首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Ribonuclease LE (RNase LE) from cultured tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) cells is a member of the RNase T(2) family showing broad base specificity. The crystal structure of RNase LE has been determined at 1.65 A resolution. The structure consists of seven alpha-helices and seven beta-strands, belonging to an alpha+beta type structure. Comparison of the structure of RNase LE with that of RNase Rh, a microbial RNase belonging to the RNase T(2) family, reveals that while the overall folding topologies are similar to each other, major insertions and deletions are found at the N-terminal regions. The structural comparison, an amino acid sequence alignment of the RNase T(2) enzymes, and comparison of the disulfide-bonding pattern of these enzymes show that the structure of RNase LE shown here is the basic framework of the animal/plant subfamily of RNase T(2) enzymes (including a self-incompatibility protein called S-RNase), and the structure of RNase Rh is that of the fungal subfamily of RNase T(2) enzymes (including RNase T(2)). Subsequently, we superposed the active-site of the RNase LE with that of RNase Rh and found that (1) His39, Trp42, His92, Glu93, Lys96, and His97 of RNase LE coincided exactly with His46, Trp49, His104, Glu105, Lys108, and His109, respectively, of RNase Rh, and (2) two conserved water molecules were found at the putative P(1) sites of both enzymes. These facts suggest that plant RNase LE has a very similar hydrolysis mechanism to that of fungal RNase Rh, and almost all the RNase T(2) enzymes widely distributed in various species share a common catalytic mechanism. A cluster of hydrophobic residues was found on the active-site face of the RNase LE molecule and two large hydrophobic pockets exist. These hydrophobic pockets appear to be base binding sites mainly by hydrophobic interactions and are responsible for the base non-specificity of RNase LE.  相似文献   

2.
In order to study the structure-function relationship of an RNase T2 family enzyme, RNase Rh, from Rhizopus niveus, we investigated the roles of three histidine residues by means of site-specific mutagenesis. One of the three histidine residues of RNase RNAP Rh produced in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by recombinant DNA technology was substituted to a phenylalanine or alanine residue. A Phe or Ala mutant enzyme at His46 or His109 showed less than 0.03%, but a mutant enzyme at His104 showed 0.54% of the enzymatic activity of the wild-type enzyme with RNA as a substrate. Similar results were obtained, when ApU was used as a substrate. The binding constant of a Phe mutant enzyme at His46 or His109 towards 2'-AMP decreased twofold, but that at His104 decreased more markedly. Therefore, we assumed that these three histidine residues are components of the active site of RNase Rh, that His104 contributes to some extent to the binding and less to the catalysis, and that the other two histidine residues and one carboxyl group not yet identified are probably involved in the catalysis. We assigned the C-2 proton resonances of His46, His104, and His109 by comparison of the 1H-NMR spectra of the three mutant enzymes containing Phe in place of His with that of the native enzyme, and also determined the individual pKa values for His46 and His104 to be 6.70 and 5.94. His109 was not titrated in a regular way, but the apparent pKa value was estimated to be around 6.3. The fact that addition of 2'-AMP caused a greater effect on the chemical shift of His104 in the 1NMR spectra as compared with those of the other histidine residues, may support the idea described above on the role of His104.  相似文献   

3.
A cDNA for an S-like RNase (RNase PD2) has been isolated from a pistil cDNA library of Prunus dulcis cv. Ferragnés. The cDNA encodes an acidic protein of 226 amino acid residues with a molecular weight of 25 kDa. A potential N-glycosylation site is present at the N-terminus in RNase PD2. A signal peptide of 23 amino acid residues and a transmembrane domain are predicted. The two active-site histidines present in enzymes of the T2/S RNase superfamily were detected in RNase PD2. Its amino acid sequence shows 71.2% similarity to RNS1 of Arabidopsis and RNase T2 of chickpea, respectively. Northern blotting and RT-PCR analyses indicate that PD2 is expressed predominantly in petals, pistils of open flowers and leaves of the almond tree. Analyses of shoots cultured in vitro suggested that the expression of RNase PD2 is associated with phosphate starvation. Southern analysis detected two sequences related to RNase PD2 in the P. dulcis genome. RFLP analysis showed that S-like RNase genes are polymorphic in different almond cultivars. The PD2 gene sequence was amplified by PCR and two introns were shown to interrupt the coding region. Based on sequence analysis, we have defined three classes of S-like RNase genes, with the PD2 RNase gene representing a distinct class. The significance of the structural divergence of S-like RNase genes is further discussed. Received: 24 January 2000 / Accepted: 17 March 2000  相似文献   

