleavage. Thus, these ions can be eliminated as cofactors for the reaction. While Ca2+ has no activity by itself, it alleviates a portion of the Mg2+ requirement; 1 mM Ca2+ reduces the Mg2+ optimum from 2 to 1 mM. These results, combined with studies of the reactivity of mixtures of metal ions, lead us to postulate that two classes of metal ion binding sites are required for catalysis. Class 1 sites have more activity with Mn2+ than with Mg2+, with the other divalent ions and Na+ and K+ having no activity. It is not known if ions located at class 1 sites have specific structural roles or are directly involved in active-site chemistry. Class 2 sites, which are presumably structural, have an order of preference Mg2+ greater than or equal to Ca2+ greater than Mn2+ and Ca2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Ba2+, with Zn2+, Cu2+, Co2+, Na+, and K+ giving no detectable activity over the concentration range tested.  相似文献   

18.
A Riepe  H Beier  H J Gross 《FEBS letters》1999,457(2):193-199
It has been reported recently that naturally occurring catalytic RNAs like hammerhead and hairpin ribozyme do not require metal ions for efficient catalysis. It seems that the folded tertiary structure of the RNA contributes more to the catalytic function than was initially recognized. We found that a highly specific self-cleavage reaction can occur within a small bulge loop of four nucleotides in a mini-substrate derived from Arabidopsis thaliana intron-containing pre-tRNA(Tyr) in the absence of metal ions. NH(4)(+) cations and non-ionic or zwitter-ionic detergents at or above their critical micelle concentration are sufficient to catalyze this reaction. The dependence on micelles for the reaction leads to the assumption that physical properties, i.e. the hydrophobic interior of a micelle, are essential for this self-cleavage reaction. We suggest that NH(4)(+)-ions play a crucial role for the entry of the negatively charged RNA into the hydrophobic interior of a detergent micelle. A change of the pattern of hydration or hydrogen bonds caused by the hydrophobic surrounding enhances the reaction by a factor of 100. These findings suggest that highly structured RNAs may shift pK(a) values towards neutrality via the local environment and thereby enhance their ability to perform general acid-base catalysis without the participation of metal ions.  相似文献   

19.
We have used site-directed mutagenesis to change amino acid side chains that have been shown crystallographically to be in close proximity to a DNA 3' terminus bound at the 3'-5' exonuclease active site of Klenow fragment. Exonuclease assays of the resulting mutant proteins indicate that the largest effects on exonuclease activity result from mutations in a group of carboxylate side chains (Asp355, Asp424 and Asp501) anchoring two divalent metal ions that are essential for exonuclease activity. Another carboxylate (Glu357) within this cluster seems to be less important as a metal ligand, but may play a separate role in catalysis of the exonuclease reaction. A second group of residues (Leu361, Phe473 and Tyr497), located around the terminal base and ribose positions, plays a secondary role, ensuring correct positioning of the substrate in the active site and perhaps also facilitating melting of a duplex DNA substrate by interacting with the frayed 3' terminus. The pH-dependence of the 3'-5' exonuclease reaction is consistent with a mechanism in which nucleophilic attack on the terminal phosphodiester bond is initiated by a hydroxide ion coordinated to one of the enzyme-bound metal ions.  相似文献   

20.
Bulged nucleotides play a variety of important roles in RNA structure and function, frequently forming tertiary interactions and sometimes even participating in RNA catalysis. In pre-mRNA splicing, the U2 snRNA base pairs with the intron branchpoint sequence (BPS) to form a short RNA duplex that contains a bulged adenosine that ultimately serves as the nucleophile that attacks the 5' splice site. We have determined a 2.18-A resolution crystal structure of a self-complementary RNA designed to mimic the highly conserved yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) branchpoint sequence (5'-UACUAACGUAGUA with the BPS italicized and the branchsite adenosine underlined) base paired with its complementary sequence from U2 snRNA. The structure shows a nearly ideal A-form helix from which two unpaired adenosines flip out. Although the adenosine adjacent to the branchsite adenosine is the one bulged out in the structure described here, either of these adenosines can serve as the nucleophile in mammalian but not in yeast pre-mRNA splicing. In addition, the packing of the bulged RNA helices within the crystal reveals a novel RNA tertiary interaction in which three RNA helices interact through bulged adenosines in the absence of any divalent metal ions.  相似文献   

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