Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:6.1.1.12 (aspartyl-tRNA synthetase)
233 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Transfer RNAs from Escherichia coli, yeast (Sacharomyces cerevisiae), and calf liver were subjected to controlled hydrolysis with venom exonuclease to remove 3'-terminal nucleotides, and then reconstructed successively with cytosine triphosphate (CTP) and 2'- or 3'-deoxyadenosine 5'-triphosphate in the presence of yeast CTP(ATP):tRNA nucleotidyltransferase. The modified tRNAs were purified by chromatography on DBAE-cellulose or acetylated DBAE-cellulose and then utilized in tRNA aminoacylation experiments in the presence of the homologous aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase activities. The E. coli, yeast, and calf liver aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases specific for alanine, glycine, histidine, lysine, serine, and threonine, as well as the E. coli and yeast prolyl-tRNA synthetases and the yeast glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase utilized only those homologous modified tRNAs terminating in 2'-deoxyadenosine (i.e., having an available 3'-OH group). This is interpreted as evidence that these aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases normally aminoacylate their unmodified cognate tRNAs on the 3'-OH group. The aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases from all three sources specific argining, isoleucine, leucine, phenylalanine, and valine, as well as the E. coli and yeast enzymes specific for methionine and the E. coli glutamyl-tRNA synthetase, used as substrates exclusively those tRNAs terminating in 3'-deoxyadenosine. Certain aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, including the E. coli, yeast, and calf liver asparagine and tyrosine activating enzymes, the E. coli and yeast cysteinyl-tRNA synthetases, and the aspartyl-tRNA synthetase from yeast, utilized both isomeric tRNAs as substrates, although generally not at the same rate. While the calf liver aspartyl- and cysteinyl-tRNA synthetases utilized only the corresponding modified tRNA species terminating in 2'-deoxyadenosine, the use of a more concentrated enzyme preparation might well result in aminoacylation of the isomeric species. The one tRNA for which positional specificity does seem to have changed during evolution is tryptophan, whose E. coli aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase utilized predominantly the cognate tRNA terminating in 3'-deoxyadenosine, while the corresponding yeast and calf liver enzymes were found to utilize predominantly the isomeric tRNAs terminating in 2'-deoxyadenosine. The data presented indicate that while there is considerable diversity in the initial position of aminoacylation of individual tRNA isoacceptors derived from a single source, positional specificity has generally been conserved during the evolution from a prokaryotic to mammalian organism.
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PMID:Initial position of aminoacylation of individual Escherichia coli, yeast, and calf liver transfer RNAs. 31 26

Transfer RNAs terminating 2'-or 3'-deoxyadenosine were prepared from unfractionated E. coli and yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) tRNAs and purified to remove unmodified tRNAs. The modified tRNA species were assayed for aminoacylation with each of the 20 amino acids to determine the initial position of tRNA aminoacylation. The E. coli and yeast aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases specific for arginine, isoleucine, leucine, methionine, phenylalanine, and valine, as well as the E. coli glutamyl-tRNA synthetase, aminoacylated only those cognate tRNAs terminating in 3'-deoxyadenosine (i.e., those having a 2'-OH group). On the other hand, those E. coli and yeast synthetases specific for alanine, glycine, histidine, lysine, proline, serine, and threonine, as well as the yeast synthetase specific for glutamine, utilized exclusively those tRNAs having an available 3'-OH group on the 3'-terminal nucleoside, while the E. coli and yeast synthetases specific for asparagine, cysteine, and tyrosine, and the yeast aspartyl-tRNA synthetase, utilized both of the modified cognate tRNAs. The only observed difference in specificity between the E. coli and yeast systems was for tRNATrp, which was aminoacylated on the 2'-position in E. coli and the 3'-position in yeast. The results indicate that the initial position of aminoacylation is not uniform for all tRNAs, although for individual tRNAs the specificity has been conserved during the evolution from a prokaryotic to eukaryotic organism.
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PMID:Position of aminoacylation of individual Escherichia coli and yeast tRNAs. 110 23