4.
The complete primary structure of a base non-specific and adenylic acid preferential RNase (RNase M) from Aspergillus saitoi was determined. The sequence was determined by analysis of the peptides generated by digestion of heat-denatured RNase M with lysylendopeptidase, and the peptides generated from RCM RNase M by digestion with staphylococcal V8 protease or chemical cleavage with BrCN. It consisted of 238 amino acid residues and carbohydrate moiety attached to the 74th asparagine residue. The molecular weight of the protein moiety deduced from the sequence was 26,596. The locations of 10 half cystine residues are almost superimposable on those of RNase Rh from Rhizopus niveus and RNase T2 from Aspergillus oryzae which have similar base specificity. The homology between RNase M and RNase Rh and RNase T2 amounted to 97 and 160 amino acid residues, respectively. The amino acid sequences conserved in the three RNases are concentrated around the three histidine residues, which are supposed to form part of the active sites of these RNases.  相似文献   

5.
Doucet N  Khirich G  Kovrigin EL  Loria JP 《Biochemistry》2011,50(10):1723-1730
The motion of amino acid residues on the millisecond (ms) time scale is involved in the tight regulation of catalytic function in numerous enzyme systems. Using a combination of mutational, enzymological, and relaxation-compensated (15)N Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) methods, we have previously established the conformational significance of the distant His48 residue and the neighboring loop 1 in RNase A function. These studies suggested that RNase A relies on an intricate network of hydrogen bonding interactions involved in propagating functionally relevant, long-range ms motions to the catalytic site of the enzyme. To further investigate the dynamic importance of this H-bonding network, this study focuses on the individual replacement of Thr17 and Thr82 with alanine, effectively altering the key H-bonding interactions that connect loop 1 and His48 to the rest of the protein. (15)N CPMG dispersion studies, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) chemical shift analysis, and NMR line shape analysis of point mutants T17A and T82A demonstrate that the evolutionarily conserved single H-bond linking His48 to Thr82 is essential for propagating ms motions from His48 to the active site of RNase A on the time scale of catalytic turnover, whereas the T17A mutation increases the off rate and conformational exchange motions in loop 1. Accumulating evidence from our mutational studies indicates that residues experiencing conformational exchange in RNase A can be grouped into two separate clusters displaying distinct dynamical features, which appear to be independently affected by mutation. Overall, this study illuminates how tightly controlled and finely tuned ms motions are in RNase A, suggesting that designed modulation of protein motions may be possible.  相似文献   

6.
The complete primary structure of a base non-specific and adenylic acid preferential RNase (RNase Le2) from the fruit bodies of Lentinus edodes was analyzed. The sequence was mostly determined by analysis of the peptides generated by V8 protease digestion and BrCN cleavage (including alpha-chymotryptic, and V8 protease digest of BrCN fragments). It consists of 239 amino acid residues. The molecular weight is 25831. The location of 10 half cystine residues were almost superimposable on those of known fungal RNases of the RNase T2 family. The sequence homologies between RNase Le2 and four known fungal RNases of the RNase T2 family, RNase T2, RNase M, RNase Trv, and RNase Rh, are 102, 103, 109, and 74, respectively. The homologous sequences are concentrated around the three histidines, which are supposed to form the active site of RNase T2 family RNases.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The complete amino acid sequence of ribonuclease N1 (RNase N1), a guanine-specific ribonuclease from a fungus, Neurospora crassa, was determined by conventional protein sequencing, using peptide fragments obtained by tryptic digestion of cyanogen bromide-treated RNase N1 and by Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion of heat-denatured RNase N1. The results showed that the protein is composed of a single polypeptide chain of 104 amino acid residues cross-linked by two disulfide bonds and has a molecular weight of 11,174: (sequence; see text) (Disulfide bonds: C2-C10, C6-C103) The amino acid sequence was homologous with those of RNase T1 (65% identity) and related microbial RNases.  相似文献   

