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Query: EC:3.1.27.3 (
RNase T1
)
1,228
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Low-pH-induced difference spectra for
ribonuclease T1
, which were determined using a reference solution at pH 6, consisted of a shorter wavelength component from 270 to 285 nm that relfected an ionization having a pKa of 3.54 and a longer wavelength component above 285 nm that reflected an ionization having a pKa of 4.29. The temperature dependence of the pKa value for data at 300 nm is consistent with its representing the dissociation of a carboxyl group. In addition, the pKa determined at this wavelength significantly decreased at lower ionic strength. Similar experiments which were conducted using catalytically inactive gamma-carboxymethyl-Glu-58-
ribonuclease T1
gave difference spectra having only the shorter wavelength component and were characterized by a single pKa of 3.53. It is concluded that the longer wavelength component of the difference spectra is due to the ionization of Glu-58. The pKa determined for this residue in the present study agrees with one found previously from kinetic studies which supports a role for Glu-58 in catalysis. Furthermore, the results suggest a model for the interaction of Glu-58 with histidine and
tryptophan
residues at the active site.
...
PMID:Spectrophotometric titration of a single carboxyl group at the active site of ribonuclease T1. 2 Sep 34
The thermal transition of
RNase T1
was studied by two different methods;
tryptophan
residue fluorescence and circular dichroism. The fluorescence measurements provide information about the environment of the indole group and CD measurements on the gross conformation of the polypeptide chain. Both measurements at pH 5 gave the same transition temperature of 56 degrees C and the same thermodynamic quantities, delta Htr (= 120 kcal/mol) and delta Str (= 360 eu/mol), for the transition from the native state to the thermally denatured state, indicating simultaneous melting of the whole molecule including the hydrophobic region where the
tryptophan
residue is buried. Stabilization by salts was observed in the pH range from 2 to 10, since the presence of 0.5 m NaCL caused an increase of about 5 degrees C to 10 degrees C in the transition temperature, depending on the pH. The fluorescence measurements on the
RNase T1
complexed with 2'-GMP showed a transition with delta Htr =167 kcal/mol and delta Str =497 eu/mol at a transition temperature about 6 degrees C higher than that for the free enzyme. The large value of delta Htr for
RNase T1
indicates the highly cooperative nature of the thermal transition; this value is much higher than those of other globular proteins. Analysis of the CD spectrum of thermally denatured
RNase T1
suggests that the denatured state is not completely random but retains some ordered structures.
...
PMID:Conformational stability of ribonuclease T1. I. Thermal denaturation and effects of salts. 3 67
The secondary structure of the terminated trp leader transcript from Escherichia coli was analyzed by
RNase T1
partial digestion. Base-paired regions were recovered by nondenaturing gel electrophoresis and identified by denaturing gel electrophoresis and fingerprinting. The tandem
tryptophan
codons in the leader peptide coding region were found to be base paired with a more distal region of the transcript. This and other secondary structures that the trp leader RNA can form help explain the physiological response of the operon as well as the behavior of regulatory mutants.
...
PMID:Attenuation in the Escherichia coli tryptophan operon: role of RNA secondary structure involving the tryptophan codon region. 11 51
The single
tryptophan
residue in
ribonuclease T1
[EC 3.1.4.8] was selectively oxidized by ozone to N'-formylkynurenine, which was then converted to kynurenine by acid-catalyzed deformylation in the frozen state. The two enzyme derivatives thus formed, NFK- and Kyn-
RNase T1
, lost enzymatic activity at pH 7.5, at which native
RNase T1
most efficiently catalyzes the hydrolysis of RNA. At pH 4.75, the modified enzymes retained a decreased but distinct enzymatic activity toward RNA without alteration of substrate specificity, and Kyn-
RNase T1
was four times more active than NFK-
RNase T1
. The binding of 3'-GMP to these modified enzymes decreased remarkably at pH 5.5, the optimum pH for binding to the intact enzyme. The gamma-carboxyl group of glutamic acid 58 was still reactive to iodoacetic acid after modification of
tryptophan
59. The amounts of the carboxymethyl group introduced into NFK- and Kyn-
RNase T1
were 0.36 and 0.59 mol, respectively, under conditions such that quantitative esterification of native
RNase T1
takes place. CD spectroscopy indicated that the tertiary structure of the molecule was disordered in NFK-
RNase T1
, but not significantly in Kyn-
RNase T1
. It is concluded that
tryptophan
59 functions in maintaining the active conformation of the protein structure, particularly in constructing the active environment for a functionally important set of groups involved in the binding of the substrate at the active site, although direct participation of in
tryptophan
the catalytic function of
ribonuclease T1
is unlikely.
...
