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Nuclear magnetic resonance studies of codon-anticodon interaction in tRNAPhe. I. Effect of binding complementary tetra and pentanucleotides to the anticodon
Authors:H A Geerdes  J H Van Boom  C W Hilbers
Institution:1. Department of Biophysical Chemistry University of Nijmegen Toernooiveld 6525 ED Nijmegen The Netherlands;2. Gorlaeus Laboratoria State University of Leiden P.O. Box 9502 2300 AA Leiden The Netherlands
Abstract:The effect of codon-anticodon interaction on the structure of two tRNAPhe species was investigated by means of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. To this end n.m.r.2 spectra of yeast and Escherichia coli tRNAPhe were recorded in the absence and the presence of the oligonucleotides U-U-C-A, U-U-C-G and U-U-C-A-G, which all contain the sequence UUC complementary to the anticodon sequence GAA. The spectra of the hydrogen-bonded protons, the methyl protons and the internucleotide phosphorous nuclei served to monitor the structure of the anticodon loop and of the tRNA in the tRNA-oligonucleotide complex. From the changes in the methyl proton spectra and in the phosphorous spectra it could be concluded that the oligonucleotides bind to the anticodon. Moreover it turned out that the binding constants obtained from these n.m.r. experiments were, within experimental error, equal to the values obtained with other techniques. Using the resonances of the protons hydrogen-bonded between the oligonucleotide and the anticodon loop the structure of the latter could be studied. In particular, binding of the pentanucleotide U-U-C-A-G, which is complementary to the five bases on the 5′ side of the anticodon loop, resulted in the resolution of four to five extra proton resonances indicating that four to five base-pairs are formed between the pentanucleotide and the anticodon loop. The formation of five base-pairs was confirmed by an independent fluorescence binding study. The resonance positions of the hydrogen-bonded protons indicate, that an RNA double helix is formed by the anticodon loop and U-U-C-A-G with the five base-pairs forming a continuous stack. This structure can be accomodated in the so-called 5′ stacked conformation of the anticodon loop, a structure that has been suggested earlier as an alternative to the familiar 3′ stacked conformation in the crystal structure models of yeast tRNAPhe. It turned out that structural adjustments of the anticodon loop to the binding of the oligonucleotides are propagated into the anticodon stem. The relevance of these results with respect to the mechanism of protein synthesis is discussed.
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