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1.
The editing domains of the closely homologous leucyl, isoleucyl, and valyl-tRNA synthetases (LeuRS, IleRS, and ValRS, respectively) contribute to accurate aminoacylation, by hydrolyzing misformed non-cognate aminoacyl-tRNAs. The editing domain is inserted at the same point of the sequence in IleRS, ValRS, and the archaeal/eukaryal LeuRS, but at a distinct point in the bacterial LeuRS. Here, we showed that LeuRS from the archaeon Pyrococcus horikoshii has editing activity against the nearly cognate isoleucine. The conserved Asp332 in the editing domain is crucial for this activity. A deletion mutant lacking the C-terminal region has only negligible aminoacylation activity, but retains the full activity of adenylate synthesis and editing. We determined the crystal structure of this editing-active, truncated form of P.horikoshii LeuRS at 2.1 A resolution. The structure revealed that it has a novel editing domain orientation. The editing domain of P.horikoshii LeuRS is rotated by approximately 180 degrees (rotational state II), with the two-beta-stranded linker untwisted by a half-turn, as compared to those in IleRS and ValRS (rotational state I). This editing domain rotational state in the archaeal LeuRS is similar to that in the bacterial LeuRS. However, because of the insertion point difference, the orientation of the editing domain relative to the enzyme core in the archaeal LeuRS differs completely from that in the bacterial LeuRS. An insertion region specific to the archaeal/eukaryal LeuRS editing domains interacts with the enzyme core and stabilizes the unique orientation. Thus, we established that there are three types of editing domain orientations relative to the enzyme core, depending on the combination of the editing domain insertion point (i or ii) and the rotational state (I or II): [i, I] for IleRS and ValRS, [ii, II] for the bacterial LeuRS, and now [i, II] for the archaeal/eukaryal LeuRS.  相似文献   

2.
A new principle for expression of heat-sensitive recombinant proteins in Escherichia coli at temperatures close to 4 degrees C was experimentally evaluated. This principle was based on simultaneous expression of the target protein with chaperones (Cpn60 and Cpn10) from a psychrophilic bacterium, Oleispira antarctica RB8(T), that allow E. coli to grow at high rates at 4 degrees C (maximum growth rate, 0.28 h(-1)). The expression of a temperature-sensitive esterase in this host at 4 to 10 degrees C yielded enzyme specific activity that was 180-fold higher than the activity purified from the non-chaperonin-producing E. coli strain grown at 37 degrees C (32,380 versus 190 micromol min(-1) g(-1)). We present evidence that the increased specific activity was not due to the low growth temperature per se but was due to the fact that low temperature was beneficial to folding, with or without chaperones. This is the first report of successful use of a chaperone-based E. coli strain to express heat-labile recombinant proteins at temperatures below the theoretical minimum growth temperature of a common E. coli strain (7.5 degrees C).  相似文献   

3.
A unique C-terminal domain extension is required by most leucyl-tRNA synthetases (LeuRS) for aminoacylation. In one exception, the enzymatic activity of yeast mitochondrial LeuRS is actually impeded by its own C-terminal domain. It was proposed that the yeast mitochondrial LeuRS has compromised its aminoacylation activity to some extent and adapted its C terminus for a second role in RNA splicing, which is also essential. X-ray crystal structures of the LeuRS-tRNA complex show that the 60 residue C-terminal domain is tethered to the main body of the enzyme via a flexible peptide linker and allows interactions with the tRNALeu elbow. We hypothesized that this short peptide linker would facilitate rigid body movement of the C-terminal domain as LeuRS transitions between an aminoacylation and editing complex or, in the case of yeast mitochondrial LeuRS, an RNA splicing complex. The roles of the C-terminal linker peptide for Escherichia coli and yeast mitochondrial LeuRS were investigated via deletion mutagenesis as well as by introducing chimeric swaps. Deletions within the C-terminal linker of E. coli LeuRS determined that its length, rather than its sequence, was critical to aminoacylation and editing activities. Although deletions in the yeast mitochondrial LeuRS peptide linker destabilized the protein in general, more stable chimeric enzymes that contained an E. coli LeuRS C-terminal domain showed that shortening its tether stimulated aminoacylation activity. This suggested that limiting C-terminal domain accessibility to tRNALeu facilitates its role in protein synthesis and may be a unique adaptation of yeast mitochondrial LeuRS that accommodates its second function in RNA splicing.  相似文献   