PMID:Chemical modification of ribonuclease T1 with ozone. 41 75
The fluorescence of the supposedly buried
tryptophan
in
ribonuclease T1
has been found to be collisionally quenched by acrylamide with a rate constant of 3 X 10(8) M--1 sec--1. Only a slight decrease in the quenching rate is observed upon a 5-fold increase in the viscosity of the solution. For this to be the case, the diffusion of the quencher must be limited by the protein matrix. To explain the process of diffusion through this complex material, the formation of "holes" in the lattice of a protein due to nanosecond fluctuations must be invoked. Thus, the dynamic character of a protein molecule is revealed. The quenching rate constant has an activation energy of 9 kcal/mol which can be used to characterize the nature of the cohesive forces in the microenvironment about the indole ring. The mechanical properties of a portion of a protein matrix can, therefore, be described as one would for a fluid.
...
PMID:Dynamics of a protein matrix revealed by fluorescence quenching. 81 Aug
Kinetic intermediates in protein folding are short-lived and therefore difficult to detect and to characterize. In the folding of polypeptide chains with incorrect isomers of Xaa-Pro peptide bonds the final rate-limiting transition to the native state is slow, since it is coupled to prolyl isomerization. Incorrect prolyl isomers thus act as effective traps for folding intermediates and allow their properties to be studied more easily. We employed this strategy to investigate the mechanism of slow folding of
ribonuclease T1
. In our experiments we use a mutant form of this protein with a single cis peptide bond at proline 39. During refolding, protein chains with an incorrect trans proline 39 can rapidly form extensive secondary structure. The CD signal in the amide region is regained within the dead-time of stopped-flow mixing (15 ms), indicating a fast formation of the single alpha-helix of
ribonuclease T1
. This step is correlated with partial formation of a hydrophobic core, because the fluorescence emission maximum of
tryptophan
59 is shifted from 349 nm to 325 nm within less than a second. After about 20 s of refolding an intermediate is present that shows about 40% enzymatic activity compared to the completely refolded protein. In addition, the solvent accessibility of
tryptophan
59 is drastically reduced in this intermediate and comparable to that of the native state as determined by acrylamide quenching of the
tryptophan
fluorescence. Activity and quenching measurements have long dead-times and therefore we do not know whether enzymatic activity and solvent accessibility also change in the time range of milliseconds. At this stage of folding at least part of the beta-sheet structure is already present, since it hosts the active site of the enzyme. The trans to cis isomerization of the tyrosine 38-proline 39 peptide bond in the intermediate and consequently the formation of native protein is very slow (tau = 6,500 s at pH 5.0 and 10 degrees C). It is accompanied by an additional increase in
tryptophan
fluorescence, by the development of the fine structure of the
tryptophan
emission spectrum, and by the regain of the full enzymatic activity. This indicates that the packing of the hydrophobic core, which involves both
tryptophan
59 and proline 39, is optimized in this step. Apparently, refolding polypeptide chains with an incorrect prolyl isomer can very rapidly form partially folded intermediates with native-like properties.
...
PMID:Structure of a rapidly formed intermediate in ribonuclease T1 folding. 130 94
Phosphorescence and ODMR measurements have been made on
ribonuclease T1
(
RNase T1
), the mutated enzyme
RNase T1
(Y45W), and their complexes with 2'GMP and 2'AMP. It is not possible to observe the phosphorescence of Trp45 in
RNase T1
(Y45W). Only that of the naturally occurring Trp59 is seen. The binding of 2'GMP to wild-type
RNase T1
produces only a minor red shift in the phosphorescence and no change in the ODMR spectrum of Trp59. However, a new
tryptophan
0,0-band is found 8.2 nm to the red of the Trp59 0,0-band in the 2'GMP complex of the mutated
RNase T1
(Y45W). Wavelength-selected ODMR measurements reveal that the red-shifted emission induced by 2'GMP binding, assigned to Trp45, occurs from a residue with significantly different zero-field splittings than those of Trp59, a buried residue subject to local polar interactions. The phosphorescence red shift and the zero-field splitting parameters demonstrate that Trp45 is located in a polarizable environment in the 2'GMP complex. In contrast with 2'GMP, binding of 2'AMP to
RNase T1
(Y45W) induces no observable phosphorescence emission from Trp45, but leads only to a minor red shift in the phosphorescence origin of Trp59 in both the mutated and wild-type enzyme. The lack of resolved phosphorescence emission from Trp45 in
RNase T1
(Y45W) implies that the emission of this residue is quenched in the uncomplexed enzyme. We conclude that local conformational changes that occur upon binding 2'GMP remove quenching residues from the vicinity of Trp45, restoring its luminescence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Phosphorescence and optically detected magnetic resonance measurements of the 2'AMP and 2'GMP complexes of a mutant ribonuclease T1 (Y45W) in solution: correlation with X-ray crystal structures. 132 71
The replacement of
tryptophan
59 of
ribonuclease T1
by a tyrosine residue does not change the stability of the protein. However, it leads to a strong acceleration of a major, proline-limited reaction that is unusually slow in the refolding of the wild-type protein. The distribution of fast- and slow-folding species and the kinetic mechanism of slow folding are not changed by the mutation. Trp-59 is in close contact to Pro-39 in native
RNase T1
and probably also in an intermediate that forms rapidly during folding. We suggest that this specific interaction interferes with the trans----cis reisomerization of the Tyr-38-Pro-39 bond at the stage of a native-like folding intermediate. The steric hindrance is abolished either by changing Trp-59 to a less bulky residue, such as tyrosine, or, by a destabilization of folding intermediates at increased concentrations of denaturant. Under such conditions folding of the wild-type protein and of the W59Y variant no longer differ. These results provide strong support for the proposal that trans----cis isomerization of Pro-39 is responsible for the major, very slow refolding reaction of
RNase T1
. They also indicate that specific tertiary interactions in folding intermediates do exist, but do not necessarily facilitate folding. They can have adverse effects and decelerate rate-limiting steps by trapping partially folded structures.