A new algorithm for refinement of heavy-atom parameters is defined by an iterative procedure where external phases are provided by density modification. This algorithm is applied to two cases, tRNA(Asp) and the complex between tRNA(Asp) and aspartyl-tRNA synthetase. In the first case, where the structure was solved by multiple isomorphous replacement (MIR) methods, it was found that the new method gives accurate values for the native-derivative scale and four occupancy of heavy-atom sites. Position refinement was more delicate and it needed to be handled in a restricted resolution range. In the second case, where a similar method was used in the early stages of solving the phase problem, it slightly decreased the phase error. It was followed by an improvement of the density-modification masks, which led to better maps at higher resolution.
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PMID:Heavy-atom refinement against solvent-flattened phases. 144 84

Chemical footprinting experiments on brewer's yeast tRNA(Asp) complexed to its cognate aspartyl-tRNA synthetase are reported: they demonstrate that bases of the anticodon loop, including the anticodon itself, are in close proximity with the synthetase. Contacts were determined using dimethylsulfate as the probe for testing reactivity of guanine and cytosine residues in free and complexed tRNA. Results correlate with the decrease in aspartylation activity of yeast tRNA(Asp) molecules mutated at these contact positions and will be compared with other structural data arising from solution and crystallographic studies on the aspartic acid complex.
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PMID:Footprinting evidence for close contacts of the yeast tRNA(Asp) anticodon region with aspartyl-tRNA synthetase. 149 79

Crystals of the dimeric aspartyl-tRNA synthetase from Escherichia coli (molecular mass 132,000 Da) complexed with its cognate tRNA (molecular mass 25,000 Da) have been grown using ammonium sulfate as precipitant. The crystals belong to the orthorhombic space group C222(1) with unit cell parameters a = 102.75 A, b = 128.11 A, c = 231.70 A and diffract to 3 A. The asymmetric unit contains one monomer of the aspartyl-tRNA synthetase and one tRNA molecule.
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PMID:Crystallization of aspartyl-tRNA synthetase-tRNA(Asp) complex from Escherichia coli and first crystallographic results. 156 73

The interaction of wild-type and mutant yeast tRNA(Asp) transcripts with yeast aspartyl-tRNA synthetase (AspRS; EC 6.1.1.12) has been probed by using iodine cleavage of phosphorothioate-substituted transcripts. AspRS protects phosphates in the anticodon (G34, U35), D-stem (U25), and acceptor end (G73) that correspond to determinant nucleotides for aspartylation. This protection, as well as that in anticodon stem (C29, U40, G41) and D-stem (U11 to U13), is consistent with direct interaction of AspRS at these phosphates. Other protection, in the variable loop (G45), D-loop (G18, G19), and T-stem and loop (G53, U54, U55), as well as enhanced reactivity at G37, may result from conformational changes of the transcript upon binding to AspRS. Transcripts mutated at determinant positions showed a loss of phosphate protection in the region of the mutation while maintaining the global protection pattern. The ensemble of results suggests that aspartylation specificity arises from both protein-base and protein-phosphate contacts and that different regions of tRNA(Asp) interact independently with AspRS. A mutant transcript of yeast tRNA(Phe) that contains the set of identity nucleotides for specific aspartylation gave a phosphate protection pattern strikingly similar to that of wild-type tRNA(Asp). This confirms that a small number of nucleotides within a different tRNA sequence context can direct specific interaction with synthetase.
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PMID:Determinant nucleotides of yeast tRNA(Asp) interact directly with aspartyl-tRNA synthetase. 163 Oct 68

The structure and function of in vitro transcribed tRNA(Asp) variants with inserted conformational features characteristic of yeast tRNA(Phe), such as the length of the variable region or the arrangement of the conserved residues in the D-loop, have been investigated. Although they exhibit significant conformational alterations as revealed by Pb2+ treatment, these variants are still efficiently aspartylated by yeast aspartyl-tRNA synthetase. Thus, this synthetase can accommodate a variety of tRNA conformers. In a second series of variants, the identity determinants of yeast tRNA(Phe) were transplanted into the previous structural variants of tRNA(Asp). The phenylalanine acceptance of these variants improves with increasing the number of structural characteristics of tRNA(Phe), suggesting that phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase is sensitive to the conformational frame embedding the cognate identity nucleotides. These results contrast with the efficient transplantation of tRNA(Asp) identity elements into yeast tRNA(Phe). This indicates that synthetases respond differently to the detailed conformation of their tRNA substrates. Efficient aminoacylation is not only dependent on the presence of the set of identity nucleotides, but also on a precise conformation of the tRNA.
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PMID:Effect of conformational features on the aminoacylation of tRNAs and consequences on the permutation of tRNA specificities. 164 Apr 53

