Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.27.1 (RNase)
16,360 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Photoinduced covalent cross-linking has been used to identify a common surface of four methionine-accepting tRNAs which interact specifically with the Escherichia coli methionine:tRNA ligase (EC 6.1.1.10). tRNA--ligase mixtures were irradiated, and the covalently linked complexes were isolated and digested with T1 RNase (Schimmel & Budzik, 1977). The fragments lost from the elution profile of the T1 RNase digest were considered to have been cross-linked to the protein and therefore in intimate contact with the enzyme. Only specific cognate tRNA--ligase pairs produce covalently linked complexes. The four substrate tRNAs used in this study have substantially different sequences, but all showed a common cross-linking pattern, supporting the view that the sites cross-linked to the enzyme reflect the functionally common contact surface rather than particularly photoreactivity regions of tRNA. The cross-linked contact surface is comprised of three regions: (1) the narrow groove of the anticodon stem and its extension into the anticodon loop; (2) the 3' terminal residues; and (3) the 3' side of the "T arm". Unlike previous studies with other tRNAs, the D arm is not involved and significant radiation damage is suffered by the tRNA which must be taken into account in the analysis. The results are consistent with and complement chemical modification studies [Schulman, L. H., & Pelka, H. (1977) Biochemistry 16, 4256].
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PMID:Photocross-linking analysis of the contact surface of tRNA Met in complexes with Escherichia coli methionine:tRNA ligase. 36 5

A wheat germ protease is responsible for Mr 105,000 methionyl-tRNA synthetase hydrolysis, generating two fragments of Mr 82,000 (harbouring the catalytic domain) and 20,000, respectively. Specificity of the protease was sought for using different kinds of protein substrates. It turned out that charged peptides were preferentially cleaved and that no proteolysis occurred when proteins were replaced by small synthetic substrates, harbouring target sites similar to those cleaved in proteins. The protease could be a ribosomal protein, since it remained associated to ribosomal structure, even after treatment by deoxycholate, Triton X-100, 800 mM KC1 and puromycin. Nevertheless, it was still active after ribonuclease treatment of the ribosomes. An identical protease activity was found in rat liver, but not in E. coli.
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PMID:Evidence for a ribosome-associated thiol protease cleaving wheat germ methionyl-tRNA synthetase. 186 82

A new method has been developed to couple a lysine-reactive cross-linker to the 4-thiouridine residue at position 8 in the primary structure of the Escherichia coli initiator methionine tRNA (tRNAfMet). Incubation of the affinity-labeling tRNAfMet derivative with E. coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MetRS) yielded a covalent complex of the protein and nucleic acid and resulted in loss of amino acid acceptor activity of the enzyme. A stoichiometric relationship (1:1) was observed between the amount of cross-linked tRNA and the amount of enzyme inactivated. Cross-linking was effectively inhibited by unmodified tRNAfMet, but not by noncognate tRNAPhe. The covalent complex was digested with trypsin, and the resulting tRNA-bound peptides were purified from excess free peptides by anion-exchange chromatography. The tRNA was then degraded with T1 ribonuclease, and the peptides bound to the 4-thiouridine-containing dinucleotide were purified by high-pressure liquid chromatography. Two major peptide products were isolated plus several minor peptides. N-Terminal sequencing of the peptides obtained in highest yield revealed that the 4-thiouridine was cross-linked to lysine residues 402 and 439 in the primary sequence of MetRS. Since many prokaryotic tRNAs contain 4-thiouridine, the procedures described here should prove useful for identification of peptide sequences near this modified base when a variety of tRNAs are bound to specific proteins.
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PMID:Covalent coupling of 4-thiouridine in the initiator methionine tRNA to specific lysine residues in Escherichia coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase. 312 28

Ribonuclease T2, nuclease S1, and snake venom phosphodiesterase were used as a structural probe for investigation of the interaction between Escherichia coli tRNAfMet and methionyl-tRNA synthetase, and the cleavage sites were analyzed by a rapid sequencing gel electrophoresis of 5'-32P-labeled tRNA. Both endonucleases cleaved the D-loop of synthetase-bound tRNA much more extensively than that of the free tRNA. Positions of A14, G15, A22, and G23 in the D-loop and C35 in the anticodon of the synthetase-bound tRNA were more susceptible to RNase T2. The synthetase-bound tRNA was predominantly cleaved by nuclease S1 at position of G15, G19, G20, and G23 in the D-loop and G2 in the acceptor stem. In contrast, the synthetase-bound tRNA was more resistant to the 3'-exonuclease, snake venom phosphodiesterase, than was the free tRNA molecule. These results suggest conformational change of the tRNA by the synthetase binding which weakened tertiary interaction between the D-loop and T psi C-loop/extra-loop. Production of acid-soluble radioactivity was also examined in the limited digestion of 5'-32P-labeled tRNA or 3'-14C-labeled methionyl-tRNA. The synthetase enhanced the release of acid-soluble oligonucleotides from the 5'-end of the tRNA but suppressed that from the 3'-end of the molecule. These results are consistent with that obtained by gel electrophoresis.
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PMID:Methionyl-tRNA synthetase-induced conformational change of Escherichia coli tRNAfMet. 626 70

Maturation of precursor transfer RNA (pre-tRNA) includes excision of the 5' leader and 3' trailer sequences, removal of introns and addition of the CCA terminus. Nucleotide modifications are incorporated at different stages of tRNA processing, after the RNA molecule adopts the proper conformation. In bacteria, tRNA(Ile2) lysidine synthetase (TilS) modifies cytidine into lysidine (L; 2-lysyl-cytidine) at the first anticodon of tRNA(Ile2) (refs 4-9). This modification switches tRNA(Ile2) from a methionine-specific to an isoleucine-specific tRNA. However, the aminoacylation of tRNA(Ile2) by methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MetRS), before the modification by TilS, might lead to the misincorporation of methionine in response to isoleucine codons. The mechanism used by bacteria to avoid this pitfall is unknown. Here we show that the TilS enzyme specifically recognizes and modifies tRNA(Ile2) in its precursor form, thereby avoiding translation errors. We identified the lysidine modification in pre-tRNA(Ile2) isolated from RNase-E-deficient Escherichia coli and did not detect mature tRNA(Ile2) lacking this modification. Our kinetic analyses revealed that TilS can modify both types of RNA molecule with comparable efficiencies. X-ray crystallography and mutational analyses revealed that TilS specifically recognizes the entire L-shape structure in pre-tRNA(Ile2) through extensive interactions coupled with sequential domain movements. Our results demonstrate how TilS prevents the recognition of tRNA(Ile2) by MetRS and achieves high specificity for its substrate. These two key points form the basis for maintaining the fidelity of isoleucine codon translation in bacteria. Our findings also provide a rationale for the necessity of incorporating specific modifications at the precursor level during tRNA biogenesis.
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PMID:Structural basis for translational fidelity ensured by transfer RNA lysidine synthetase. 1984 69