9.
The full-length cDNA encoding RNase Rh, which is secreted extracellularly by Rhizopus niveus, was isolated and its nucleotide sequence was determined. It was placed under control of the promoter of the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in a high expression vector in yeast. Since yeast cells transformed by this plasmid poorly secreted RNase into the medium, the plasmid pYE RNAP-Rh was constructed, in which the signal sequence of RNase Rh was replaced by the prepro-sequence of aspartic proteinase-I, one of the extracellular enzymes secreted by R. niveus. Yeast cells harboring pYE RNAP-Rh produced RNase efficiently (ca. 40 micrograms/ml) into the medium. The product was a mixture of six enzymes (RNase RNAP-Rhs) having 3, 5, 9, 13, 14, and 16 additional amino acid residues attached to the amino terminus of the mature RNase Rh. The major product was the RNase with three additional amino acids at the amino terminus. Limited digestion of RNase RNAP-Rhs with staphylococcal V8 protease succeeded in shortening the various lengths of extra amino acid residues attached to the amino terminus of RNase Rh, yielding an RNase that has 3 additional amino acids at the amino terminus. It has been named RNase RNAP-Rh. The RNase RNAP-Rh showed the same specific activity and CD spectra as those of RNase Rh, suggesting that the two have similar conformations to each other around aromatic amino acid residues and the peptide backbone.  相似文献   

10.
Amidination of the available lysine residues of the complex between RNase A and human placental RNase inhibitor has been performed with methyl acetimidate; the conditions of the derivatization preserve the complex functionally intact. Resistance of epsilon-acetimidyllysine residues to hydrolysis by trypsin allowed, after peptide mapping, the identification of lysine residues 7, 31, 41, 61, and 91 as those which were fully protected by the inhibitor from amidination. Lysine residue 37 was partially protected from amidination. In the presence of poly(A), lysine residues 41 and 61 of RNase A were fully protected from amidination, while lysine residues 7, 31, 37, 91, and 104 were only partially protected; the enzyme retained full activity. The results permit identification of lysine residues located in the binding domain of RNase A for the inhibitor. This region is not identical with, but does overlap, the binding domain for poly(A).  相似文献   

11.
Within this study, the recently identified ovine CSN1S2 variants C and D were characterized at the molecular genetic level. Sequencing of the cDNA and of parts of the DNA identified several sequence differences within CSN1S2*C and D in comparison to CSN1S2*A and B. CSN1S2*C is characterized by two non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within exon 7 (c.178A>G, c.187G>T) leading to the amino acid substitutions p.Val45Ile and p.Ala48Ser. CSN1S2*D is caused by the SNP c.183G>C, leading to an amino acid replacement at position 46 (p.Arg46Ser). A very common c.527G>A-SNP within exon 15, resulting in the amino acid substitution p.Arg161His and producing the new variant CSN1S2*G, not detectable by isoelectric focusing and previously misidentified as CSN1S2*A, was also identified. On the basis of the identified sequence differences, a new nomenclature is proposed and a possible phylogenetic pathway shown for ovine CSN1S2 variants.  相似文献   

12.
13.
A gene encoding a ribonuclease T2 (RNase T2) family enzyme, RNHe30, was cloned from Hericium erinaceum by PCR. The deduced amino acid sequence from the complimentary DNA (cDNA) (1074 bp) encodes a 302-aa protein (RNase He30) that has the consensus amino acid sequences of RNase T2 family enzymes including the putative signal peptide. The presence of five introns in the genomic DNA was confirmed by comparison of the cDNA and genomic DNA sequences. The promoter region contains a putative CAAT box and a consensus TATA box. Genes coding homologous enzymes were also identified in various other basidiomycetes. A phylogenetic tree of RNase T2s from these fungi was constructed from a multiple alignment of the deduced amino acid sequences. The tree showed that the enzymes were divided into two main groups.  相似文献   

