Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.30.2 (
endonuclease
)
18,621
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report the characterization and partial purification of potato mitochondrial
RNase Z
, an
endonuclease
that generates mature tRNA 3' ends. The enzyme consists of one (or more) protein(s) without RNA subunits. Products of the processing reaction are tRNA molecules with 3' terminal hydroxyl groups and 3' trailers with 5' terminal phosphates. The main processing sites are located immediately 3' to the discriminator and one nucleotide further downstream. This endonucleolytic processing at and close to the tRNA 3' end in potato mitochondria suggests a higher similarity to the eukaryotic than to the prokaryotic tRNA 3' processing pathway. Partial purification and separation of
RNase Z
from the 5' processing activity RNase P allowed us to determine biochemical characteristics of the enzyme. The activity is stable over broad pH and temperature ranges, with peak activity at pH 8 and 30 degrees C. Optimal concentrations for MgCl2 and KCl are 5 mM and 30 mM, respectively. The potato mitochondrial
RNase Z
accepts only tRNA precursors with mature 5' ends. The precursor for tRNAPhe requires RNA editing for efficient processing by
RNase Z
.
...
PMID:5' end maturation and RNA editing have to precede tRNA 3' processing in plant mitochondria. 941 37
The nuclear tRNA 3' processing activity from wheat has been characterized and partially purified. Several characteristics of the wheat nuclear 3' processing enzyme now allow this activity to be distinguished from its mitochondrial counterpart. The nuclear enzyme is an
endonuclease
, which we termed nuclear
RNase Z
. The enzyme cleaves at the discriminator base and seems to consist only of protein subunits, since essential RNA subunits could not be detected.
RNase Z
leaves 5' terminal phosphoryl and 3' terminal hydroxyl groups at the processing products. It is a stable enzyme being active over broad temperature and pH ranges, with the highest activity at 35 degrees C and pH 8.4. The apparent molecular mass according to gel filtration chromatography is 122 kDa. The nuclear
RNase Z
does process 5' extended pretRNAs but with a much lower efficiency than 5' matured pretRNAs. Nuclear intron-containing precursor tRNAs as well as mitochondrial precursor tRNAs are efficiently cleaved by the nuclear
RNase Z
. Mitochondrial pretRNA(His) is processed by the nuclear
RNase Z
, generating a mature tRNA(His) containing an 8 base pair acceptor stem. The edited mitochondrial pretRNA(Phe) is cleaved easily, while the unedited version having a mismatch in the acceptor stem is not cleaved. Thus, an intact acceptor stem seems to be required for processing. Experiments with precursors containing mutated tRNAs showed that a completely intact anticodon arm is not necessary for processing by
RNase Z
. Comparison of the plant nuclear tRNA 3' processing enzyme with the plant mitochondrial one suggests that both activities are different enzymes.
...
PMID:tRNA 3' processing in plants: nuclear and mitochondrial activities differ. 1068 60
Here, we report the first characterization and partial purification of an archaeal tRNA 3' processing activity, the
RNase Z
from Haloferax volcanii. The activity identified here is an
endonuclease
, which cleaves tRNA precursors 3' to the discriminator. Thus tRNA 3' processing in archaea resembles the eukaryotic 3' processing pathway. The archaeal
RNase Z
has a KCl optimum at 5mM, which is in contrast to the intracellular KCl concentration being as high as 4M KCl. The archaeal
RNase Z
does process 5' extended and intron-containing pretRNAs but with a much lower efficiency than 5' matured, intronless pretRNAs. At least in vitro there is thus no defined order for 5' and 3' processing and splicing. A heterologous precursor tRNA is cleaved efficiently by the archaeal
RNase Z
. Experiments with precursors containing mutated tRNAs revealed that removal of the anticodon arm reduces cleavage efficiency only slightly, while removal of D and T arm reduces processing effciency drastically, even down to complete inhibition. Comparison with its nuclear and mitochondrial homologs revealed that the substrate specificity of the archaeal
RNase Z
is narrower than that of the nuclear
RNase Z
but broader than that of the mitochondrial
RNase Z
.
