Daniel Herschlag
Professor of Biochemistry and, by courtesy, of Chemical Engineering
Bio
The overarching goal of the Herschlag Lab is to understand the fundamental behavior of RNA and proteins and, in turn, how these behaviors determine and impact biology more broadly. We are particularly interested in questions of how enzymes work, how RNA folds, how proteins recognize RNA, and the roles of RNA/protein interactions in regulation and control, and the evolution of molecules and molecular interactions. The lab takes an interdisciplinary approach, spanning and integrating physics, chemistry and biology, and employing a wide range of techniques.
Academic Appointments
-
Professor, Biochemistry
-
Professor (By courtesy), Chemical Engineering
-
Member, Bio-X
-
Faculty Fellow, Sarafan ChEM-H
-
Member, Stanford Cancer Institute
Administrative Appointments
-
Senior Associate Dean of Graduate Education and Postdoctoral Affairs, School of Medicine (2011 - 2015)
Honors & Awards
-
Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2023)
-
Stein and Moore Award, Protein Society (2022)
-
Founders Award, Biophysical Society (2020)
-
Excellence in Mentoring and Service Award, Stanford University Biosciences (2019)
-
Member, National Academy of Sciences (2018)
-
Student Service Faculty Award, Biochemistry, Stanford School of Medicine (2012)
-
William Rose Award, ASBMB (2010)
-
Fellow, AAAS (2005)
-
Merit Award, NIH (2002)
-
Cope Scholar Award, ACS (2000)
-
Established Investigator, AHA (1998-2002)
-
Pfizer Award for Enzyme Chemistry, ACS (1997)
-
Fellowship in Science and Engineering, David and Lucile Packard (1995-2000)
-
Scholar, Searle (1993-1996)
-
Scholar in Biomedical Science, Lucille P. Markey (1990-1997)
-
Postdoctoral Fellowship, Helen Hay Whitney (1989-1990; Colorado)
-
Fellowship, Gillette Foundation (1986-1987; Brandeis)
-
Award in Biochemistry, American Institute of Chemists (1982; SUNY)
-
Award for Excellence in Biochemistry, SUNY (1982)
-
Phi Beta Kappa, Michigan (1979)
-
Scholar, James B. Angell (1978, 1979; Michigan)
Current Research and Scholarly Interests
The overarching goal of the Herschlag Lab is to understand the fundamental behavior of RNA and proteins and, in turn, how these behaviors determine and impact biology more broadly. We are particularly interested in questions of how enzymes work, how RNA folds, how proteins recognize RNA, and the roles of RNA/protein interactions in regulation and control, and the evolution of molecules and molecular interactions. The lab takes an interdisciplinary approach, spanning and integrating physics, chemistry and biology, and employing a wide range of techniques.
2024-25 Courses
- Biochemistry Department Minicourse
BIOC 202 (Aut) - Chemistry for Biologists and Others
BIOS 294 (Win) - Developing an Original Research Proposal
BIOC 360 (Spr) - Generating Models for Biological Processes Using Core Principles from Chemistry and Physics
BIOS 418 (Spr) -
Independent Studies (10)
- Advanced Undergraduate Research
CHEM 190 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Directed Instruction/Reading
CHEM 90 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Directed Investigation
BIOE 392 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Directed Reading in Biochemistry
BIOC 299 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Directed Reading in Biophysics
BIOPHYS 399 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Graduate Research
BIOPHYS 300 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Graduate Research and Special Advanced Work
BIOC 399 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Medical Scholars Research
BIOC 370 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - The Teaching of Biochemistry
BIOC 221 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Undergraduate Research
BIOC 199 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum)
- Advanced Undergraduate Research
-
Prior Year Courses
2023-24 Courses
- Biochemistry Mini-Course
BIOC 202 (Aut) - Developing an Original Research Proposal
BIOC 360 (Spr)
2022-23 Courses
- A Practical Guide to Success in Science
BIOS 246 (Win) - Biochemistry Mini-Course
BIOC 202 (Aut) - Developing an Original Research Proposal
BIOC 360 (Spr) - Understanding Kinetics for Biologists and Biology
BIOS 202 (Aut)
2021-22 Courses
- Biochemistry Mini-Course
BIOC 202 (Aut) - Chemistry for Biologists and Others
BIOC 294, BIOS 294 (Aut)
- Biochemistry Mini-Course
Stanford Advisees
-
Doctoral Dissertation Reader (AC)
Peter Cavanagh, Simone Evans, Abby Thurm -
Postdoctoral Faculty Sponsor
Patrick Almhjell, Prathamesh Datar, Albert Lee, Jimin Yoon -
Doctoral Dissertation Advisor (AC)
Siyuan Du, John Shin, Gabriel Tauber -
Doctoral Dissertation Co-Advisor (AC)
Eliel Akinbami
All Publications
-
Decoupling of catalysis and transition state analog binding from mutations throughout a phosphatase revealed by high-throughput enzymology.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2023; 120 (29): e2219074120
Abstract
Using high-throughput microfluidic enzyme kinetics (HT-MEK), we measured over 9,000 inhibition curves detailing impacts of 1,004 single-site mutations throughout the alkaline phosphatase PafA on binding affinity for two transition state analogs (TSAs), vanadate and tungstate. As predicted by catalytic models invoking transition state complementary, mutations to active site and active-site-contacting residues had highly similar impacts on catalysis and TSA binding. Unexpectedly, most mutations to more distal residues that reduced catalysis had little or no impact on TSA binding and many even increased tungstate affinity. These disparate effects can be accounted for by a model in which distal mutations alter the enzyme's conformational landscape, increasing the occupancy of microstates that are catalytically less effective but better able to accommodate larger transition state analogs. In support of this ensemble model, glycine substitutions (rather than valine) were more likely to increase tungstate affinity (but not more likely to impact catalysis), presumably due to increased conformational flexibility that allows previously disfavored microstates to increase in occupancy. These results indicate that residues throughout an enzyme provide specificity for the transition state and discriminate against analogs that are larger only by tenths of an Angstrom. Thus, engineering enzymes that rival the most powerful natural enzymes will likely require consideration of distal residues that shape the enzyme's conformational landscape and fine-tune active-site residues. Biologically, the evolution of extensive communication between the active site and remote residues to aid catalysis may have provided the foundation for allostery to make it a highly evolvable trait.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.2219074120
View details for PubMedID 37428919
-
Author Correction: RNA conformational propensities determine cellular activity.
Nature
2023
View details for DOI 10.1038/s41586-023-06286-z
View details for PubMedID 37296211
-
RNA conformational propensities determine cellular activity.
Nature
2023
Abstract
Cellular processes are the product of interactions between biomolecules, which associate to form biologically active complexes1. These interactions are mediated by intermolecular contacts, which if disrupted, lead to alterations in cell physiology. Nevertheless, the formation of intermolecular contacts nearly universally requires changes in the conformations of the interacting biomolecules. As a result, binding affinity and cellular activity crucially depend both on the strength of the contacts and on the inherent propensities to form binding-competent conformational states2,3. Thus, conformational penalties are ubiquitous in biology and must be known in order to quantitatively model binding energetics for protein and nucleic acid interactions4,5. However, conceptual and technological limitations have hindered our ability to dissect and quantitatively measure how conformational propensities affect cellular activity. Here we systematically altered and determined the propensities for forming the protein-bound conformation of HIV-1 TAR RNA. These propensities quantitatively predicted the binding affinities of TAR to the RNA-binding region of the Tat protein and predicted the extent of HIV-1 Tat-dependent transactivation in cells. Our results establish the role of ensemble-based conformational propensities in cellular activity and reveal an example of a cellular process driven by an exceptionally rare and short-lived RNA conformational state.
View details for DOI 10.1038/s41586-023-06080-x
View details for PubMedID 37198487
-
Refinement of Multiconformer Ensemble Models from Multi-temperature X-ray Diffraction Data.
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
2023
Abstract
Conformational ensembles underlie all protein functions. Thus, acquiring atomic-level ensemble models that accurately represent conformational heterogeneity is vital to deepen our understanding of how proteins work. Modeling ensemble information from X-ray diffraction data has been challenging, as traditional cryo-crystallography restricts conformational variability while minimizing radiation damage. Recent advances have enabled the collection of high quality diffraction data at ambient temperatures, revealing innate conformational heterogeneity and temperature-driven changes. Here, we used diffraction datasets for Proteinase K collected at temperatures ranging from 313 to 363K to provide a tutorial for the refinement of multiconformer ensemble models. Integrating automated sampling and refinement tools with manual adjustments, we obtained multiconformer models that describe alternative backbone and sidechain conformations, their relative occupancies, and interconnections between conformers. Our models revealed extensive and diverse conformational changes across temperature, including increased bound peptide ligand occupancies, different Ca2+ binding site configurations and altered rotameric distributions. These insights emphasize the value and need for multiconformer model refinement to extract ensemble information from diffraction data and to understand ensemble-function relationships.
