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Query: UNIPROT:Q07644 (polypeptide)
72,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Native dimeric methionyl-tRNA synthetase and its monomeric proteolytic fragment are shown to form and to bind 1 mol of methyionyl adenylate per polypeptide chain. Moreover, at 25 degrees C, each monomer of the dimeric native enzyme behaves independently, exhibiting the same parameters for the methionine activation reaction as does the monomeric modified enzyme. These results were obtained using several independent methods including equilibrium and nonequilibrium dialysis, active site and tryptophan fluorescence titrations, and stopped-flow by fluorescence. Stopped-flow resolution of the reversible methionine activation reaction also demonstrates that methionine and ATP-Mg2+ react without coupling to form a ternary enzyme-methionine-ATP-Mg2+ complex. This complex readily converts to enzyme-methionyl approximately adenylate-PP-Mg2+ with a standard free energy close to zero. It is concluded that the uncoupled enzyme-methionine-ATP-Mg2+ complex may resemble the transition state of the reaction at the expense of the additional state of the reaction at the expense of the additional synergistic binding energy provided by reciprocal coupling, within the site, of the methionine molecule with the adenosine and PP-Mg2+ parts of the ATP-Mg2+ molecule (Blanguet, S., Fayat, G., and Waller, J. P. (1975), J. Mol. Biol. 94, 1.).
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PMID:Methionyl-tRNA synthetase from Escherichia coli: active stoichiometry and stopped-flow analysis of methionyl adenylate formaiton. 18 14

The metS gene encoding homodimeric methionyl-tRNA synthetase from Bacillus stearothermophilus has been cloned and a 2880 base pair sequence solved. Comparison of the deduced enzyme protomer sequence (Mr 74,355) with that of the E. coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase protomer (Mr 76,124) revealed a relatively low level (32%) of identities, although both enzymes have very similar biochemical properties (Kalogerakos, T., Dessen, P., Fayat, G. and Blanquet, S. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 3712-3723). However, all the sequence patterns whose functional significance have been probed in the case of the E. coli enzyme are found in the thermostable enzyme sequence. In particular, a stretch of 16 amino acids corresponding to the CAU anticodon binding site in the E. coli synthetase structure is highly conserved in the metS sequence. The metS product could be expressed in E. coli and purified. It showed structure-function relationships identical to those of the enzyme extracted from B. stearothermophilus cells. In particular, the patterns of mild proteolysis were the same. Subtilisin converted the native dimer into a fully active monomeric species (62 kDa), while trypsin digestion yielded an inactive form because of an additional cleavage of the 62 kDa polypeptide into two subfragments capable however of remaining firmly associated. The subtilisin cleavage site was mapped on the enzyme polypeptide, and a gene encoding the active monomer was constructed and expressed in E. coli. Finally, trypsin attack was demonstrated to cleave a peptidic bond within the KMSKS sequence common to E. coli and B. stearothermophilus methionyl-tRNA synthetases. This sequence has been shown, in the case of the E. coli enzyme, to have an essential role for the catalysis of methionyl-adenylate formation.
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PMID:Methionyl-tRNA synthetase from Bacillus stearothermophilus: structural and functional identities with the Escherichia coli enzyme. 185 9

Yeast methionyl-tRNA synthetase has a long N-terminal extension fused to the mononucleotide binding fold that occurs at the N-terminal end of the homologous E coli enzyme. We examined the contribution of this polypeptide region to the activity of the enzyme by creating several internal deletions in MESI which preserve the correct reading frame. The results show that 185 amino acids are dispensable for activity and stability. Removal of the next 5 residues affects the activity of the enzyme. The effect is more pronounced on the tRNA amino-acylation steps than on the adenylate formation step. The Km for ATP and methionine are unaltered, indicating that the global structure of the enzyme is maintained. The Km for tRNA increased slightly by a factor of 3, which indicates that the positioning of the tRNA on the surface of the molecule is not affected. There is, however, a great effect on the Vmax of the enzyme. Examination of the 3-D structure of the homologous E coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase indicates that the amino acid region preceding the mononucleotide binding fold does not participate directly in the catalytic cleft. It could, however, act at a distance by propagating a mutational alteration of the catalytic residues. The tRNA(Met) anticodon binding region of the E coli enzyme has recently been characterized. By mutagenesis of the topologically equivalent region in the yeast enzyme, we could identify residues that alter specifically the aminoacylation of the tRNA. Leu 658 provides a van der Waals contact that is critical for the recognition of the yeast tRNA.
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PMID:Yeast methionyl-tRNA synthetase: analysis of the N-terminal extension and the putative tRNA anticodon binding region by site-directed mutagenesis. 212 59