4.
Yeast mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS) binds to the bI4 intron and collaborates with the bI4 maturase to aid excision of the group I intron. Deletion analysis isolated the inserted LeuRS CP1 domain as a critical factor in the protein's splicing activity. Protein fragments comprised of just the LeuRS CP1 region rescued complementation of a yeast strain that expressed a splicing-defective LeuRS. Three-hybrid analysis determined that these CP1-containing LeuRS fragments, ranging from 214 to 375 amino acids, bound to the bI4 intron. In each case, interactions with only the LeuRS protein fragment specifically stimulated bI4 intron splicing activity. Substitution of a homologous CP1 domain from isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase or mutation within the LeuRS CP1 region of the smallest protein fragment abolished RNA binding and splicing activity. The CP1 domain is best known for its amino acid editing activity. However, these results suggest that elements within the LeuRS CP1 domain also play a novel role, independent of the full-length tRNA synthetase, in binding the bI4 group I intron and facilitating its self-splicing activity.  相似文献   

5.
We have isolated and characterized the nuclear gene for the mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS) of Neurospora crassa and have established that a defect in this structural gene is responsible for the leu-5 phenotype. We have purified mitochondrial LeuRS protein, determined its N-terminal sequence, and used this sequence information to identify and isolate a full-length genomic DNA clone. The 3.7-kilobase-pair region representing the structural gene and flanking regions has been sequenced. The 5' ends of the mRNA were mapped by S1 nuclease protection, and the 3' ends were determined from the sequence of cDNA clones. The gene contains a single short intron, 60 base pairs long. The methionine-initiated open reading frame specifies a 52-amino-acid mitochondrial targeting sequence followed by a 942-amino-acid protein. Restriction fragment length polymorphism analyses mapped the mitochondrial LeuRS structural gene to linkage group V, exactly where the leu-5 mutation had been mapped before. We show that the leu-5 strain has a defect in the structural gene for mitochondrial LeuRS by restoring growth under restrictive conditions for this strain after transformation with a wild-type copy of the mitochondrial LeuRS gene. We have cloned the mutant allele present in the leu-5 strain and identified the defect as being due to a Thr-to-Pro change in mitochondrial LeuRS. Finally, we have used immunoblotting to show that despite the apparent lack of mitochondrial LeuRS activity in leu-5 extracts, the leu-5 strain contains levels of mitochondrial LeuRS protein to similar to those of the wild-type strain.  相似文献   

6.
Leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS) performs dual essential roles in group I intron RNA splicing as well as protein synthesis within the yeast mitochondria. Deletions of the C terminus differentially impact the two functions of the enzyme in splicing and aminoacylation in vivo. Herein, we determined that a fiveamino acid C-terminal deletion of LeuRS, which does not complement a null strain, can form a ternary complex with the bI4 intron and its maturase splicing partner. However, the complex fails to stimulate splicing activity. The x-ray co-crystal structure of LeuRS showed that a C-terminal extension of about 60 amino acids forms a discrete domain, which is unique among the LeuRSs and interacts with the corner of the L-shaped tRNALeu. Interestingly, deletion of the entire yeast mitochondrial LeuRS C-terminal domain enhanced its aminoacylation and amino acid editing activities. In striking contrast, deletion of the corresponding C-terminal domain of Escherichia coli LeuRS abolished aminoacylation of tRNALeu and also amino acid editing of mischarged tRNA molecules. These results suggest that the role of the leucine-specific C-terminal domain in tRNA recognition for aminoacylation and amino acid editing has adapted differentially and with surprisingly opposite effects. We propose that the secondary role of yeast mitochondrial LeuRS in RNA splicing has impacted the functional evolution of this critical C-terminal domain.  相似文献   

7.
In a hyperthermophilic bacterium, Aquifex aeolicus, leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS) consists of two non-identical polypeptide subunits (alpha and beta), different from the canonical LeuRS, which has a single polypeptide chain. By PCR, using genome DNA of A. aeolicus as a template, genes encoding the alpha and beta subunits were amplified and cloned in Escherichia coli. The alpha subunit could not be expressed stably in vivo, whereas the beta subunit was overproduced and purified by a simple procedure. The beta subunit was inactive in catalysis but was able to bind tRNA(Leu). Interestingly, the heterodimer alphabeta-LeuRS could be overproduced in E. coli cells containing both genes and was purified to 95% homogeneity as a hybrid dimer. The kinetics of A. aeolicus LeuRS in pre-steady and steady states and cross-recognition of LeuRS and tRNA(Leu) from A. aeolicus and E. coli were studied. Magnesium concentration, pH value, and temperature aminoacylation optima were determined to be 12 mm, 7.8, and 70 degrees C, respectively. Under optimal conditions, A. aeolicus alphabeta-LeuRS is stable up to 65 degrees C.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Conventional baker's yeast converts sugars in dough into CO2 and ethanol to a significant extent when the dough is stored for days at 5 degrees C. We have isolated Csf (cold-sensitive fermentation) mutants of a commercial baker's yeast by a selection method including as the critical step a nystatin treatment to mutagenized cells at 10 degrees C in the presence of antimycin A. The fermentative activity of mutant strain CSF3 was substantially zero at 5 degrees C and one-fifth that of the parent at 10 degrees C but was restored to the same level as the parental activity at 25 to 40 degrees C. In contrast with the parent, the mutant strain normally produced white bread dough and butter roll dough even after the dough was stored for a week at 5 degrees C.  相似文献   