View details for DOI 10.1101/2023.05.05.539620
View details for PubMedID 37205593
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC10187334
-
Obtaining anomalous and ensemble information from protein crystals from 220 K up to physiological temperatures.
Acta crystallographica. Section D, Structural biology
2023; 79 (Pt 3): 212-223
Abstract
X-ray crystallography has been invaluable in delivering structural information about proteins. Previously, an approach has been developed that allows high-quality X-ray diffraction data to be obtained from protein crystals at and above room temperature. Here, this previous work is built on and extended by showing that high-quality anomalous signal can be obtained from single protein crystals using diffraction data collected at 220 K up to physiological temperatures. The anomalous signal can be used to directly determine the structure of a protein, i.e. to phase the data, as is routinely performed under cryoconditions. This ability is demonstrated by obtaining diffraction data from model lysozyme, thaumatin and proteinase K crystals, the anomalous signal from which allowed their structures to be solved experimentally at 7.1 keV X-ray energy and at room temperature with relatively low data redundancy. It is also demonstrated that the anomalous signal from diffraction data obtained at 310 K (37°C) can be used to solve the structure of proteinase K and to identify ordered ions. The method provides useful anomalous signal at temperatures down to 220 K, resulting in an extended crystal lifetime and increased data redundancy. Finally, we show that useful anomalous signal can be obtained at room temperature using X-rays of 12 keV energy as typically used for routine data collection, allowing this type of experiment to be carried out at widely accessible synchrotron beamline energies and enabling the simultaneous extraction of high-resolution data and anomalous signal. With the recent emphasis on obtaining conformational ensemble information for proteins, the high resolution of the data allows such ensembles to be built, while the anomalous signal allows the structure to be experimentally solved, ions to be identified, and water molecules and ions to be differentiated. Because bound metal-, phosphorus- and sulfur-containing ions all have anomalous signal, obtaining anomalous signal across temperatures and up to physiological temperatures will provide a more complete description of protein conformational ensembles, function and energetics.
View details for DOI 10.1107/S205979832300089X
View details for PubMedID 36876431
-
Building a quantitative and predictive model of 5 ' SS selection by human U1 snRNP using RNA-map
CELL PRESS. 2023: 219A
View details for Web of Science ID 000989629701191
-
Building a quantitative and predictive model of 5'SS selection by human U1 snRNP using RNA-map.
Biophysical journal
2023; 122 (3S1): 219a
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.bpj.2022.11.1303
View details for PubMedID 36783069
-
Refinement of multiconformer ensemble models from multi-temperature X-ray diffraction data.
Methods in enzymology
2023; 688: 223-254
Abstract
Conformational ensembles underlie all protein functions. Thus, acquiring atomic-level ensemble models that accurately represent conformational heterogeneity is vital to deepen our understanding of how proteins work. Modeling ensemble information from X-ray diffraction data has been challenging, as traditional cryo-crystallography restricts conformational variability while minimizing radiation damage. Recent advances have enabled the collection of high quality diffraction data at ambient temperatures, revealing innate conformational heterogeneity and temperature-driven changes. Here, we used diffraction datasets for Proteinase K collected at temperatures ranging from 313 to 363K to provide a tutorial for the refinement of multiconformer ensemble models. Integrating automated sampling and refinement tools with manual adjustments, we obtained multiconformer models that describe alternative backbone and sidechain conformations, their relative occupancies, and interconnections between conformers. Our models revealed extensive and diverse conformational changes across temperature, including increased bound peptide ligand occupancies, different Ca2+ binding site configurations and altered rotameric distributions. These insights emphasize the value and need for multiconformer model refinement to extract ensemble information from diffraction data and to understand ensemble-function relationships.
View details for DOI 10.1016/bs.mie.2023.06.009
View details for PubMedID 37748828
-
Ensemble-function relationships to dissect mechanisms of enzyme catalysis.
Science advances
2022; 8 (41): eabn7738
Abstract
Decades of structure-function studies have established our current extensive understanding of enzymes. However, traditional structural models are snapshots of broader conformational ensembles of interchanging states. We demonstrate the need for conformational ensembles to understand function, using the enzyme ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) as an example. Comparison of prior KSI cryogenic x-ray structures suggested deleterious mutational effects from a misaligned oxyanion hole catalytic residue. However, ensemble information from room-temperature x-ray crystallography, combined with functional studies, excluded this model. Ensemble-function analyses can deconvolute effects from altering the probability of occupying a state (P-effects) and changing the reactivity of each state (k-effects); our ensemble-function analyses revealed functional effects arising from weakened oxyanion hole hydrogen bonding and substrate repositioning within the active site. Ensemble-function studies will have an integral role in understanding enzymes and in meeting the future goals of a predictive understanding of enzyme catalysis and engineering new enzymes.
View details for DOI 10.1126/sciadv.abn7738
View details for PubMedID 36240280
-
A comprehensive thermodynamic model for RNA binding by the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Pumilio protein PUF4.
Nature communications
2022; 13 (1): 4522
Abstract
Genomic methods have been valuable for identifying RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) and the genes, pathways, and processes they regulate. Nevertheless, standard motif descriptions cannot be used to predict all RNA targets or test quantitative models for cellular interactions and regulation. We present a complete thermodynamic model for RNA binding to the S. cerevisiae Pumilio protein PUF4 derived from direct binding data for 6180 RNAs measured using the RNA on a massively parallel array (RNA-MaP) platform. The PUF4 model is highly similar to that of the related RBPs, human PUM2 and PUM1, with one marked exception: a single favorable site of base flipping for PUF4, such that PUF4 preferentially binds to a non-contiguous series of residues. These results are foundational for developing and testing cellular models of RNA-RBP interactions and function, for engineering RBPs, for understanding the biophysical nature of RBP binding and the evolutionary landscape of RNAs and RBPs.
View details for DOI 10.1038/s41467-022-31968-z
View details for PubMedID 35927243
-
Evaluating the impact of X-ray damage on conformational heterogeneity in room-temperature (277 K) and cryo-cooled protein crystals.
Acta crystallographica. Section D, Structural biology
2022; 78 (Pt 8): 945-963
Abstract
Cryo-cooling has been nearly universally adopted to mitigate X-ray damage and facilitate crystal handling in protein X-ray crystallography. However, cryo X-ray crystallographic data provide an incomplete window into the ensemble of conformations that is at the heart of protein function and energetics. Room-temperature (RT) X-ray crystallography provides accurate ensemble information, and recent developments allow conformational heterogeneity (the experimental manifestation of ensembles) to be extracted from single-crystal data. Nevertheless, high sensitivity to X-ray damage at RT raises concerns about data reliability. To systematically address this critical issue, increasingly X-ray-damaged high-resolution data sets (1.02-1.52 A resolution) were obtained from single proteinase K, thaumatin and lysozyme crystals at RT (277 K). In each case a modest increase in conformational heterogeneity with X-ray damage was observed. Merging data with different extents of damage (as is typically carried out) had negligible effects on conformational heterogeneity until the overall diffraction intensity decayed to 70% of its initial value. These effects were compared with X-ray damage effects in cryo-cooled crystals by carrying out an analogous analysis of increasingly damaged proteinase K cryo data sets (0.9-1.16 A resolution). X-ray damage-associated heterogeneity changes were found that were not observed at RT. This property renders it difficult to distinguish real from artefactual conformations and to determine the conformational response to changes in temperature. The ability to acquire reliable heterogeneity information from single crystals at RT, together with recent advances in RT data collection at accessible synchrotron beamlines, provides a strong motivation for the widespread adoption of RT X-ray crystallography to obtain conformational ensemble information.
View details for DOI 10.1107/S2059798322005939
View details for PubMedID 35916220
-
Ensemble-function relationships to connect structure to mechanism: application of EnsemblePDB to the serine protease reaction coordinate and its catalytic features
CELL PRESS. 2022: 441A
View details for Web of Science ID 000759523002687
-
Direct Measurement of Interhelical DNA Repulsion and Attraction by Quantitative Cross-Linking.
