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Query: EC:6.1.1.20 (phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase)
358 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The photoinduced reaction of phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase (E.C.6.1.1.20) from E.coli MRE-600 with tRNAphe containing photoreative p-N3-C6H4-NHCOCH2-group attached to 4-thiouridine sU8 (azido-tRNAphe) was investigated. The attachment of this group does not influence the dissociation constant of the complex of Phe-tRNAphe with the enzyme, however it results in sevenfold increase of Km in the enzymatic aminoacylation of tRNAphe. Under irradiation at 300 nm at pH 5.8 the covalent binding of [14C]-Phe-azido-tRNAphe to the enzyme takes place 0.3 moles of the reagent being attached per mole of the enzyme. tRNA prevents the reaction. Phenylalanine, ATP,ADP,AMP, adenosine and pyrophosphate (2.5 xx 10(-3) M) don't affect neither the stability of the tRNA-enzyme complex nor the rate of the affinity labelling. The presence of the mixture of either phenylalanine or phenylalaninol with ATP as well as phenylalaninol adenylate exhibits 50% inhibition of the photoinduced reaction. Therefore, the reaction of [14C]-Phe-azido-tRNA with the enzyme is significantly less sensitive to the presence of the ligands than the reaction of chlorambucilyl-tRNA with the reactive group attached to the acceptor end of the tRNA studied in 1. It has been concluded that the kinetics of the affinity labelling does permit to discriminate the influence of the low molecular weight ligands of the enzyme on the different sites of the tRNA enzyme interaction.
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PMID:Affinity labelling of phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase from E. coli MRE-600 by E. coli tRNAphe containing photoreactive group. 0 72

In an effort to avoid proteolytic fragmentation of enzymes extracted from yeast cells, the (L-phenylalanine:tRNAPhe ligase (AMP-forming) phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase (EC6.1.1.20)) has been isolated from toluene lysates of baker's yeast in the presence of the protease inhibitor, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. The procedure includes ammonium sulfate fractionation and chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and hydroxylapatite columns. Acrylamide gel electrophoresis of the enzyme in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate indicates a single subunit of 75 000; other isolations have led to two subunits of 75 000 and 63 000, respectively, in agreement with other workers. Steady state kinetic analysis of the enzyme has also been carried out. The apparent kinetic patterns resulting from application of Cleland's procedure, in which the substrates are varied pairwise in the presence of saturating concentrations of the third component, suggest a reaction mechanism in which ATP and phenylalanine enter the reaction in an obligatory ordered fashion but do not completely eliminate a random mechanism.
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PMID:Purification and properties of phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase from baker's yeast. 76 25

Phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetases [L-phenylalanine:tRNAPhe ligase (AMP-forming), EC 6.1.1.20] from Escherichia coli, yeast cytoplasm, and mammalian cytoplasm have an unusual conserved alpha 2 beta 2 quaternary structure that is shared by only one other aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase. Both subunits are required for activity. We show here that a single mitochondrial polypeptide from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is an active phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase. This protein (the MSF1 gene product) is active as a monomer. It has all three characteristic sequence motifs of the class II aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, and its activity may result from the recruitment of additional sequences into an alpha-subunit-like structure.
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PMID:Evolution of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase quaternary structure and activity: Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase. 192 98