The crystal structure of the tryptic fragment of the methionyl-tRNA synthetase from Escherichia coli, complexed with ATP, has been refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 0.220, at 2.5 A resolution (for 4433 protein atoms). In the last stages of the refinement, the simulated annealing refinement method was fully applied, contributing to a drastic improvement of the model and the identification of the missing atoms. In the final model, the root-mean-square deviation from ideality for bond distances is 0.021 A and for angle distances is 0.054 A. The position of the zinc ion has been confirmed and is located near the active site. The tryptic fragment is composed of two globular domains. The first domain, from the N terminus to Thr360, contains a nucleotide-binding fold into which two long polypeptides of 101 and 70 residues are inserted. The nucleotide-binding fold is strengthened by the presence of the zinc ion in the vicinity of the active site. The second domain, up to Pro526, is mainly alpha-helical. The C-terminal polypeptide, Phe527 to Lys551, folds back towards the first domain, making a link between the two domains. The heptapeptide 528-534 partly shapes a deep cavity that plunges into the central core of the nucleotide-binding fold, where the ATP molecule is located. The adenine ring, deeply buried in the bottom of the cleft, is blocked between the first helix HA, and the strands A and D of the beta-sheet and makes no polar interaction with the enzyme. The 2' and 3' hydroxyl groups of the ribose, whose conformation is C2' endo, interact with the main-chain carbonyl oxygen atoms of Ile231 and Glu241, respectively. The side-chain nitrogen atom of Lys142 is at hydrogen-bonding distance from the ring oxygen O-4' of the ribose. One of the alpha-phosphate oxygen atoms and one of the gamma-phosphate oxygen atoms interact with the imidazole ring of His21, which is well conserved in many of the known synthetases; this indicates a possible crucial role for this residue in binding ATP. The beta-phosphate group is linked to the main-chain carbonyl oxygen atom of Tyr15 through an intermediate water molecule. The gamma-phosphate group interacts with the carbonyl oxygen atom and the side-chain of Asn17.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Crystallographic study at 2.5 A resolution of the interaction of methionyl-tRNA synthetase from Escherichia coli with ATP. 225 37

Site-directed nuclease digestion and nonsense mutations of the Escherichia coli metG gene were used to produce a series of C-terminal truncated methionyl-tRNA synthetases. Genetic complementation studies and characterization of the truncated enzymes establish that the methionyl-tRNA synthetase polypeptide (676 residues) can be reduced to 547 residues without significant effect on either the activity or the stability of the enzyme. The truncated enzyme (M547) appears to be similar to a previously described fully active monomeric from of 64,000 Mr derived from the native homodimeric methionyl-tRNA synthetase (2 x 76,000 Mr) by limited trypsinolysis in vitro. According to the crystallographic three-dimensional structure at 2.5 A resolution of this trypsin-modified enzyme, the polypeptide backbone folds into two domains. The former, the N-domain, contain a crevice that is believed to bind ATP. The latter, the C-domain, has a 28 C-residue extension (520 to 547), which folds back, toward the N-domain and forms an arm linking the two domains. This study shows that upon progressive shortening of this C-terminal extension, the enzyme thermostability decreases. This observation, combined with the study of several point mutations, allows us to propose that the link made by the C-terminal arm of M547 between its N and C-terminal domains is essential to sustain an active enzyme conformation. Moreover, directing point mutations in the 528-533 region, which overhangs the putative ATP-binding site, demonstrates that this part of the C-terminal arm participates also in the specific complexation of methionyl-tRNA synthetase with its cognate tRNAs.
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PMID:Identification of an amino acid region supporting specific methionyl-tRNA synthetase: tRNA recognition. 247 52

MESI, the structural gene for methionyl-tRNA synthetase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes an amino-terminal extension of 193 amino acids, based on the comparison of the encoded protein with the Escherichia coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase. We examined the contribution of this polypeptide region to the activity of the enzyme by creating several internal deletions in MESI which preserve the correct reading frame. The results show that 185 amino acids are dispensable for activity and stability. Removal of the next 5 residues affects the activity of the enzyme. The effect is more pronounced on the tRNA aminoacylation step than on the adenylate formation step. The Km for ATP and methionine are unaltered indicating that the global structure of the enzyme is maintained. The Km for tRNA increased slightly by a factor of 3 which indicates that the positioning of the tRNA on the surface of the molecule is not affected. There is, however, a great effect on the Vmax of the enzyme. Examination of the three-dimension structure of the homologous E. coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase indicates that the amino acid region preceding the mononucleotide-binding fold does not participate directly in the catalytic cleft. It could, however, act at a distance by propagating a mutational alteration to the catalytic residues.
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PMID:Deletion analysis in the amino-terminal extension of methionyl-tRNA synthetase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae shows that a small region is important for the activity and stability of the enzyme. 267

In a significant fraction of the Escherichia coli cytosolic proteins, the N-terminal methionine residue incorporated during the translation initiation step is excised. The N-terminal methionine excision is catalyzed by methionyl-aminopeptidase (MAP). Previous studies have suggested that the action of this enzyme could depend mainly on the nature of the second amino acid residue in the polypeptide chain. In this study, to achieve a systematic analysis of the specificity of MAP action, each of the 20 amino acids was introduced at the penultimate position of methionyl-tRNA synthetase of E. coli and the extent of in vivo methionine excision was measured. To facilitate variant protein purification and N-terminal sequence determination, an expression shuttle vector based on protein fusion with beta-galactosidase was used. From our results, methionine excision catalyzed by MAP is shown to obey the following rule: the catalytic efficiency of MAP, and therefore the extent of cleavage, decreases in parallel with the increasing of the maximal side-chain length of the amino acid in the penultimate position. This molecular model accounts for the rate of N-terminal methionine excision in E. coli, as deduced from the analysis of 100 protein N-terminal sequences.
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PMID:Extent of N-terminal methionine excision from Escherichia coli proteins is governed by the side-chain length of the penultimate amino acid. 268 40