10.
Control of isoleucine-valine biosynthesis was examined in the cold-sensitive hisW3333 mutant strain of Salmonella typhimurium. During growth at the permissive temperature (37 degrees C), the isoleucine-valine (ilv) biosynthetic enzyme levels of the hisW mutant were two- to fourfold below these levels in an isogenic hisW+ strain. Upon a reduction in growth temperature to partially permissive (30 degrees C), the synthesis of these enzymes in the hisW mutant was further reduced. However, synthesis of the ilv enzymes was responsive to the repression signal(s) caused by the addition of excess amounts of isoleucine, valine, and leucine to the hisW mutants. Such a "super-repressed" phenotype as that observed in this hisW mutant is similar to that previously shown for the hisU1820 mutant, but was different from the regulatory response of the hisT1504 mutant strain. Moreover, by the use of growth-rate-limiting amounts of the branched-chain amino acids, it was shown that this hisW mutant generally did not increase the synthesis of the ilv enzymes as did the hisW+ strain. Overall, these results are in agreement with the hypothesis that the hisW mutant is less responsive to ilv specific attenuation control than is the hisW+ strain and suggest that this limited regulatory response is due to an alteration in the amount or structure of an element essential to attenuation control of the ilv operons.  相似文献   

11.
12.
13.
aaRSs (aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases) establish the rules of the genetic code by catalysing the formation of aminoacyl-tRNA. The quality control for aminoacylation is achieved by editing activity, which is usually carried out by a discrete editing domain. For LeuRS (leucyl-tRNA synthetase), the CP1 (connective peptide 1) domain is the editing domain responsible for hydrolysing mischarged tRNA. The CP1 domain is universally present in LeuRSs, except MmLeuRS (Mycoplasma mobile LeuRS). The substitute of CP1 in MmLeuRS is a nonapeptide (MmLinker). In the present study, we show that the MmLinker, which is critical for the aminoacylation activity of MmLeuRS, could confer remarkable tRNA-charging activity on the inactive CP1-deleted LeuRS from Escherichia coli (EcLeuRS) and Aquifex aeolicus (AaLeuRS). Furthermore, CP1 from EcLeuRS could functionally compensate for the MmLinker and endow MmLeuRS with post-transfer editing capability. These investigations provide a mechanistic framework for the modular construction of aaRSs and their co-ordination to achieve catalytic efficiency and fidelity. These results also show that the pre-transfer editing function of LeuRS originates from its conserved synthetic domain and shed light on future study of the mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Fukunaga R  Yokoyama S 《Biochemistry》2007,46(17):4985-4996
In the archaeal leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS), the C-terminal domain recognizes the long variable arm of tRNA(Leu) for aminoacylation, and the so-called editing domain deacylates incorrectly formed Ile-tRNA(Leu). We previously reported, for Pyrococcus horikoshii LeuRS, that a deletion mutant lacking the C-terminal domain (LeuRS_delta(811-967)) retains normal editing activity, but has severely reduced aminoacylation activity. In this study, we found that LeuRS_delta(811-967), but not the wild-type LeuRS, exhibited surprisingly robust deacylation activity against Ile-tRNA(Ile), correctly formed by isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase ("misediting"). Structural superposition of tRNA(Ile) onto the LeuRS x tRNA(Leu) complex indicated that Ile911, Lys912, and Glu913 of the LeuRS C-terminal domain clash with U20 of tRNA(Ile), which is bulged out as compared to the corresponding nucleotide of tRNA(Leu). The deletion of amino acid residues 911-913 of LeuRS enhanced the Ile-tRNA(Ile) deacylation activity, without affecting the Ile-tRNA(Leu) deacylation activity. These results demonstrate that the clashing between U20 of tRNA(Ile) and residues 911-913 of the LeuRS C-terminal domain is the structural mechanism that prevents misediting. In contrast, the deletion of the C-terminal domains of the isoleucyl- and valyl-tRNA synthetases impaired both the aminoacylation (Ile-tRNA(Ile) and Val-tRNA(Val) formation, respectively) and editing (Val-tRNA(Ile) and Thr-tRNA(Val) deacylation, respectively) activities, and did not cause misediting (Val-tRNA(Val) and Thr-tRNA(Thr) deacylation, respectively) activity. Thus, the requirement of the C-terminal domain for misediting prevention is unique to LeuRS, which does not recognize the anticodon of the cognate tRNA, unlike the common aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases.  相似文献   

