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Query: EC:6.1.1.10 (
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
)
387
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:Covalent coupling of 4-thiouridine in the initiator methionine tRNA to specific lysine residues in Escherichia coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase. 312 28
The DNA nucleotide sequence of the valS gene encoding valyl-tRNA synthetase of Escherichia coli has been determined. The deduced primary structure of valyl-tRNA synthetase was compared to the primary sequences of the known aminoacyl-
tRNA
synthetases of yeast and bacteria. Significant homology was detected between valyl-tRNA synthetase of E. coli and other known branched-chain aminoacyl-
tRNA
synthetases. In pairwise comparisons the highest level of homology was detected between the homologous valyl-
tRNA
synthetases of yeast and E. coli, with an observed 41% direct identity overall. Comparisons between the valyl- and isoleucyl-
tRNA
synthetases of E. coli yielded the highest level of homology detected between heterologous enzymes (19.2% direct identity overall). An alignment is presented between the three branched-chain aminoacyl-
tRNA
synthetases (valyl- and isoleucyl-
tRNA
synthetases of E. coli and yeast mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase) illustrating the close relatedness of these enzymes. These results give credence to the supposition that the branched-chain aminoacyl-
tRNA
synthetases along with
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
form a family of genes within the aminoacyl-
tRNA
synthetases that evolved from a common ancestral progenitor gene.
...
PMID:Valyl-tRNA synthetase gene of Escherichia coli K12. Primary structure and homology within a family of aminoacyl-TRNA synthetases. 327 60
Amino acid sequences of aminoacyl-
tRNA
synthetases specific for 12 different amino acids have now been published. Differences in origin at the species and organelle level result in 20 distinct sequences being available for comparison. Some of these were compared in small groups as they were determined and, although some homologies were detected, it was generally concluded that there was surprisingly little sequence homology in this functionally related group of enzymes. We have made comparisons of all of the available sequences by using a combination of computer and manual alignment methods and knowledge of the sequences in the Rossmann fold region of
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
from E. coli and tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase from B. stearothermophilus, enzymes whose three-dimensional structures have been described. It emerges that all of the aminoacyl-
tRNA
synthetase sequences thus examined show considerable homology with each other over at least parts of this region, some over virtually all of it. We conclude that a great deal more similarity than had previously been suspected exists in these proteins. In particular, the alignments we have made strongly imply the existence of a mononucleotide binding site of the Rossmann fold configuration in all of the synthetases compared.
...
PMID:Sequence comparisons in the aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases with emphasis on regions of likely homology with sequences in the Rossmann fold in the methionyl and tyrosyl enzymes. 328 33
A protein affinity labeling derivative of E. coli
tRNA
(fMet) carrying lysine-reactive cross-linking groups has been covalently coupled to monomeric trypsin-modified E. coli
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
. The cross-linked
tRNA
-synthetase complex has been isolated by gel filtration, digested with trypsin, and the
tRNA
-bound peptides separated from the bulk of the free tryptic peptides by anion exchange chromatography. The bound peptides were released from the
tRNA
by cleavage of the disulfide bond of the cross-linker and purified by reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography, yielding three major peptides. These peptides were found to cochromatograph with three peptides of known sequence previously cross-linked to native
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
through lysine residues 402, 439 and 465. These results show that identical lysine residues are in close proximity to
tRNA
(fMet) bound to native dimeric
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
and to the crystallizable monomeric form of the enzyme, and indicate that cross-linking to the dimeric protein occurs on the occupied subunit of the 1:1
tRNA
-synthetase complex.
...
PMID:Peptides at the tRNA binding site of the crystallizable monomeric form of E. coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase. 332 Sep 68
Chemical synthesis is described of a 77-nucleotide-long RNA molecule that has the sequence of an Escherichia coli Ado-47-containing
tRNA
(fMet) species in which the modified nucleosides have been substituted by their unmodified parent nucleosides. The sequence was assembled on a solid-phase, controlled-pore glass support in a stepwise manner with an automated DNA synthesizer. The ribonucleotide building blocks used were fully protected 5'-monomethoxytrityl-2'-silyl-3'-N,N-diisopropylaminophosphoram idites. p-Nitro-phenylethyl groups were used to protect the O6 of guanine residues. The fully deprotected
tRNA
analogue was characterized by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (sizing), terminal nucleotide analysis, sequencing, and total enzyme degradation, all of which indicated that the sequence was correct and contained only 3-5 linkages. The 77-mer was then assayed for amino acid acceptor activity by using E. coli
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
. The results indicated that the synthetic product, lacking modified bases, is a substrate for the enzyme and has an amino acid acceptance 11% of that of the major native species,
tRNA
(fMet) containing 7-methylguanosine at position 47.
...
PMID:Total chemical synthesis of a 77-nucleotide-long RNA sequence having methionine-acceptance activity. 341 59
Covalent modification of Escherichia coli tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (TyrRS) by the 2',3'-dialdehyde derivative of tRNATyr (tRNAox) resulted in a time-dependent inactivation of both ATP-PPi exchange and
tRNA
aminoacylation activities of the enzyme. In parallel with the inactivation, covalent incorporation of approximately 1 mol of [14C]tRNATyrox/mol of the dimeric synthetase occurred. Intact tRNATyr protected the enzyme against inactivation by the
tRNA
dialdehyde. Treatment of the TyrRS-[14C]tRNATyr covalent complex with alpha-chymotrypsin produced two labeled peptides (A and B) that were isolated and identified by sequence analysis. Peptides A and B are adjacent and together span residues 227-244 in the primary structure of the enzyme. The three lysine residues in this sequence (lysines-229, -234, and -237) are labeled in a mutually exclusive fashion, with lysine-234 being the most reactive. By analogy with the known three-dimensional structure of the homologous tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase from Bacillus stearothermophilus, these lysines should be part of the C-terminal domain which is presumed to bind the cognate
tRNA
. Interestingly, the labeled TyrRS structure showed significant similarities to the structure around the lysine residue of E. coli
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
which is the most reactive toward tRNAMetf(ox) (lysine-335) [Hountondji, C., Blanquet, S., & Lederer, F. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 1175-1180].