...
PMID:Folding of RNase T1 is decelerated by a specific tertiary contact in a folding intermediate. 160 6
We used harmonic-content frequency-domain fluorometry to determine the anisotropy decays of a variety of single
tryptophan
peptides and proteins. Resolution of the rapid and complex anisotropy decays was enhanced by global analysis of the data measured in the presence of quenching by either oxygen or acrylamide. For each protein, and for each quencher, data were obtained at four to six quencher concentrations, and the data analyzed globally to recover the anisotropy decay. The decrease in decay times produced by quenching allows measurements to an upper frequency limit of 2 GHz. The chosen proteins provided a range of exposures of the
tryptophan
residues to the aqueous phase, these being ACTH, monellin, Staphylococcus nuclease and
ribonuclease T1
, in order of decreasing exposure. Examination of indole and several small peptides demonstrates the resolution limitations of the measurements; a correlation time of 12 ps was measured for indole in methanol at 40 degrees C. Comparison of the anisotropy decays of gly-trp-gly with leu-trp-leu revealed stearic effects of the larger leucine side chains on the indole ring. The anisotropy decay of gly-trp-gly revealed a 40 ps component for the indole side chain, which was resolved from the overall 150 ps correlation time of the tripeptide. Only the longer correlation time was observed for leu-trp-leu. With the exception of
ribonuclease T1
, each of the proteins displayed a subnanosecond component in the anisotropy decay which we assign to independent motions of the
tryptophan
residues. For example, Staphylococcus nuclease and monellin displayed segmental
tryptophan
motions with correlation times of 80 and 275 ps, respectively. The amplitudes of the rapid components increased with increasing exposure to the aqueous phase. These highly resolved anisotropy decays for proteins of known structure are suitable for comparison with molecular dynamic simulations.
...
PMID:Anisotropy decays of single tryptophan proteins measured by GHz frequency-domain fluorometry with collisional quenching. 164 47
Hydrophobic effects on binding of
ribonuclease T1
to guanine bases of several ribonucleotides have been proved by mutating a hydrophobic residue at the recognition site and by measuring the effect on binding. Mutation of a hydrophobic surface residue to a more hydrophobic residue (Tyr45----Trp) enhances the binding to ribonucleotides, including mononucleotide inhibitor and product, and a synthetic substrate-analog trinucleotide as well as the binding to dinucleotide substrates and RNA. Enhancements on binding to non-substrate ribonucleotides by the mutation have been observed with free energy changes ranging from -2.2 to -3.9 kJ/mol. These changes are in good agreement with that of substrate binding, -2.3 kJ/mol, which is calculated from Michaelis constants obtained from kinetic studies. It is shown, by comparing the observed and calculated changes in binding free energy with differences in the observed transfer free energy changes of the amino acid side chains from organic solvents to water, that the enhancement observed on guanine binding comes from the difference in the hydrophobic effects of the side chains of tyrosine and
tryptophan
. Furthermore, a linear relationship between nucleolytic activities and hydrophobicity of the residues (Ala, Phe, Tyr, Trp) at position 45 is observed. The mutation could not change substantially the base specificity of
RNase T1
, which exhibits a prime requirement for guanine bases of substrates.
...
PMID:Hydrophobic effects on protein/nucleic acid interaction: enhancement of substrate binding by mutating tyrosine 45 to tryptophan in ribonuclease T1. 172 96
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