Journal of the American Chemical Society
1800
Abstract
To better understand the forces that mediate nucleic acid compaction in biology, we developed the disulfide cross-linking approach xHEED (X-linking of Helices to measure Electrostatic Effects at Distance) to measure the distance-dependent encounter frequency of two DNA helices in solution. Using xHEED, we determined the distance that the electrostatic potential extends from DNA helices, the dependence of this distance on ionic conditions, and the magnitude of repulsion when two helices approach one another. Across all conditions tested, the potential falls to that of the bulk solution within 15 A of the major groove surface. For separations of 30 A, we measured a repulsion of 1.8 kcal/mol in low monovalent ion concentration (30 mM Na+), with higher Na+ concentrations ameliorating this repulsion, and 2 M Na+ or 100 mM Mg2+ eliminating it. Strikingly, we found full screening at very low Co3+ concentrations and net attraction at higher concentrations, without the higher-order DNA condensation that typically complicates studies of helical attraction. Our measurements define the relevant distances for electrostatic interactions of nucleic-acid helices in biology and introduce a new method to propel further understanding of how these forces impact biological processes.
View details for DOI 10.1021/jacs.1c11122
View details for PubMedID 35073489
-
Systematic investigation of the link between enzyme catalysis and cold adaptation
ELIFE
2022; 11
View details for DOI 10.7554/eLife.72884.sa2
View details for Web of Science ID 000746410300001
-
Systematic investigation of the link between enzyme catalysis and cold adaptation.
eLife
1800; 11
Abstract
Cold temperature is prevalent across the biosphere and slows the rates of chemical reactions. Increased catalysis has been predicted to be a dominant adaptive trait of enzymes to reduced temperature, and this expectation has informed physical models for enzyme catalysis and influenced bioprospecting strategies. To systematically test rate enhancement as an adaptive trait to cold, we paired kinetic constants of 2223 enzyme reactions with their organism's optimal growth temperature (TGrowth) and analyzed trends of rate constants as a function of TGrowth. These data do not support a general increase in rate enhancement in cold adaptation. In the model enzyme ketosteroid isomerase (KSI), there is prior evidence for temperature adaptation from a change in an active site residue that results in a tradeoff between activity and stability. Nevertheless, we found that little of the rate constant variation for 20 KSI variants was accounted for by TGrowth. In contrast, and consistent with prior expectations, we observed a correlation between stability and TGrowth across 433 proteins. These results suggest that temperature exerts a weaker selection pressure on enzyme rate constants than stability and that evolutionary forces other than temperature are responsible for the majority of enzymatic rate constant variation.
View details for DOI 10.7554/eLife.72884
View details for PubMedID 35019838
-
uPIC-M: Efficient and Scalable Preparation of Clonal Single Mutant Libraries for High-Throughput Protein Biochemistry.
ACS omega
2021; 6 (45): 30542-30554
Abstract
New high-throughput biochemistry techniques complement selection-based approaches and provide quantitative kinetic and thermodynamic data for thousands of protein variants in parallel. With these advances, library generation rather than data collection has become rate-limiting. Unlike pooled selection approaches, high-throughput biochemistry requires mutant libraries in which individual sequences are rationally designed, efficiently recovered, sequence-validated, and separated from one another, but current strategies are unable to produce these libraries at the needed scale and specificity at reasonable cost. Here, we present a scalable, rapid, and inexpensive approach for creating User-designed Physically Isolated Clonal-Mutant (uPIC-M) libraries that utilizes recent advances in oligo synthesis, high-throughput sample preparation, and next-generation sequencing. To demonstrate uPIC-M, we created a scanning mutant library of SpAP, a 541 amino acid alkaline phosphatase, and recovered 94% of desired mutants in a single iteration. uPIC-M uses commonly available equipment and freely downloadable custom software and can produce a 5000 mutant library at 1/3 the cost and 1/5 the time of traditional techniques.
View details for DOI 10.1021/acsomega.1c04180
View details for PubMedID 34805683
-
Cation enrichment in the ion atmosphere is promoted by local hydration of DNA.
Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP
2021
Abstract
Electrostatic interactions are central to the structure and function of nucleic acids, including their folding, condensation, and interaction with proteins and other charged molecules. These interactions are profoundly affected by ions surrounding nucleic acids, the constituents of the so-called ion atmosphere. Here, we report precise Fourier Transform-Terahertz/Far-Infrared (FT-THz/FIR) measurements in the frequency range 30-500 cm-1 for a 24-bp DNA solvated in a series of alkali halide (NaCl, NaF, KCl, CsCl, and CsF) electrolyte solutions which are sensitive to changes in the ion atmosphere. Cation excess in the ion atmosphere is detected experimentally by observation of cation modes of Na+, K+, and Cs+ in the frequency range between 70-90 cm-1. Based on MD simulations, we propose that the magnitude of cation excess (which is salt specific) depends on the ability of the electrolyte to perturb the water network at the DNA interface: In the NaF atmosphere, the ions reduce the strength of interactions between water and the DNA more than in case of a NaCl electrolyte. Here, we explicitly take into account the solvent contribution to the chemical potential in the ion atmosphere: A decrease in the number of bound water molecules in the hydration layer of DNA is correlated with enhanced density fluctuations, which decrease the free energy cost of ion-hydration, thus promoting further ion accumulation within the DNA atmosphere. We propose that taking into account the local solvation is crucial for understanding the ion atmosphere.
View details for DOI 10.1039/d1cp01963e
View details for PubMedID 34622888
-
High throughput and quantitative enzymology in the genomic era.
Current opinion in structural biology
2021; 71: 259-273
Abstract
Accurate predictions from models based on physical principles are the ultimate metric of our biophysical understanding. Although there has been stunning progress towardstructure prediction, quantitative prediction of enzyme function has remained challenging. Realizing this goal will require large numbers of quantitative measurements of rate and binding constantsand the use of these ground-truth data sets to guide the development and testing of these quantitative models. Ground truth data more closely linked to the underlying physical forces are also desired. Here, we describe technological advances that enable both types of ground truth measurements. These advances allow classic models to be tested, provide novel mechanistic insights, and place us on the path toward a predictive understanding of enzyme structure and function.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.sbi.2021.07.010
View details for PubMedID 34592682
-
High-throughput dissection of the thermodynamic and conformational properties of a ubiquitous class of RNA tertiary contact motifs.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2021; 118 (33)
Abstract
Despite RNA's diverse secondary and tertiary structures and its complex conformational changes, nature utilizes a limited set of structural "motifs"-helices, junctions, and tertiary contact modules-to build diverse functional RNAs. Thus, in-depth descriptions of a relatively small universe of RNA motifs may lead to predictive models of RNA tertiary conformational landscapes. Motifs may have different properties depending on sequence and secondary structure, giving rise to subclasses that expand the universe of RNA building blocks. Yet we know very little about motif subclasses, given the challenges in mapping conformational properties in high throughput. Previously, we used "RNA on a massively parallel array" (RNA-MaP), a quantitative, high-throughput technique, to study thousands of helices and two-way junctions. Here, we adapt RNA-MaP to study the thermodynamic and conformational properties of tetraloop/tetraloop receptor (TL/TLR) tertiary contact motifs, analyzing 1,493 TLR sequences from different classes. Clustering analyses revealed variability in TL specificity, stability, and conformational behavior. Nevertheless, natural GAAA/11ntR TL/TLRs, while varying in tertiary stability by 2.5 kcal/mol, exhibited conserved TL specificity and conformational properties. Thus, RNAs may tune stability without altering the overall structure of these TL/TLRs. Furthermore, their stability correlated with natural frequency, suggesting thermodynamics as the dominant selection pressure. In contrast, other TL/TLRs displayed heterogenous conformational behavior and appear to not be under strong thermodynamic selection. Our results build toward a generalizable model of RNA-folding thermodynamics based on the properties of isolated motifs, and our characterized TL/TLR library can be used to engineer RNAs with predictable thermodynamic and conformational behavior.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.2109085118
View details for PubMedID 34373334
-
Revealing enzyme functional architecture via high-throughput microfluidic enzyme kinetics.
Science (New York, N.Y.)