...
PMID:Escherichia coli tyrosyl- and methionyl-tRNA synthetases display sequence similarity at the binding site for the 3'-end of tRNA. 351 22
Five species of tRNAfMet labeled with a single fluorophore are prepared to analyze the conformational changes at the 3'-end, at dihydrouridine, and at thiouridine in tRNAfMet upon binding of
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
. The emission and excitation spectra, anisotropy, and solvent accessibility of the fluorophore in each of the modified tRNAfMet's are determined in the absence and presence of
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
. The results are consistent with the following. The probes at the 3'-end are in a nonpolar environment, mobile relative to the
tRNA
molecule, and fully exposed to the solvent. The probes at dihydrouridine are partially stacked over the neighboring bases, nearly immobile, and relatively inaccessible. The S8-C13 cross-linked product is rigid. Upon binding of
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
, the probes at the 3'-terminus become localized in a less polar environment, highly immobilized, and effectively shielded against solvent access, while the probes at dihydrouridine appear to be partially unstacked from the neighboring base and become slightly more accessible for solvent. Singlet-singlet energy transfer between the intrinsic protein fluorescence and the fluorophores in modified
tRNA
's was observed by sensitized emission for tRNAfMet modified at the 3'-end and for S8-C13 but not for tRNAfMet's modified at dihydrouridine. These results suggest that dihydrouridine in tRNAfMet is oriented away from
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
in the
tRNA
-enzyme complex.
...
PMID:Methionyl-tRNA synthetase induced 3'-terminal and delocalized conformational transition in tRNAfMet: steady-state fluorescence of tRNA with a single fluorophore. 351 29
Besides their central role in protein synthesis, aminoacyl-
tRNA
synthetases have been found or thought to be involved in other processes. We present here a study showing that tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase has a surprising tissular distribution. Indeed, immunochemical determinations showed that in several bovine organs such as liver, kidney and heart, tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase constitutes, as expected, about 0.02% of soluble proteins. In spleen, brain cortex, stomach, cerebellum or duodenum, this amount is about 10-times higher, and in pancreas it is 100-fold. There is no correlation between these amounts and the RNA content of the organs. Moreover, the concentration of another aminoacyl-
tRNA
synthetase (
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
) is higher in liver than in pancreas, while the amount of tRNATrp is not higher in pancreas than in liver as compared to other tRNAs. Among several interpretations, it is possible that tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase is involved in a function other than
tRNA
aminoacylation. This unknown function would be specific to the differentiated organs, since fetal cerebellum and fetal pancreas contain the same amount of tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase as adult liver.
...
PMID:Tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase is a major soluble protein species in bovine pancreas. 351 5
Methionyl-tRNA synthetase (
MetRS
, 2 X 75 kDa) was purified to homogeneity from an extreme thermophile, Thermus thermophilus HB8. The polypeptide chain of
MetRS
was cleaved by limited digestion with trypsin into four domains: T1 (29 kDa), T2 (23 kDa), T3 (14.5 kDa), and T4 (7.5 kDa), which were aligned in that order.
MetRS
was also cleaved into similar fragments with a variety of other proteases. Domains T1, T2, T3, and T4 were isolated by column chromatography. "Tandem domain" T1-T2 (56 kDa) is fully active in the aminoacylation of
tRNA
and is further cleaved with trypsin into domains T1 and T2. Domain T1 is the smallest aminoacylation unit so far reported. Domain T2 (enzymatically inactive) interacts with tRNAMetf, as found by UV-induced cross-linking. Isolated domain T3 forms a dimer and is responsible for the dimer assembly of two protomers in
MetRS
. Domain T4 is a flexible tail of
MetRS
. These domains, in particular T1 and T2, will be important for detailed structure analyses in relation to aminoacylation activity.
...
PMID:Functions of isolated domains of methionyl-tRNA synthetase from an extreme thermophile, Thermus thermophilus HB8. 354 90
Developmental changes at the level of initiation step of translation in the rat brain were studied. The level of deacylated tRNAimet in rat brain was measured at two stages of postnatal development. Although the amount of
tRNA
was slightly lower in adult than in young (4 day old) rats, the charging capacity of initiator tRNAimet in vitro was similar at both ages. No differences during development were found in
methionyl-tRNA synthetase
activity, which throws doubt on its possible participation in regulation of the initiation step. When assayed in the ribosomal salt wash protein fractions, initiation factor 2 activity decreased during brain development, and increased activities were detected in the supernatant of the microsomal fractions. The decrease in eIF-2 activity paralleled the observed decrease in the rat of overall protein synthesis or initiation activity in vitro, suggesting that the regulation of the initiation step of translation during brain development may be tightly linked to changes in initiation factor 2 activity in brain tissue.
...
PMID:Developmental studies of the first step of the initiation of brain protein synthesis, role for initiation factor 2. 363 47
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