14.
In order to elucidate the structure-function relationship of RNases belonging to the RNase T2 family (base non-specific and adenylic acid-preferential RNase), an RNase of this family was purified from Trichoderma viride (RNase Trv) to give three closely adjacent bands with RNase activity on slab-gel electrophoresis in a yield of 20%. The three RNases gave single band with the same mobility on slab-gel electrophoresis after endoglycosidase F digestion. The enzymatic properties including base specificity of RNase Trv were very similar to those of typical T2-family RNases such as RNase T2 from Aspergillus oryzae and RNase M from A. saitoi. The specific activity of RNase Trv towards yeast RNA was about 13-fold higher than that of RNase M. The complete primary structure of RNase Trv was determined by analyses of the peptides generated by digestion of reduced and carboxymethylated RNase Trv with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, lysylendopeptidase and alpha-chymotrypsin. The molecular weight of the protein moiety deduced from the sequence was 25,883. The locations of 10 half-cystine residues were almost superimposable upon those of other RNases of this family. The homologies between RNase Trv and RNase T2, RNase M, and RNase Rh (Rhizopus niveus) were 124, 132, and 92 residues, respectively. The sequences around three histidine residues, His52, His109, and His114, were highly conserved in these 4 RNases.  相似文献   

15.
The crystal structure of RNase Rh, a new class of microbial ribonuclease from Rhizopus niveus, has been determined at 2.5 A resolution by the multiple isomorphous replacement method. The crystal structure was refined by simulated annealing with molecular dynamics. The current crystallographic R-factor is 0.200 in the 10-2.5 A resolution range. The molecular structure which is completely different from the known structures of RNase A and RNase T1 consists of six alpha-helices and seven beta-strands, belonging to the alpha+beta type structure. Two histidine and one glutamic acid residues which were predicted as the most probably functional residues by chemical modification studies are found to be clustered. The steric nature of the active site taken together with the relevant site-directed mutagenesis experiments (Irie et al.) indicates that: (i) the two histidine residues are the general acid and base; and (ii) an aspartic acid residue plays a role of recognizing adenine moiety of the substrate.  相似文献   

16.
The crystal structure of the Pyrus pyrifolia pistil ribonuclease (S(3)-RNase) responsible for gametophytic self-incompatibility was determined at 1.5-A resolution. It consists of eight helices and seven beta-strands, and its folding topology is typical of RNase T(2) family enzymes. Based on a structural comparison of S(3)-RNase with RNase Rh, a fungal RNase T(2) family enzyme, the active site residues of S(3)-RNase assigned were His(33) and His(88) as catalysts and Glu(84) and Lys(87) as stabilizers of an intermediate in the transition state. Moreover, amino acid residues that constitute substrate binding sites of the two RNases could be superimposed geometrically. A hypervariable (HV) region that has an S-allele-specific sequence comprises a long loop and short alpha-helix. This region is far from the active site cleft, exposed on the molecule's surface, and positively charged. Four positively selected (PS) regions, in which the number of nonsynonymous substitutions exceeds that of synonymous ones, are located on either side of the active site cleft, and accessible to solvent. These structural features suggest that the HV or PS regions may interact with a pollen S-gene product(s) to recognize self and non-self pollen.  相似文献   