2021; 373 (6553)
Abstract
Systematic and extensive investigation of enzymes is needed to understand their extraordinary efficiency and meet current challenges in medicine and engineering. We present HT-MEK (High-Throughput Microfluidic Enzyme Kinetics), a microfluidic platform for high-throughput expression, purification, and characterization of more than 1500 enzyme variants per experiment. For 1036 mutants of the alkaline phosphatase PafA (phosphate-irrepressible alkaline phosphatase of Flavobacterium), we performed more than 670,000 reactions and determined more than 5000 kinetic and physical constants for multiple substrates and inhibitors. We uncovered extensive kinetic partitioning to a misfolded state and isolated catalytic effects, revealing spatially contiguous regions of residues linked to particular aspects of function. Regions included active-site proximal residues but extended to the enzyme surface, providing a map of underlying architecture not possible to derive from existing approaches. HT-MEK has applications that range from understanding molecular mechanisms to medicine, engineering, and design.
View details for DOI 10.1126/science.abf8761
View details for PubMedID 34437092
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC8454890
-
Revealing enzyme functional architecture via high-throughput microfluidic enzyme kinetics
SCIENCE
2021; 373 (6553): 411-+
View details for DOI 10.1126/science.abf8761
View details for Web of Science ID 000679232100028
-
Parallel molecular mechanisms for enzyme temperature adaptation.
Science (New York, N.Y.)
2021; 371 (6533)
Abstract
The mechanisms that underly the adaptation of enzyme activities and stabilities to temperature are fundamental to our understanding of molecular evolution and how enzymes work. Here, we investigate the molecular and evolutionary mechanisms of enzyme temperature adaption, combining deep mechanistic studies with comprehensive sequence analyses of thousands of enzymes. We show that temperature adaptation in ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) arises primarily from one residue change with limited, local epistasis, and we establish the underlying physical mechanisms. This residue change occurs in diverse KSI backgrounds, suggesting parallel adaptation to temperature. We identify residues associated with organismal growth temperature across 1005 diverse bacterial enzyme families, suggesting widespread parallel adaptation to temperature. We assess the residue properties, molecular interactions, and interaction networks that appear to underly temperature adaptation.
View details for DOI 10.1126/science.aay2784
View details for PubMedID 33674467
-
Assessment of enzyme active site positioning and tests of catalytic mechanisms through X-ray-derived conformational ensembles.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2020; 117 (52): 33204–15
Abstract
How enzymes achieve their enormous rate enhancements remains a central question in biology, and our understanding to date has impacted drug development, influenced enzyme design, and deepened our appreciation of evolutionary processes. While enzymes position catalytic and reactant groups in active sites, physics requires that atoms undergo constant motion. Numerous proposals have invoked positioning or motions as central for enzyme function, but a scarcity of experimental data has limited our understanding of positioning and motion, their relative importance, and their changes through the enzyme's reaction cycle. To examine positioning and motions and test catalytic proposals, we collected "room temperature" X-ray crystallography data for Pseudomonas putida ketosteroid isomerase (KSI), and we obtained conformational ensembles for this and a homologous KSI from multiple PDB crystal structures. Ensemble analyses indicated limited change through KSI's reaction cycle. Active site positioning was on the 1- to 1.5-A scale, and was not exceptional compared to noncatalytic groups. The KSI ensembles provided evidence against catalytic proposals invoking oxyanion hole geometric discrimination between the ground state and transition state or highly precise general base positioning. Instead, increasing or decreasing positioning of KSI's general base reduced catalysis, suggesting optimized Angstrom-scale conformational heterogeneity that allows KSI to efficiently catalyze multiple reaction steps. Ensemble analyses of surrounding groups for WT and mutant KSIs provided insights into the forces and interactions that allow and limit active-site motions. Most generally, this ensemble perspective extends traditional structure-function relationships, providing the basis for a new era of "ensemble-function" interrogation of enzymes.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.2011350117
View details for PubMedID 33376217
-
Instrumentation and experimental procedures for robust collection of X-ray diffraction data from protein crystals across physiological temperatures.
Journal of applied crystallography
2020; 53 (Pt 6): 1493–1501
Abstract
Traditional X-ray diffraction data collected at cryo-temperatures have delivered invaluable insights into the three-dimensional structures of proteins, providing the backbone of structure-function studies. While cryo-cooling mitigates radiation damage, cryo-temperatures can alter protein conformational ensembles and solvent structure. Furthermore, conformational ensembles underlie protein function and energetics, and recent advances in room-temperature X-ray crystallography have delivered conformational heterogeneity information that can be directly related to biological function. Given this capability, the next challenge is to develop a robust and broadly applicable method to collect single-crystal X-ray diffraction data at and above room temperature. This challenge is addressed herein. The approach described provides complete diffraction data sets with total collection times as short as 5 s from single protein crystals, dramatically increasing the quantity of data that can be collected within allocated synchrotron beam time. Its applicability was demonstrated by collecting 1.09-1.54 A resolution data over a temperature range of 293-363 K for proteinase K, thaumatin and lysozyme crystals at BL14-1 at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource. The analyses presented here indicate that the diffraction data are of high quality and do not suffer from excessive dehydration or radiation damage.
View details for DOI 10.1107/S1600576720013503
View details for PubMedID 33312102
-
Rapid and accurate determination of atomistic RNA dynamic ensemble models using NMR and structure prediction.
Nature communications
2020; 11 (1): 5531
Abstract
Biomolecules form dynamic ensembles of many inter-converting conformations which are key for understanding how they fold and function. However, determining ensembles is challenging because the information required to specify atomic structures for thousands of conformations far exceeds that of experimental measurements. We addressed this data gap and dramatically simplified and accelerated RNA ensemble determination by using structure prediction tools that leverage the growing database of RNA structures to generate a conformation library. Refinement of this library with NMR residual dipolar couplings provided an atomistic ensemble model for HIV-1 TAR, and the model accuracy was independently supported by comparisons to quantum-mechanical calculations of NMR chemical shifts, comparison to a crystal structure of a substate, and through designed ensemble redistribution via atomic mutagenesis. Applications to TAR bulge variants and more complex tertiary RNAs support the generality of this approach and the potential to make the determination of atomic-resolution RNA ensembles routine.
View details for DOI 10.1038/s41467-020-19371-y
View details for PubMedID 33139729
-
The individual and the team in collaborative science.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2020; 117 (28): 16116
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.2006671117
View details for PubMedID 32665449
-
The structural ensemble of a Holliday junction determined by X-ray scattering interference.
Nucleic acids research
2020
Abstract
The DNA four-way (Holliday) junction is the central intermediate of genetic recombination, yet key aspects of its conformational and thermodynamic properties remain unclear. While multiple experimental approaches have been used to characterize the canonical X-shape conformers under specific ionic conditions, the complete conformational ensemble of this motif, especially at low ionic conditions, remains largely undetermined. In line with previous studies, our single-molecule Forster resonance energy transfer (smFRET) measurements of junction dynamics revealed transitions between two states under high salt conditions, but smFRET could not determine whether there are fast and unresolvable transitions between distinct conformations or a broad ensemble of related states under low and intermediate salt conditions. We therefore used an emerging technique, X-ray scattering interferometry (XSI), to directly probe the conformational ensemble of the Holliday junction across a wide range of ionic conditions. Our results demonstrated that the four-way junction adopts an out-of-plane geometry under low ionic conditions and revealed a conformational state at intermediate ionic conditions previously undetected by other methods. Our results provide critical information to build toward a full description of the conformational landscape of the Holliday junction and underscore the utility of XSI for probing conformational ensembles under a wide range of solution conditions.
View details for DOI 10.1093/nar/gkaa509
View details for PubMedID 32597986
-
Slow Molecular Recognition by RNA
WILEY. 2020
View details for DOI 10.1096/fasebj.2020.34.s1.08709
View details for Web of Science ID 000546023101576
-
Biosciences Proposal Bootcamp: Structured peer and faculty feedback improves trainees' proposals and grantsmanship self-efficacy.
PloS one
2020; 15 (12): e0243973
Abstract
Grant writing is an essential skill to develop for academic and other career success but providing individual feedback to large numbers of trainees is challenging. In 2014, we launched the Stanford Biosciences Grant Writing Academy to support graduate students and postdocs in writing research proposals. Its core program is a multi-week Proposal Bootcamp designed to increase the feedback writers receive as they develop and refine their proposals. The Proposal Bootcamp consisted of two-hour weekly meetings that included mini lectures and peer review. Bootcamp participants also attended faculty review workshops to obtain faculty feedback. Postdoctoral trainees were trained and hired as course teaching assistants and facilitated weekly meetings and review workshops. Over the last six years, the annual Bootcamp has provided 525 doctoral students and postdocs with multi-level feedback (peer and faculty). Proposals from Bootcamp participants were almost twice as likely to be funded than proposals from non-Bootcamp trainees. Overall, this structured program provided opportunities for feedback from multiple peer and faculty reviewers, increased the participants' confidence in developing and submitting research proposals, while accommodating a large number of participants.