...
PMID:tRNA 3' end maturation in archaea has eukaryotic features: the RNase Z from Haloferax volcanii. 1188 30
Although correct tRNA 3' ends are crucial for protein biosynthesis, generation of mature tRNA 3' ends in eukaryotes is poorly understood and has so far only been investigated in vitro. We report here for the first time that eukaryotic tRNA 3' end maturation is catalysed by the
endonuclease
RNase Z
in vivo. Silencing of the JhI-1 gene (
RNase Z
homolog) in vivo with RNAi in Drosophila S2 cultured cells causes accumulation of nuclear and mitochondrial pre-tRNAs, suggesting that JhI-1 encodes both forms of the tRNA 3'
endonuclease
RNase Z
, and establishing its biological role in endonucleolytic tRNA 3' end processing. In addition our data show that in vivo 5' processing of nuclear and mitochondrial pre-tRNAs occurs before 3' processing.
...
PMID:Drosophila RNase Z processes mitochondrial and nuclear pre-tRNA 3' ends in vivo. 1471 23
The deafness-associated 7472insC mtDNA mutation was previously shown to decrease the steady-state level of tRNA(Ser(UCN)) post-transcriptionally. To identify the affected tRNA maturation step(s) we analysed the effects of the mutation on processing in vivo and in vitro. tRNA(Ser(UCN)) from cybrid cells homoplasmic for 7472insC contained a high frequency (>11%) of molecules misprocessed at one or both termini. In vitro assays using partially purified HeLa cell RNase P and mitochondrial tRNA 3' processing
endonuclease
(
tRNase Z
) confirmed that the efficiency of both 5' and 3' processing was impaired. A mutant precursor not already processed at the 5' end was poorly processed in vitro by
tRNase Z
. Misprocessing at the 3' end further impaired the efficiency and accuracy of 5' processing of the mutant substrate. The mutation thus appears to affect several distinct, but interdependent, RNA processing steps, with the predicted outcome dependent on the exact processing pathway operating in vivo.
...
PMID:The 7472insC mtDNA mutation impairs 5' and 3' processing of tRNA(Ser(UCN)). 1533 35
Biosynthesis of transfer RNA requires processing from longer precursors at the 5'- and 3'-ends. In eukaryotes, in archaea, and in those bacteria where the 3'-terminal CCA sequence is not encoded, 3' processing is carried out by the
endonuclease
RNase Z
, which cleaves after the discriminator nucleotide to generate a mature 3'-end ready for the addition of the CCA sequence. We have identified and cloned the gene coding for
RNase Z
in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The gene has been expressed in Escherichia coli, and the recombinant protein was purified. The enzymatic activity of
RNase Z
from Synechocystis has been studied in vitro with a variety of substrates. The presence of C or CC after the discriminator nucleotide modifies the cleavage site of
RNase Z
so that it is displaced by one and two nucleotides to the 3'-side, respectively. The presence of the complete 3'-terminal CCA sequence in the precursor of the tRNA completely inhibits
RNase Z
activity. The inactive CCA-containing precursor binds to Synechocystis
RNase Z
with similar affinity than the mature tRNA. The properties of the enzyme described here could be related with the mechanism by which CCA is added in this organism, with the participation of two separate nucleotidyl transferases, one specific for the addition of C and another for the addition of A. This work is the first characterization of
RNase Z
from a cyanobacterium, and the first from an organism with two separate nucleotidyl transferases.
...
PMID:Sequence-dependent cleavage site selection by RNase Z from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. 1605 5
tRNA 3' processing is one of the essential steps during tRNA maturation. The tRNA 3'-processing
endonuclease
tRNase Z
was only recently isolated, and its functional domains have not been identified so far. We performed an extensive mutational study to identify amino acids and regions involved in dimerization, tRNA binding, and catalytic activity. 29 deletion and point variants of the
tRNase Z
enzyme were generated. According to the results obtained, variants can be sorted into five different classes. The first class still had wild type activity in all three respects. Members of the second and third class still formed dimers and bound tRNAs but had reduced catalytic activity (class two) or no catalytic activity (class three). The fourth class still formed dimers but did not bind the tRNA and did not process precursors. Since this class still formed dimers, it seems that the amino acids mutated in these variants are important for RNA binding. The fifth class did not have any activity anymore. Several conserved amino acids could be mutated without or with little loss of activity.