Yeast-mitochondrial methionyl-tRNA synthetase was purified 1060-fold from mitochondrial matrix proteins of Saccharomyces cerevisiae using a four-step procedure based on affinity chromatography (heparin-Ultrogel, tRNA(Met)-Sepharose, Agarose-hexyl-AMP) to yield to a single polypeptide of high specific activity (1800 U/mg). Like the cytoplasmic methionyl-tRNA synthetase (Mr 85,000), the mitochondrial isoenzyme is a monomer, but of significantly smaller polypeptide size (Mr 65,000). In contrast, the corresponding enzyme of Escherichia coli is a dimer (Mr 152,000) made up of identical subunits. The measured affinity constants of the purified mitochondrial enzyme for methionine and tRNA(Met) are similar to those of the cytoplasmic isoenzyme. However, the two yeast enzymes exhibit clearly different patterns of aminoacylation of heterologous yeast and E. coli tRNA(Met). Furthermore, polyclonal antibodies raised against the two proteins did not show any cross-reactivity by inhibition of enzymatic activity and by the highly sensitive immunoblotting technique, indicating that the two enzymes share little, if any, common antigenic determinants. Taken together, our results further support the belief that the yeast mitochondrial and cytoplasmic methionyl-tRNA synthetases are different proteins coded for by two distinct nuclear genes. Like the yeast cytoplasmic aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, the mitochondrial enzymes displayed affinity for immobilized heparin. This distinguishes them from the corresponding enzymes of E. coli. Such an unexpected property of the mitochondrial enzymes suggests that they have acquired during evolution a domain for binding to negatively charged cellular components.
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PMID:Purification of the yeast mitochondrial methionyl-tRNA synthetase. Common and distinctive features of the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial isoenzymes. 306 Mar 59

We have previously shown that anticodon bases are essential for specific recognition of tRNA substrates by Escherichia coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MetRS) [Schulman, L. H., & Pelka, H. (1983) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 80, 6755-6759] and that the enzyme tightly binds to C34 at the wobble position of E. coli initiator methionine tRNA (tRNAfMet) [Pelka, H., & Schulman, L. H. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4450-4456]. We have also previously demonstrated that an affinity labeling derivative of tRNAfMet can be quantitatively cross-linked to the tRNA binding site of MetRS [Valenzuela, D., & Schulman, L. H. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4555-4561]. Here, we have determined the site in MetRS which is cross-linked to the anticodon of tRNAfMet, as well as the location of four additional cross-links. Only a single peptide, containing Lys465, is covalently coupled to C34, indicating that the recognition site for the anticodon is close to this sequence in the three-dimensional structure of MetRS. The D loop at one corner of the tRNA molecule is cross-linked to three peptides, containing Lys402, Lys439, and Lys596. The 5' terminus of the tRNA is cross-linked to Lys640, near the carboxy terminus of the enzyme. Since the 3' end of tRNAfMet is positioned close to the active site in the N-terminal domain [Hountondji, C., Blanquet, S., & Lederer, F. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 1175-1180], this result indicates that the carboxy ends of the two polypeptide chains of native dimeric MetRS are folded back toward the N-terminal domain of each subunit.
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PMID:tRNA recognition site of Escherichia coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase. 311 44

The size distribution of the 20 aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases from wild-type Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells and from the mutant cell line tsH1, containing a temperature-sensitive leucyl-tRNA synthetase, was determined by gel filtration. Nine aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, specific for arginine, aspartic acid, glutamic acid, glutamine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine and proline, which coeluted as high-Mr entities (Mr approximately 1.2 X 10(6)), were further co-purified to yield a multienzyme complex, the polypeptide composition of which was identical to that previously determined for the complex from rabbit liver. Immunoprecipitates obtained from crude extracts of wild-type and tsH1 mutant cells, using specific antibodies directed to the lysyl-tRNA or methionyl-tRNA synthetase components of the complex, displayed the same polypeptide compositions as that of the purified complex, thereby establishing the heterotypic nature of this complex. Although the activity of leucyl-tRNA synthetase from the mutant cells, grown at a permissive temperature, was low compared to that from the wild-type, the polypeptide of Mr 129 000, corresponding to this enzyme, was present in similar amounts and occurred exclusively as a component of the high-Mr complex. Finally, we report that attempts to demonstrate phosphorylation of the components of the complex from cultured CHO, HeLa and C3 cells were unsuccessful.
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PMID:A complex from cultured Chinese hamster ovary cells containing nine aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. Thermolabile leucyl-tRNA synthetase from the tsH1 mutant cell line is an integral component of this complex. 397 83


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