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0243973
View details for PubMedID 33370337
-
How to measure and evaluate binding affinities.
eLife
2020; 9
Abstract
Quantitative measurements of biomolecule associations are central to biological understanding and are needed to build and test predictive and mechanistic models. Given the advances in high-throughput technologies and the projected increase in the availability of binding data, we found it especially timely to evaluate the current standards for performing and reporting binding measurements. A review of 100 studies revealed that in most cases essential controls for establishing the appropriate incubation time and concentration regime were not documented, making it impossible to determine measurement reliability. Moreover, several reported affinities could be concluded to be incorrect, thereby impacting biological interpretations. Given these challenges, we provide a framework for a broad range of researchers to evaluate, teach about, perform, and clearly document high-quality equilibrium binding measurements. We apply this framework and explain underlying fundamental concepts through experimental examples with the RNA-binding protein Puf4.
View details for DOI 10.7554/eLife.57264
View details for PubMedID 32758356
-
A Quantitative and Predictive Model for RNA Binding by Human Pumilio Proteins
MOLECULAR CELL
2019; 74 (5): 966-+
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.molcel.2019.04.012
View details for Web of Science ID 000470249100011
-
Demonstration of protein cooperativity mediated by RNA structure using the human protein PUM2
RNA
2019; 25 (6): 702–12
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.068585.118
View details for Web of Science ID 000468092200004
-
Blind tests of RNA-protein binding affinity prediction.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2019
Abstract
Interactions between RNA and proteins are pervasive in biology, driving fundamental processes such as protein translation and participating in the regulation of gene expression. Modeling the energies of RNA-protein interactions is therefore critical for understanding and repurposing living systems but has been hindered by complexities unique to RNA-protein binding. Here, we bring together several advances to complete a calculation framework for RNA-protein binding affinities, including a unified free energy function for bound complexes, automated Rosetta modeling of mutations, and use of secondary structure-based energetic calculations to model unbound RNA states. The resulting Rosetta-Vienna RNP-DeltaDeltaG method achieves root-mean-squared errors (RMSEs) of 1.3 kcal/mol on high-throughput MS2 coat protein-RNA measurements and 1.5 kcal/mol on an independent test set involving the signal recognition particle, human U1A, PUM1, and FOX-1. As a stringent test, the method achieves RMSE accuracy of 1.4 kcal/mol in blind predictions of hundreds of human PUM2-RNA relative binding affinities. Overall, these RMSE accuracies are significantly better than those attained by prior structure-based approaches applied to the same systems. Importantly, Rosetta-Vienna RNP-DeltaDeltaG establishes a framework for further improvements in modeling RNA-protein binding that can be tested by prospective high-throughput measurements on new systems.
View details for PubMedID 30962376
-
A Microfluidics-Based Assay for Mapping Connectivity in Highly Proficient Enzymes Reveals Functional Modularity
CELL PRESS. 2019: 66A
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.bpj.2018.11.403
View details for Web of Science ID 000460779800337
-
Sequence-dependent RNA helix conformational preferences predictably impact tertiary structure formation.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2019
Abstract
Structured RNAs and RNA complexes underlie biological processes ranging from control of gene expression to protein translation. Approximately 50% of nucleotides within known structured RNAs are folded into Watson-Crick (WC) base pairs, and sequence changes that preserve these pairs are typically assumed to preserve higher-order RNA structure and binding of macromolecule partners. Here, we report that indirect effects of the helix sequence on RNA tertiary stability are, in fact, significant but are nevertheless predictable from a simple computational model called RNAMake-∆∆G. When tested through the RNA on a massively parallel array (RNA-MaP) experimental platform, blind predictions for >1500 variants of the tectoRNA heterodimer model system achieve high accuracy (rmsd 0.34 and 0.77 kcal/mol for sequence and length changes, respectively). Detailed comparison of predictions to experiments support a microscopic picture of how helix sequence changes subtly modulate conformational fluctuations at each base-pair step, which accumulate to impact RNA tertiary structure stability. Our study reveals a previously overlooked phenomenon in RNA structure formation and provides a framework of computation and experiment for understanding helix conformational preferences and their impact across biological RNA and RNA-protein assemblies.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.1901530116
View details for PubMedID 31375637
-
Quantitative Studies of an RNA Duplex Electrostatics by Ion Counting.
Biophysical journal
2019
Abstract
RNAs are one of the most charged polyelectrolytes in nature, and understanding their electrostatics is fundamental to their structure and biological functions. An effective way to characterize the electrostatic field generated by nucleic acids is to quantify interactions between nucleic acids and ions that surround the molecules. These ions form a loosely associated cloud referred to as an ion atmosphere. Although theoretical and computational studies can describe the ion atmosphere around RNAs, benchmarks are needed to guide the development of these approaches, and experiments to date that read out RNA-ion interactions are limited. Here, we present ion counting studies to quantify the number of ions surrounding well-defined model systems of RNA and DNA duplexes. We observe that the RNA duplex attracts more cations and expels fewer anions compared to the DNA duplex, and the RNA duplex interacts significantly stronger with the divalent cation Mg2+, despite their identical total charge. These experimental results suggest that the RNA duplex generates a stronger electrostatic field than DNA, as is predicted based on the structural differences between their helices. Theoretical calculations using a nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann equation give excellent agreement with experiments for monovalent ions but underestimate Mg2+-DNA and Mg2+-RNA interactions by 20%. These studies provide needed stringent benchmarks to use against other all-atom theoretical models of RNA-ion interactions, interactions that likely must be accurately accounted for in structural, dynamic, and energetic terms to confidently model RNA structure, interactions, and function.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.bpj.2019.08.007
View details for PubMedID 31466697
-
Computational design of three-dimensional RNA structure and function.
Nature nanotechnology
2019
Abstract
RNA nanotechnology seeks to create nanoscale machines by repurposing natural RNA modules. The field is slowed by the current need for human intuition during three-dimensional structural design. Here, we demonstrate that three distinct problems in RNA nanotechnology can be reduced to a pathfinding problem and automatically solved through an algorithm called RNAMake. First, RNAMake discovers highly stable single-chain solutions to the classic problem of aligning a tetraloop and its sequence-distal receptor, with experimental validation from chemical mapping, gel electrophoresis, solution X-ray scattering and crystallography with 2.55 Å resolution. Second, RNAMake automatically generates structured tethers that integrate 16S and 23S ribosomal RNAs into single-chain ribosomal RNAs that remain uncleaved by ribonucleases and assemble onto messenger RNA. Third, RNAMake enables the automated stabilization of small-molecule binding RNAs, with designed tertiary contacts that improve the binding affinity of the ATP aptamer and improve the fluorescence and stability of the Spinach RNA in cell extracts and in living Escherichia coli cells.
View details for DOI 10.1038/s41565-019-0517-8
View details for PubMedID 31427748
-
Enhancement of RNA/Ligand Association Kinetics via an Electrostatic Anchor.
Biochemistry
2019
Abstract
The diverse biological processes mediated by RNA rest upon its recognition of various ligands, including small molecules and nucleic acids. Nevertheless, a recent literature survey suggests that RNA molecular recognition of these ligands is slow, with association rate constants orders of magnitude below the diffusional limit. Thus, we were prompted to consider strategies for increasing RNA association kinetics. Proteins can accelerate ligand association via electrostatic forces, and here, using the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme, we provide evidence that electrostatic forces can accelerate RNA/ligand association. This RNA enzyme (E) catalyzes cleavage of an oligonucleotide substrate (S) by an exogenous guanosine (G) cofactor. The G 2'- and 3'-OH groups interact with an active site metal ion, termed MC, within E·S·G, and we perturbed each of these contacts via -NH3+ substitution. New and prior data indicate that G(2'NH3+) and G(3'NH3+) bind as strongly as G, suggesting that the -NH3+ substituents of these analogues avoid repulsive interactions with MC and make alternative interactions. Unexpectedly, removal of the adjacent -OH via -H substitution to give G(2'H,3'NH3+) and G(2'NH3+,3'H) enhanced binding, in stark contrast to the deleterious effect of these substitutions on G binding. Pulse-chase experiments indicate that the -NH3+ moiety of G(2'H,3'NH3+) increases the rate of G association. These results suggest that the positively charged -NH3+ group can act as a molecular "anchor" to increase the residence time of the encounter complex and thereby enhance productive binding. Electrostatic anchors may provide a broadly applicable strategy for the development of fast binding RNA ligands and RNA-targeted therapeutics.