16.
The fidelity of protein synthesis depends on the capacity of aminoacyl‐tRNA synthetases (AARSs) to couple only cognate amino acid‐tRNA pairs. If amino acid selectivity is compromised, fidelity can be ensured by an inherent AARS editing activity that hydrolyses mischarged tRNAs. Here, we show that the editing activity of Escherichia coli leucyl‐tRNA synthetase (EcLeuRS) is not required to prevent incorrect isoleucine incorporation. Rather, as shown by kinetic, structural and in vivo approaches, the prime biological function of LeuRS editing is to prevent mis‐incorporation of the non‐standard amino acid norvaline. This conclusion follows from a reassessment of the discriminatory power of LeuRS against isoleucine and the demonstration that a LeuRS editing‐deficient E. coli strain grows normally in high concentrations of isoleucine but not under oxygen deprivation conditions when norvaline accumulates to substantial levels. Thus, AARS‐based translational quality control is a key feature for bacterial adaptive response to oxygen deprivation. The non‐essential role for editing under normal bacterial growth has important implications for the development of resistance to antimicrobial agents targeting the LeuRS editing site.  相似文献   

17.
The thermostability of beta-xylanases produced by nine thermophilic Thermomyces lanuginosus strains in a coarse corn cob medium was assessed. The xylanase produced by T. lanuginosus strain SSBP retained 100% of its activity after 6 h at temperatures up to 65 degrees C. In comparison seven ATCC strains and the DSM 5826 strain of T. lanuginosus only retained 100% xylanase activity at temperatures up to 60 degrees C. Culture filtrates of T. lanuginosus strain SSBP grown on coarse corn cobs, oatspelts xylan, birchwood xylan, wheatbran, locust beangum, and sugar cane bagasse, retained 100% xylanase activity at temperatures up to 60 degrees C. The xylanase produced on corn cobs was the most thermostable and showed an increase of approximately 6% from 70 degrees C to 80 degrees C. The T(1/2) of all strains at 70 degrees C at pH 6.5 varied greatly from 63 min for strain ATCC 28083 to 340 min for strain SSBP. The xylanase of strain SSBP was much less thermostable at pH 5.0 and pH 12.0 with T(1/2) values of 11.5 min and 15 min, respectively at 70 degrees C. At 50 degrees C, the enzyme of T. lanuginosus strain SSBP produced on coarse corn cobs was stable within the pH range of 5.5-10.0. Furthermore, the enzyme retained total activity at 60 degrees C for over 14 days and at 65 degrees C for over 48 h. The xylanase of T. lanuginosus strain SSBP possesses thermo- and pH stability properties that may be attractive to industrial application.  相似文献   

18.
A new epoxide hydrolase with high enantioselectivity toward (R)-glycidyl phenyl ether (R-GPE) was partially purified from Bacillus megaterium strain ECU1001. The maximum activity of the isolated enzyme was observed at 30 degrees C and pH 6.5 in a buffer system with 5% (v/v) of DMSO as a cosolvent. The enzyme was quite stable at pH 7.5 and retained full activity after incubation at 40 degrees C for 6 h. Interestingly, when the cosolvent DMSO was replaced by an emulsifier (Tween-80, 0.5% w/v) as an alternative additive to help disperse the water-insoluble substrate, the apparent activity of the epoxide hydrolase significantly increased by about 1.8-fold, while the temperature optimum shifted from 30 to 40 degrees C and the half-life of the enzyme at 50 degrees C increased by 2.5 times. The enzymatic hydrolysis of rac-GPE was highly enantioselective, with an E-value (enantiomeric ratio) of 69.3 in the Tween-80 emulsion system, which is obviously higher than that (41.2) observed in the DMSO-containing system.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Mansukhani  Alka  Condon  Tom  Hampel  Arnold  Oxender  Dale L. 《Biochemical genetics》1984,22(3-4):349-355
The Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell culture temperature-sensitive mutant ts025Cl with a defect in leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS) does not have an inherently more thermolabile LeuRS, but instead the mutation causes the complete loss of the LeuRS high molecular weight complexes which are present in normal wild-type cells. The mutant cell LeuRS has a single 8 S enzyme form which corresponds hydrodynamically to the 8 S free form of wild-type enzyme. Both 8 S forms have the same thermostability and the same K m for leucine, indicating that there is no inherent defect in the catalytic activity of the enzyme. The temperature-sensitive phenotype can be explained by the lack of thermostable high molecular weight forms of LeuRS.This work was supported by NIH Grant GM 19506 to A.E.H. and GM 20737 to D.E.O.  相似文献   

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