The Boc-protected derivative of a photoactivatable, carbene-generating analogue of phenylalanine, L-4'-[3-(trifluoromethyl)-3H-diazirin-3-yl]phenylalanine [(Tmd)Phe], was used to acylate 5'-O-phosphorylcytidylyl(3'-5')adenosine (pCpA). A diacyl species was isolated which upon successive treatments with trifluoroacetic acid and 0.01 M HCl yielded a 1:1 mixture of 2'(3')-O-(Tmd)phenylalanyl-pCpA and of its 2'-5'-phosphodiester isomeric form. Adapting a procedure introduced by Hecht's group [Heckler, T.G., Chang, L.H., Zama, Y., Naka, T., Chorghade, M.S., & Hecht, S.M. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 1468-1473], brief incubation of a 15 molar excess of this material with Escherichia coli tRNAPhe, missing at the acceptor stem the last two nucleotides (pCpA), in the presence of T4 RNA ligase and ATP afforded "chemically misaminoacylated" tRNAPhe in approximately 50% yield. Following chromatographic purification on DEAE-Sephadex A-25, benzoylated DEAE-cellulose, and Bio-Gel P-6, the misaminoacylated tRNAPhe was characterized by (i) urea-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, (ii) enzymatic reaminoacylation under homologous conditions following chemical deacylation, and (iii) its ability to stimulate protein synthesis in an in vitro translation system which, through the addition of the phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase inhibitor phenylalaninyl-AMP, was unable to charge its endogenous tRNAPhe. The data demonstrate that we have prepared a biologically active misaminoacylated tRNAPhe.
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PMID:Mischarging Escherichia coli tRNAPhe with L-4'-[3-(trifluoromethyl)-3H-diazirin-3-yl]phenylalanine, a photoactivatable analogue of phenylalanine. 306 65

The activation of L-phenylalanine by yeast phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase using adenosine 5'-[(S)-alpha-17O,alpha,alpha-18O2]triphosphate is shown to proceed with inversion of configuration at P alpha of ATP. This observation taken together with the lack of positional isotope exchange when adenosine 5'-[beta,beta-18O2]triphosphate is incubated with the enzyme in the absence of phenylalanine and in the presence of the competitive inhibitor phenylalaninol indicates that activation of phenylalanine occurs by a direct "in-line" adenylyl-transfer reaction. In the presence of Zn2+, yeast phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase also catalyzes the phenylalanine-dependent hydrolysis of ATP to AMP and the synthesis of P1,P4-bis(5'-adenosyl) tetraphosphate (Ap4A). With adenosine 5'-[(S)-alpha-17O,alpha,alpha-18O2]triphosphate, the formation of AMP and Ap4A is shown to occur with inversion and retention of configuration, respectively. It is concluded that phenylalanyl adenylate is an intermediate in both processes, Zn2+ promoting AMP formation by hydrolytic cleavage of the C-O bond and Ap4A formation by displacement at phosphorus of phenylalanine by ATP.
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PMID:Mechanism of activation of phenylalanine and synthesis of P1, P4-bis(5'-adenosyl) tetraphosphate by yeast phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase. 389 31

Homogeneous yeast cytoplasmic and mitochondrial phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetases (L-phenylalanine:tRNAPhe ligase (AMP-forming), EC 6.1.1.20) are analysed for structural differences. Only the large subunit of the mitochondrial enzyme is a glycoprotein with nearly 3% carbohydrate by weight. The carbohydrates present are: glucose, N-acetylglucosamine, mannose, galactose and N-acetylneuraminic acid. Removal of the sugar moieties yields an activity increase, but no significant change of sensitivity to proteolytic degradation. Antibodies to both homogeneous enzymes demonstrate a structural similarity for both types of subunit using the highly sensitive immunoblotting technique.
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PMID:Phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetases from yeast cytoplasm and mitochondria. The presence of a carbohydrate moiety in the mitochondrial enzyme and immunological evidence for structural relationship. 618 69

5-azacytidine-5'-triphosphate prepared from 5-azacytidine by chemical phosphorylation is a substrate for AMP (CMP) tRNA nucleotidyl transferase from yeast. tRNAsPhe from yeast containing 5-azacytidine in their 3'-termini were prepared enzymatically. tRNAPhe-Cpn5CpA and tRNAPhe-n5Cpn5CpA can be aminoacylated by phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase from yeast and they are active in the poly(U)-dependent synthesis of poly(Phe) on E. coli ribosomes. The decomposition of 5-azacytidine via hydrolysis of the triazine ring is significantly accelerated by a phosphate group on the 5'-position of the nucleotide. After the incorporation of 5-azacytidine-5'-phosphate into a polynucleotide chain the rate of hydrolysis of the triazine ring decreases considerably.
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PMID:Chemical synthesis of 5-azacytidine nucleotides and preparation of tRNAs containing 5-azacytidine in its 3'-terminus. 620 76