View details for DOI 10.1021/acs.biochem.9b00231
View details for PubMedID 31117387
-
The roles of structural dynamics in the cellular functions of RNAs.
Nature reviews. Molecular cell biology
2019
Abstract
RNAs fold into 3D structures that range from simple helical elements to complex tertiary structures and quaternary ribonucleoprotein assemblies. The functions of many regulatory RNAs depend on how their 3D structure changes in response to a diverse array of cellular conditions. In this Review, we examine how the structural characterization of RNA as dynamic ensembles of conformations, which form with different probabilities and at different timescales, is improving our understanding of RNA function in cells. We discuss the mechanisms of gene regulation by microRNAs, riboswitches, ribozymes, post-transcriptional RNA modifications and RNA-binding proteins, and how the cellular environment and processes such as liquid-liquid phase separation may affect RNA folding and activity. The emerging RNA-ensemble-function paradigm is changing our perspective and understanding of RNA regulation, from in vitro to in vivo and from descriptive to predictive.
View details for DOI 10.1038/s41580-019-0136-0
View details for PubMedID 31182864
-
Ion counting demonstrates a high electrostatic field generated by the nucleosome.
eLife
2019; 8
Abstract
The first step towards the eukaryotic nuclear DNA compaction process is the formation of a nucleosome, which comprises of the negatively charged DNA wrapped around a positively charged histone protein octamer. Often, it is assumed that the complexation of the DNA into the nucleosome completely attenuates the DNA charge and hence the electrostatic field generated by the molecule. In contrast, theoretical and computational studies suggest that the nucleosome retains a strong, negative electrostatic field. Despite their fundamental implications for chromatin organization and function, these opposing views of nucleosome electrostatics have not been experimentally tested. Herein, we directly measure nucleosome electrostatics and find that while nucleosome formation reduces the complex charge by half, the nucleosome nevertheless maintains a strong negative electrostatic field. Our studies highlight the importance of considering the polyelectrolyte nature of the nucleosome and its impact on processes ranging from factor binding to DNA compaction.
View details for DOI 10.7554/eLife.44993
View details for PubMedID 31184587
-
Serum electrolytes can promote hydroxyl radical-initiated biomolecular damage from inflammation.
Free radical biology & medicine
2019; 141: 475–82
Abstract
Chronic inflammatory disorders are associated with biomolecular damage attributed partly to reactions with Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS), particularly hydroxyl radicals (•OH). However, the impacts of serum electrolytes on ROS-associated damage has received little attention. We demonstrate that the conversion of •OH to carbonate and halogen radicals via reactions with serum-relevant carbonate and halide concentrations fundamentally alters the targeting of amino acids and loss of enzymatic activity in catalase, albumin and carbonic anhydrase, three important blood proteins. Chemical kinetic modeling indicated that carbonate and halogen radical concentrations should exceed •OH concentrations by 6 and 2 orders of magnitude, respectively. Steady-state γ-radiolysis experiments demonstrated that serum-level carbonates and halides increased tyrosine, tryptophan and enzymatic activity losses in catalase up to 6-fold. These outcomes were specific to carbonates and halides, not general ionic strength effects. Serum carbonates and halides increased the degradation of tyrosines and methionines in albumin, and increased the degradation of histidines while decreasing enzymatic activity loss in carbonic anhydrase. Serum electrolytes increased the degradation of tyrosines, tryptophans and enzymatic activity in the model enzyme, ketosteroid isomerase, predominantly due to carbonate radical reactions. Treatment of a mutant ketosteroid isomerase indicated that preferential targeting of the active site tyrosine accounted for half of the total tyrosine loss. The results suggest that carbonate and halogen radicals may be more significant than •OH as drivers for protein degradation in serum. Accounting for the selective targeting of biomolecules by these daughter radicals is important for developing a mechanistic understanding of the consequences of oxidative stress.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2019.07.023
View details for PubMedID 31349038
-
Increasing the length of poly-pyrimidine bulges broadens RNA conformational ensembles with minimal impact on stacking energetics
RNA
2018; 24 (10): 1363–76
Abstract
Helical elements separated by bulges frequently undergo transitions between unstacked and coaxially stacked conformations during the folding and function of noncoding RNAs. Here, we examine the dynamic properties of poly-pyrimidine bulges of varying length (n = 1-4, 7) across a range of Mg2+ concentrations using HIV-1 TAR RNA as a model system and solution NMR spectroscopy. In the absence of Mg2+, helices linked by bulges with n ≥ 3 residues adopt predominantly unstacked conformations (stacked population <15%), whereas one-bulge and two-bulge motifs adopt predominantly stacked conformations (stacked population >74%). In the presence of 3 mM Mg2+, the helices predominantly coaxially stack (stacked population >84%), regardless of bulge length, and the midpoint for the Mg2+-dependent stacking transition is within threefold regardless of bulge length. In the absence of Mg2+, the difference between free energy of interhelical coaxial stacking across the bulge variants is estimated to be ∼2.9 kcal/mol, based on an NMR chemical shift mapping with stacking being more energetically disfavored for the longer bulges. This difference decreases to ∼0.4 kcal/mol in the presence of Mg2+ NMR RDCs and resonance intensity data show increased dynamics in the stacked state with increasing bulge length in the presence of Mg2+ We propose that Mg2+ helps to neutralize the growing electrostatic repulsion in the stacked state with increasing bulge length thereby increasing the number of coaxial conformations that are sampled. Energetically compensated interhelical stacking dynamics may help to maximize the conformational adaptability of RNA and allow a wide range of conformations to be optimally stabilized by proteins and ligands.
View details for PubMedID 30012568
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC6140463
-
The Story of RNA Folding, as Told in Epochs.
Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology
2018; 10 (10)
Abstract
SUMMARYThe past decades have witnessed tremendous developments in our understanding of RNA biology. At the core of these advances have been studies aimed at discerning RNA structure and at understanding the forces that influence the RNA folding process. It is easy to take the present state of understanding for granted, but there is much to be learned by considering the path to our current understanding, which has been tortuous, with the birth and death of models, the adaptation of experimental tools originally developed for characterization of protein structure and catalysis, and the development of novel tools for probing RNA. In this review we tour the stages of RNA folding studies, considering them as "epochs" that can be generalized across scientific disciplines. These epochs span from the discovery of catalytic RNA, through biophysical insights into the putative primordial RNA World, to characterization of structured RNAs, the building and testing of models, and, finally, to the development of models with the potential to yield generalizable predictive and quantitative models for RNA conformational, thermodynamic, and kinetic behavior. We hope that this accounting will aid others as they navigate the many fascinating questions about RNA and its roles in biology, in the past, present, and future.
View details for PubMedID 30275276
-
Structural Coupling Throughout the Active Site Hydrogen Bond Networks of Ketosteroid Isomerase and Photoactive Yellow Protein
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2018; 140 (31): 9827–43
Abstract
Hydrogen bonds are fundamental to biological systems and are regularly found in networks implicated in folding, molecular recognition, catalysis, and allostery. Given their ubiquity, we asked the fundamental questions of whether, and to what extent, hydrogen bonds within networks are structurally coupled. To address these questions, we turned to three protein systems, two variants of ketosteroid isomerase and one of photoactive yellow protein. We perturbed their hydrogen bond networks via a combination of site-directed mutagenesis and unnatural amino acid substitution, and we used 1H NMR and high-resolution X-ray crystallography to determine the effects of these perturbations on the lengths of the two oxyanion hole hydrogen bonds that are donated to negatively charged transition state analogs. Perturbations that lengthened or shortened one of the oxyanion hole hydrogen bonds had the opposite effect on the other. The oxyanion hole hydrogen bonds were also affected by distal hydrogen bonds in the network, with smaller perturbations for more remote hydrogen bonds. Across 19 measurements in three systems, the length change in one oxyanion hole hydrogen bond was propagated to the other, by a factor of -0.30 ± 0.03. This common effect suggests that hydrogen bond coupling is minimally influenced by the remaining protein scaffold. The observed coupling is reproduced by molecular mechanics and quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) calculations for changes to a proximal oxyanion hole hydrogen bond. However, effects from distal hydrogen bonds are reproduced only by QM/MM, suggesting the importance of polarization in hydrogen bond coupling. These results deepen our understanding of hydrogen bonds and their networks, providing strong evidence for long-range coupling and for the extent of this coupling. We provide a broadly predictive quantitative relationship that can be applied to and can be further tested in new systems.