Aspartyl-tRNA synthetase from higher eukaryotes is a component of a multienzyme complex comprising nine aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. The cDNA encoding cytoplasmic rat liver aspartyl-tRNA synthetase was previously cloned and sequenced. This work reports the identification of structural features responsible for its association within the multisynthetase complex. Mutant and chimeric proteins have been expressed in mammalian cells and their structural behavior analyzed. A wild-type rat liver aspartyl-tRNA synthetase, expressed in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, associates within the complex from CHO cells, whereas a mutant enzyme with a deletion of 34 amino acids from its amino-terminal extremity does not. A chimeric enzyme, made of the amino-terminal moiety of rat liver aspartyl-tRNA synthetase fused to the catalytic domain of yeast lysyl-tRNA synthetase, has been expressed in Lys-101 cells, a CHO cell line with a temperature-sensitive lysyl-tRNA synthetase. The fusion protein is stable in vivo, does not associate within the multisynthetase complex and cannot restore normal growth of the mutant cells. These results establish that the 3.7-kDa amino-terminal moiety of mammalian aspartyl-tRNA synthetase mediates its association with the other components of the complex. In addition, the finding that yeast lysyl-tRNA synthetase cannot replace the aspartyl-tRNA synthetase component of the mammalian complex, indicates that interactions between neighbouring enzymes also play a prominent role in stabilization of this multienzyme structure and strengthened the view that the multisynthetase complex is a discrete entity with a well-defined structural organization.
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PMID:Engineering mammalian aspartyl-tRNA synthetase to probe structural features mediating its association with the multisynthetase complex. 173 30

Cytoplasmic aspartyl-tRNA synthetase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is an alpha 2 dimer (alpha, Mr 63,000), each alpha containing 12 histidines. The covalent incorporation of 6-7 mol of diethyl pyrocarbonate per monomer corresponded to complete enzyme inactivation. This inactivation was reversed by hydroxylamine hydrolysis which regenerates free histidine (and tyrosine) while leaving the carbethoxy group still attached to the epsilon-amino group of lysine. Three histidines, one tyrosine, and four lysines were the main targets of the reagent. Site-directed mutagenesis was also tried to replace each of these modified residues. Given the unstability of the carbethoxy-imidazole bond, the nine histidines that were not modified by diethyl pyrocarbonate were mutated too. For these experiments, the enzyme was expressed in Escherichia coli by using a vector bearing the structural gene in which the first 13 codons were replaced by the first 14 of the CII lambda gene. This substitution had no effect on the kinetic parameters. The combined results of chemical modification and site-directed mutagenesis show that one histidine seems to be part of the active site while two others play an important structural role. On the other hand, labeled lysines and tyrosine are nonessential residues. These results are discussed in light of two recent articles establishing the existence of a second family of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases devoid of the HIGH and KMSKS consensus sequences and containing no Rossmann's domain in their three-dimensional structures.
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PMID:Identification of structurally and functionally important histidine residues in cytoplasmic aspartyl-tRNA synthetase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 202 21

The nucleotides crucial for the specific aminoacylation of yeast tRNA(Asp) by its cognate synthetase have been identified. Steady-state aminoacylation kinetics of unmodified tRNA transcripts indicate that G34, U35, C36, and G73 are important determinants of tRNA(Asp) identity. Mutations at these positions result in a large decrease (19- to 530-fold) of the kinetic specificity constant (ratio of the catalytic rate constant kcat and the Michaelis constant Km) for aspartylation relative to wild-type tRNA(Asp). Mutation to G10-C25 within the D-stem reduced kcat/Km eightfold. This fifth mutation probably indirectly affects the presentation of the highly conserved G10 nucleotide to the synthetase. A yeast tRNA(Phe) was converted into an efficient substrate for aspartyl-tRNA synthetase through introduction of the five identity elements. The identity nucleotides are located in regions of tight interaction between tRNA and synthetase as shown in the crystal structure of the complex and suggest sites of base-specific contacts.
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PMID:Identity elements for specific aminoacylation of yeast tRNA(Asp) by cognate aspartyl-tRNA synthetase. 204 78


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