...
PMID:Analysis of the functional modules of the tRNA 3' endonuclease (tRNase Z). 1611 25
The elaC gene product from Escherichia coli, ZiPD, is a 3' tRNA-processing
endonuclease
belonging to the
tRNase Z
family of enzymes that have been identified in a wide variety of organisms. In contrast to the elaC homologue from Bacillus subtilis, E. coli elaC is not essential for viability, and although both enzymes process only precursor tRNA (pre-tRNA) lacking a CCA triplet at the 3' end in vitro, the physiological role of ZiPD remains enigmatic because all pre-tRNA species in E. coli are transcribed with the CCA triplet. We present the first crystal structure of ZiPD determined by multiple anomalous diffraction at a resolution of 2.9 A. This structure shares many features with the
tRNase Z
enzymes from B. subtilis and Thermotoga maritima, but there are distinct differences in metal binding and overall domain organization. Unlike the previously described homologous structures, ZiPD dimers display crystallographic symmetry and fully loaded metal sites. The ZiPD exosite is similar to that of the B. subtilis enzyme structurally, but its position with respect to the protein core differs substantially, illustrating its ability to act as a clamp in binding tRNA. Furthermore, the ZiPD crystal structure presented here provides insight into the enzyme's cooperativity and assists the ongoing attempt to elucidate the physiological function of this protein.
...
PMID:The crystal structure of the zinc phosphodiesterase from Escherichia coli provides insight into function and cooperativity of tRNase Z-family proteins. 1645 44
Proteins of the metallo-beta-lactamase family with either demonstrated or predicted nuclease activity have been identified in a number of organisms ranging from bacteria to humans and has been shown to be important constituents of cellular metabolism. Nucleases of this family are believed to utilize a zinc-dependent mechanism in catalysis and function as 5' to 3' exonucleases and or endonucleases in such processes as 3' end processing of RNA precursors, DNA repair, V(D)J recombination, and telomere maintenance. Examples of metallo-beta-lactamase nucleases include CPSF-73, a known component of the cleavage/polyadenylation machinery, which functions as the
endonuclease
in 3' end formation of both polyadenylated and histone mRNAs, and Artemis that opens DNA hairpins during V(D)J recombination. Mutations in two metallo-beta-lactamase nucleases have been implicated in human diseases:
tRNase Z
required for 3' processing of tRNA precursors has been linked to the familial form of prostate cancer, whereas inactivation of Artemis causes severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). There is also a group of as yet uncharacterized proteins of this family in bacteria and archaea that based on sequence similarity to CPSF-73 are predicted to function as nucleases in RNA metabolism. This article reviews the cellular roles of nucleases of the metallo-beta-lactamase family and the recent advances in studying these proteins.
...
PMID:Nucleases of the metallo-beta-lactamase family and their role in DNA and RNA metabolism. 1745 16
Although the enzyme
tRNase Z
has only recently been isolated, a plethora of data has already been acquired concerning the enzyme.
tRNase Z
is the
endonuclease
that catalyzes the removal of the tRNA 3' trailer, yielding the mature tRNA 3' end ready for CCA addition and aminoacylation. Another substrate cleaved by
tRNase Z
is the small chromogenic phosphodiester bis(p-nitrophenyl)phosphate (bpNPP), which is the smallest
tRNase Z
substrate known so far. Hitherto the biological function as tRNA 3'-end processing enzyme has been shown only in one prokaryotic and one eukaryotic organism, respectively. This review summarizes the present information concerning the two
tRNase Z
substrates pre-tRNA and bpNPP, as well as the metal requirements of
tRNase Z
enzymes.
...
PMID:tRNase Z: the end is not in sight. 1759 40
1
2
3
Next >>