View details for DOI 10.1021/jacs.8b01596
View details for Web of Science ID 000441475800011
View details for PubMedID 29990421
-
High-Throughput Investigation of Diverse Junction Elements in RNA Tertiary Folding.
Cell
2018
Abstract
RNAs fold into defined tertiary structures to function in critical biological processes. While quantitative models can predict RNA secondary structure stability, we are still unable to predict the thermodynamic stability of RNA tertiary structure. Here, we probe conformational preferences of diverse RNA two-way junctions to develop a predictive model for the formation of RNA tertiary structure. We quantitatively measured tertiary assembly energetics of >1,000 of RNA junctions inserted in multiple structural scaffolds to generate a "thermodynamic fingerprint" for each junction. Thermodynamic fingerprints enabled comparison of junction conformational preferences, revealing principles for how sequence influences 3-dimensional conformations. Utilizing fingerprints of junctions with known crystal structures, we generated ensembles for related junctions that predicted their thermodynamic effects on assembly formation. This work reveals sequence-structure-energeticrelationships in RNA, demonstrates the capacity fordiverse compensation strategies within tertiary structures, and provides a path to quantitative modeling of RNA folding energetics based on "ensemble modularity."
View details for PubMedID 29961580
-
Hydrogen Bonds: Simple after All?
BIOCHEMISTRY
2018; 57 (24): 3338–52
Abstract
Hydrogen bonds play integral roles in biological structure, function, and conformational dynamics and are fundamental to life as it has evolved on Earth. However, our understanding of these fundamental and ubiquitous interactions has seemed fractured and incomplete, and it has been difficult to extract generalities and principles about hydrogen bonds despite thousands of papers published on this topic, perhaps in part because of the expanse of this subject and the density of studies. Fortunately, recent hydrogen bond proposals, discussions, and debates have stimulated new tests and models and have led to a remarkably simple picture of the structure of hydrogen bonds. This knowledge also provides clarity concerning hydrogen bond energetics, limiting and simplifying the factors that need be considered. Herein we recount the advances that have led to this simpler view of hydrogen bond structure, dynamics, and energetics. A quantitative predictive model for hydrogen bond length can now be broadly and deeply applied to evaluate current proposals and to uncover structural features of proteins, their conformational restraints, and their correlated motions. In contrast, a quantitative energetic description of molecular recognition and catalysis by proteins remains an important ongoing challenge, although our improved understanding of hydrogen bonds may aid in testing predictions from current and future models. We close by codifying our current state of understanding into five "Rules for Hydrogen Bonding" that may provide a foundation for understanding and teaching about these vital interactions and for building toward a deeper understanding of hydrogen bond energetics.
View details for DOI 10.1021/acs.biochem.8b00217
View details for Web of Science ID 000436026000004
View details for PubMedID 29678112
-
Recording and Analyzing Nucleic Acid Distance Distributions with X-Ray Scattering Interferometry (XSI).
Current protocols in nucleic acid chemistry
2018; 73 (1): e54
Abstract
Most structural techniques provide averaged information or information about a single predominant conformational state. However, biological macromolecules typically function through series of conformations. Therefore, a complete understanding of macromolecular structures requires knowledge of the ensembles that represent probabilities on a conformational free energy landscape. Here we describe an emerging approach, X-ray scattering interferometry (XSI), a method that provides instantaneous distance distributions for molecules in solution. XSI uses gold nanocrystal labels site-specifically attached to a macromolecule and measures the scattering interference from pairs of heavy metal labels. The recorded signal can directly be transformed into a distance distribution between the two probes. We describe the underlying concepts, present a detailed protocol for preparing samples and recording XSI data, and provide a custom-written graphical user interface to facilitate XSI data analysis. © 2018 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
View details for PubMedID 29927110
-
Gold nanocrystal labels provide a sequence-to-3D structure map in SAXS reconstructions
SCIENCE ADVANCES
2018; 4 (5): eaar4418
Abstract
Small-angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) is a powerful technique to probe the structure of biological macromolecules and their complexes under virtually arbitrary solution conditions, without the need for crystallization. While it is possible to reconstruct molecular shapes from SAXS data ab initio, the resulting electron density maps have a resolution of ~1 nm and are often insufficient to reliably assign secondary structure elements or domains. We show that SAXS data of gold-labeled samples significantly enhance the information content of SAXS measurements, allowing the unambiguous assignment of macromolecular sequence motifs to specific locations within a SAXS structure. We first demonstrate our approach for site-specifically internally and end-labeled DNA and an RNA motif. In addition, we present a protocol for highly uniform and site-specific labeling of proteins with small (~1.4 nm diameter) gold particles and apply our method to the signaling protein calmodulin. In all cases, the position of the small gold probes can be reliably identified in low-resolution electron density maps. Enhancing low-resolution measurements by site-selective gold labeling provides an attractive approach to aid modeling of a large range of macromolecular systems.
View details for PubMedID 29806025
-
Hidden Structural Modules in a Cooperative RNA Folding Transition
CELL REPORTS
2018; 22 (12): 3240–50
Abstract
Large-scale, cooperative rearrangements underlie the functions of RNA in RNA-protein machines and gene regulation. To understand how such rearrangements are orchestrated, we used high-throughput chemical footprinting to dissect a seemingly concerted rearrangement in P5abc RNA, a paradigm of RNA folding studies. With mutations that systematically disrupt or restore putative structural elements, we found that this transition reflects local folding of structural modules, with modest and incremental cooperativity that results in concerted behavior. First, two distant secondary structure changes are coupled through a bridging three-way junction and Mg2+-dependent tertiary structure. Second, long-range contacts are formed between modules, resulting in additional cooperativity. Given the sparseness of RNA tertiary contacts after secondary structure formation, we expect that modular folding and incremental cooperativity are generally important for specifying functional structures while also providing productive kinetic paths to these structures. Additionally, we expect our approach to be useful for uncovering modularity in other complex RNAs.
View details for PubMedID 29562180
-
Dissecting the Electrostatics of Nucleic Acids
CELL PRESS. 2018: 441A–442A
View details for Web of Science ID 000430450000701
-
Differential catalytic promiscuity of the alkaline phosphatase superfamily bimetallo core reveals mechanistic features underlying enzyme evolution
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
2017; 292 (51): 20960–74
Abstract
Members of enzyme superfamilies specialize in different reactions but often exhibit catalytic promiscuity for one another's reactions, consistent with catalytic promiscuity as an important driver in the evolution of new enzymes. Wanting to understand how catalytic promiscuity and other factors may influence evolution across a superfamily, we turned to the well-studied alkaline phosphatase (AP) superfamily, comparing three of its members, two evolutionarily distinct phosphatases and a phosphodiesterase. We mutated distinguishing active-site residues to generate enzymes that had a common Zn2+ bimetallo core but little sequence similarity and different auxiliary domains. We then tested the catalytic capabilities of these pruned enzymes with a series of substrates. A substantial rate enhancement of ∼1011-fold for both phosphate mono- and diester hydrolysis by each enzyme indicated that the Zn2+ bimetallo core is an effective mono/di-esterase generalist and that the bimetallo cores were not evolutionarily tuned to prefer their cognate reactions. In contrast, our pruned enzymes were ineffective sulfatases, and this limited promiscuity may have provided a driving force for founding the distinct one-metal-ion branch that contains all known AP superfamily sulfatases. Finally, our pruned enzymes exhibited 107-108-fold phosphotriesterase rate enhancements, despite absence of such enzymes within the AP superfamily. We speculate that the superfamily active-site architecture involved in nucleophile positioning prevents accommodation of the additional triester substituent. Overall, we suggest that catalytic promiscuity, and the ease or difficulty of remodeling and building onto existing protein scaffolds, have greatly influenced the course of enzyme evolution. Uncovering principles and properties of enzyme function, promiscuity, and repurposing provides lessons for engineering new enzymes.
View details for PubMedID 29070681
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC5743071
-
Slow molecular recognition by RNA
RNA
2017; 23 (12): 1745–53
Abstract
Molecular recognition is central to biological processes, function, and specificity. Proteins associate with ligands with a wide range of association rate constants, with maximal values matching the theoretical limit set by the rate of diffusional collision. As less is known about RNA association, we compiled association rate constants for all RNA/ligand complexes that we could find in the literature. Like proteins, RNAs exhibit a wide range of association rate constants. However, the fastest RNA association rates are considerably slower than those of the fastest protein associations and fall well below the diffusional limit. The apparently general observation of slow association with RNAs has implications for evolution and for modern-day biology. Our compilation highlights a quantitative molecular property that can contribute to biological understanding and underscores our need to develop a deeper physical understanding of molecular recognition events.