A mathematical treatment of affinity labeling of the enzymes is presented. The model considered involves a dimeric enzyme with identical ligand binding sites. Equations are derived which describe the kinetics of modification; mutual influence of ligand molecules on association, on the rate of covalent attachment and the possibility of the existence of different sites of modification are taken into account. Experimental data on affinity labeling of phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase (L-phenylalanine:tRNAPhe ligase (AMP-forming), EC 6.1.1.20) of Escherichia coli MRE-600 with N-bromoacetyl-[14C]phenylalanyl-tRNA are treated in terms of the model suggested. The affinity (association constant value) of the tRNAPhe analog molecule towards the enzyme is only slightly affected by another molecule, whereas the reaction rate constant of covalent attachment decreases significantly. The latter is assumed to be due to acceptor site change in the complex containing two molecules of the tRNAPhe analog.
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PMID:Co-operative effects in affinity labeling reveal the interaction of tRNA-recognition centers of phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase. 634 94

The synthesis of diadenosine 5',5"'-P1-,P4-tetraphosphate (Ap4A) catalyzed by phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase in the presence of Zn2+ involves the same partial reactions (synthesis of phenylalanyladenylate and transfer of the adenylate moiety to ATP) as occur in the absence of this metal ion. However, transfer is strongly stimulated while adenylate synthesis is depressed. Also inhibited are pyrophosphorolysis of phenylalanyladenylate and transfer of phenylalanine from the adenylate to cognate tRNA, because overall tRNA phenylalanylation is depressed [Mayaux, J.-F., & Blanquet, S. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 4647-4654], whereas binding of tRNA to the synthetase is not. At moderate concentrations of Zn2+, and in the presence of 5 microM phenylalanine and 0.5 mM ATP, transfer of AMP is rate limiting, while at higher concentrations of Zn2+ synthesis of adenylate is rate determining. The Zn2+ concentration optimum for stimulation depends on the concentration of phenylalanine and ATP. The effects of Zn2+ are mediated through two classes of binding site(s) on the synthetase, the half-saturations of which are 1-4 and 20-30 microM Zn2+, respectively. Binding of Zn2+ to the second class of site(s) causes inhibition of the synthetase, whereas binding to the first class is responsible for activation and inhibition, which may be caused by a conformational change. Evidence for the latter is the observed decrease in protein intrinsic fluorescence intensity and the decrease in fluorescence intensity of 6-(p-toluidinyl)naphthalene-2-sulfonate, which is used as a reporter group. The kinetics of the binding reaction show a saturation dependence on Zn2+, also suggesting that a conformational change occurs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase of Escherichia coli K10. Effects of zinc(II) on partial reactions of diadenosine 5',5"'-P1,P4-tetraphosphate synthesis, conformation, and protein aggregation. 636 59

The present paper reports a study of the mutual interactions between the substrates, the intermediate, and the products of the aminoacylation reaction, when bound to the phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase from yeast. The following conclusions can be drawn. a) tRNAPhe displaces Phe-tRNAPhe from the synthetase by lowering the affinity of the enzyme for the aminoacylated tRNA. b) Phe-tRNAPhe and Phe-AMP compete for the catalytically active site of the enzyme. c) Chemically synthesized Phe-AMP, when added to the synthetase, primarily forms a low-affinity complex with the enzyme. The transformation of this complex into the high-affinity catalytic complex is a very slow process. These findings confirm a previous study, based on steady-state kinetics. A schematic representation of the aminoacylation process is given. It summarizes the present and previous results and illustrates a rather complex 'flip-flop' mechanism.
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PMID:Interference of ligands on the phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase from yeast. 675 18


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