17.
In most tissues, ribonucleases (RNases) are found in a latent form complexed with ribonuclease inhibitor (RI). To examine whether these so-called cytoplasmic RNases belong to the same superfamily as pancreatic RNases, we have purified from porcine liver two such RNases (PL1 and PL3) and examined their primary structures. It was found that RNase PL1 belonged to the same family as human RNase Us [Beintema et al. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 4530-4538] and bovine RNase K2 [Irie et al. (1988) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 104, 289-296]. RNase PL3 was found to be a hitherto structurally uncharacterized type of RNase. Its polypeptide chain of 119 amino acid residues was N-terminally blocked with pyroglutamic acid, and its sequence differed at 63 positions with that of the pancreatic enzyme. All residues important for catalysis and substrate binding have been conserved. Comparison of the primary structure of RNase PL3 with that of its bovine counterpart (RNase BL4; M. Irie, personal communication) revealed an unusual conservation for this class of enzymes; the 2 enzymes were identical at 112 positions. Moreover, comparison of the amino acid compositions of these RNases with that of a human colon carcinoma-derived RNase, RNase HT-29 [Shapiro et al. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7255-7264], suggested that these three proteins are orthologous gene products. The structural characteristics of RNases PL1 and PL3 were typical of secreted RNases, and this observation questions the proposed cytoplasmic origin of these RI-associated enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
Thermus thermophilus ribonuclease H was overexpressed and purified from Escherichia coli. The determination of the complete amino acid sequence allowed modification of that predicted from the DNA sequence, and the enzyme was shown to be composed of 166 amino acid residues with a molecular weight of 18,279. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was 10.5, and the specific absorption coefficient A0.1%(280) was 1.69. The enzymatic and physicochemical properties as well as the thermal and conformational stabilities of the enzyme were compared with those of E. coli RNase HI, which shows 52% amino acid sequence identity. Comparison of the far and near UV circular dichroism spectra suggests that the two enzymes are similar in the main chain folding but different in the spatial environments of tyrosine and tryptophan residues. The enzymatic activities of T. thermophilus RNase H at 37 and 70 degrees C for the hydrolysis of either an M13 DNA/RNA hybrid or a nonanucleotide duplex were approximately 5-fold lower and 3-fold higher, respectively, as compared with E. coli RNase HI at 37 degrees C. The melting temperature, Tm, of T. thermophilus RNase H was 82.1 degrees C in the presence of 1.2 M guanidine hydrochloride, which was 33.9 degrees C higher than that observed for E. coli RNase HI. The free energy changes of unfolding in the absence of denaturant, delta G[H2O], of T. thermophilus RNase H increased by 11.79 kcal/mol at 25 degrees C and 14.07 kcal/mol at 50 degrees C, as compared with E. coli RNase HI.  相似文献   

19.
In this study, we explore the evolution and function of two closely related RNase A ribonucleases from the chicken, Gallus gallus. Separated by approximately 10 kb on chromosome 6, the coding sequences of RNases A-1 and A-2 are diverging under positive selection pressure (dN > dS) but remain similar to one another (81% amino acid identity) and to the mammalian angiogenins. Immunoreactive RNases A-1 and A-2 (both approximately 16 kDa) were detected in peripheral blood granulocytes and bone marrow. Recombinant proteins are ribonucleolytically active (kcat = 2.6 and 0.056 s(-1), respectively), and surprisingly, both interact with human placental ribonuclease inhibitor. RNase A-2, the more cationic (pI 11.0), is both angiogenic and bactericidal; RNase A-1 (pI 10.2) has neither activity. We demonstrated via point mutation of the catalytic His110 that ablation of ribonuclease activity has no impact on the bactericidal activity of RNase A-2. We determined that the divergent domains II (amino acids 71-76) and III (amino acids 89-104) of RNase A-2 are both important for bactericidal activity. Furthermore, we demonstrated that these cationic domains can function as independent bactericidal peptides without the tertiary structure imposed by the RNase A backbone. These results suggest that ribonucleolytic activity may not be a crucial constraint limiting the ongoing evolution of this gene family and that the ribonuclease backbone may be merely serving as a scaffold to support the evolution of novel, nonribonucleolytic proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Amino-acid sequence of ribonuclease T2 from Aspergillus oryzae   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
The amino acid sequence of ribonuclease T2 (RNase T2) from Aspergillus oryzae has been determined. This has been achieved by analyzing peptides obtained by digestions with Achromobacter lyticus protease I, Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, and alpha-chymotrypsin of two large cyanogen bromide peptides derived from the reduced and S-carboxymethylated or S-aminoethylated protein. Digestion with A. lyticus protease I was successfully used to degrade the N-terminal half of the S-aminoethylated protein at cysteine residues. RNase T2 is a glycoprotein consisting of 239 amino acid residues with a relative molecular mass of 29,155. The sugar content is 7.9% (by mass). Three glycosylation sites were determined at Asns 15, 76 and 239. Apparently RNase T2 has a very low degree of sequence similarity with RNase T1, but a considerable similarity is observed around the amino acid residues involved in substrate recognition and binding in RNase T1. These similar residues may be important for the catalytic activity of RNase T2.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号