View details for PubMedID 28971853
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC5688996
-
Quantitative tests of a reconstitution model for RNA folding thermodynamics and kinetics
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2017; 114 (37): E7688–E7696
Abstract
Decades of study of the architecture and function of structured RNAs have led to the perspective that RNA tertiary structure is modular, made of locally stable domains that retain their structure across RNAs. We formalize a hypothesis inspired by this modularity-that RNA folding thermodynamics and kinetics can be quantitatively predicted from separable energetic contributions of the individual components of a complex RNA. This reconstitution hypothesis considers RNA tertiary folding in terms of ΔGalign, the probability of aligning tertiary contact partners, and ΔGtert, the favorable energetic contribution from the formation of tertiary contacts in an aligned state. This hypothesis predicts that changes in the alignment of tertiary contacts from different connecting helices and junctions (ΔGHJH) or from changes in the electrostatic environment (ΔG+/-) will not affect the energetic perturbation from a mutation in a tertiary contact (ΔΔGtert). Consistent with these predictions, single-molecule FRET measurements of folding of model RNAs revealed constant ΔΔGtert values for mutations in a tertiary contact embedded in different structural contexts and under different electrostatic conditions. The kinetic effects of these mutations provide further support for modular behavior of RNA elements and suggest that tertiary mutations may be used to identify rate-limiting steps and dissect folding and assembly pathways for complex RNAs. Overall, our model and results are foundational for a predictive understanding of RNA folding that will allow manipulation of RNA folding thermodynamics and kinetics. Conversely, the approaches herein can identify cases where an independent, additive model cannot be applied and so require additional investigation.
View details for PubMedID 28839094
-
An Activator-Blocker Pair Provides a Controllable On-Off Switch for a Ketosteroid Isomerase Active Site Mutant
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2017; 139 (32): 11089–95
Abstract
Control of enzyme activity is fundamental to biology and represents a long-term goal in bioengineering and precision therapeutics. While several powerful molecular strategies have been developed, limitations remain in their generalizability and dynamic range. We demonstrate a control mechanism via separate small molecules that turn on the enzyme (activator) and turn off the activation (blocker). We show that a pocket created near the active site base of the enzyme ketosteriod isomerase (KSI) allows efficient and saturable base rescue when the enzyme's natural general base is removed. Binding a small molecule with similar properties but lacking general-base capability in this pocket shuts off rescue. The ability of small molecules to directly participate in and directly block catalysis may afford a broad controllable dynamic range. This approach may be amenable to numerous enzymes and to engineering and screening approaches to identify activators and blockers with strong, specific binding for engineering and therapeutic applications.
View details for PubMedID 28719738
-
Kemp Eliminase Activity of Ketosteroid Isomerase
BIOCHEMISTRY
2017; 56 (4): 582-591
Abstract
Kemp eliminases represent the most successful class of computationally designed enzymes, with rate accelerations of up to 10(9)-fold relative to the rate of the same reaction in aqueous solution. Nevertheless, several other systems such as micelles, catalytic antibodies, and cavitands are known to accelerate the Kemp elimination by several orders of magnitude. We found that the naturally occurring enzyme ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) also catalyzes the Kemp elimination. Surprisingly, mutations of D38, the residue that acts as a general base for its natural substrate, produced variants that catalyze the Kemp elimination up to 7000-fold better than wild-type KSI does, and some of these variants accelerate the Kemp elimination more than the computationally designed Kemp eliminases. Analysis of the D38N general base KSI variant suggests that a different active site carboxylate residue, D99, performs the proton abstraction. Docking simulations and analysis of inhibition by active site binders suggest that the Kemp elimination takes place in the active site of KSI and that KSI uses the same catalytic strategies of the computationally designed enzymes. In agreement with prior observations, our results strengthen the conclusion that significant rate accelerations of the Kemp elimination can be achieved with very few, nonspecific interactions with the substrate if a suitable catalytic base is present in a hydrophobic environment. Computational design can fulfill these requirements, and the design of more complex and precise environments represents the next level of challenges for protein design.
View details for DOI 10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00762
View details for Web of Science ID 000393355400004
View details for PubMedID 28045505
-
Pseudouridine and N-6 methyladenosine modifications weaken PUF protein/RNA interactions.
RNA (New York, N.Y.)
2017
Abstract
RNA modifications are ubiquitous in biology, with over 100 distinct modifications. While the vast majority were identified and characterized on abundant noncoding RNA such as tRNA and rRNA, the advent of sensitive sequencing-based approaches has led to the discovery of extensive and regulated modification of eukaryotic messenger RNAs as well. The two most abundant mRNA modifications-pseudouridine (Ψ) and N(6)-methyladenosine (m(6)A)-affect diverse cellular processes including mRNA splicing, localization, translation, and decay and modulate RNA structure. Here, we test the hypothesis that RNA modifications directly affect interactions between RNA-binding proteins and target RNA. We show that Ψ and m(6)A weaken the binding of the human single-stranded RNA binding protein Pumilio 2 (hPUM2) to its consensus motif, with individual modifications having effects up to approximately threefold and multiple modifications giving larger effects. While there are likely to be some cases where RNA modifications essentially fully ablate protein binding, here we see modest responses that may be more common. Such modest effects could nevertheless profoundly alter the complex landscape of RNA:protein interactions, and the quantitative rather than qualitative nature of these effects underscores the need for quantitative, systems-level accounting of RNA:protein interactions to understand post-transcriptional regulation.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.060053.116
View details for PubMedID 28138061
-
Lessons from Enzyme Kinetics Reveal Specificity Principles for RNA-Guided Nucleases in RNA Interference and CRISPR-Based Genome Editing.
Cell systems
2017; 4 (1): 21-29
Abstract
RNA-guided nucleases (RGNs) provide sequence-specific gene regulation through base-pairing interactions between a small RNA guide and target RNA or DNA. RGN systems, which include CRISPR-Cas9 and RNA interference (RNAi), hold tremendous promise as programmable tools for engineering and therapeutic purposes. However, pervasive targeting of sequences that closely resemble the intended target has remained a major challenge, limiting the reliability and interpretation of RGN activity and the range of possible applications. Efforts to reduce off-target activity and enhance RGN specificity have led to a collection of empirically derived rules, which often paradoxically include decreased binding affinity of the RNA-guided nuclease to its target. We consider the kinetics of these reactions and show that basic kinetic properties can explain the specificities observed in the literature and the changes in these specificities in engineered systems. The kinetic models described provide a foundation for understanding RGN targeting and a necessary conceptual framework for their rational engineering.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.cels.2016.12.010
View details for PubMedID 28125791
-
Determination of the conformational ensemble of the TAR RNA by X-ray scattering interferometry.
Nucleic acids research
2017
Abstract
The conformational ensembles of structured RNA's are crucial for biological function, but they remain difficult to elucidate experimentally. We demonstrate with HIV-1 TAR RNA that X-ray scattering interferometry (XSI) can be used to determine RNA conformational ensembles. X-ray scattering interferometry (XSI) is based on site-specifically labeling RNA with pairs of heavy atom probes, and precisely measuring the distribution of inter-probe distances that arise from a heterogeneous mixture of RNA solution structures. We show that the XSI-based model of the TAR RNA ensemble closely resembles an independent model derived from NMR-RDC data. Further, we show how the TAR RNA ensemble changes shape at different salt concentrations. Finally, we demonstrate that a single hybrid model of the TAR RNA ensemble simultaneously fits both the XSI and NMR-RDC data set and show that XSI can be combined with NMR-RDC to further improve the quality of the determined ensemble. The results suggest that XSI-RNA will be a powerful approach for characterizing the solution conformational ensembles of RNAs and RNA-protein complexes under diverse solution conditions.
View details for DOI 10.1093/nar/gkw1352
View details for PubMedID 28108663
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC5416899
-
Single-Molecule Fluorescence Reveals Commonalities and Distinctions among Natural and in Vitro-Selected RNA Tertiary Motifs in a Multistep Folding Pathway
Journal of the American Chemical Society
2017: 18576-18589
Abstract
Decades of study of the RNA folding problem have revealed that diverse and complex structured RNAs are built from a common set of recurring structural motifs, leading to the perspective that a generalizable model of RNA folding may be developed from understanding of the folding properties of individual structural motifs. We used single-molecule fluorescence to dissect the kinetic and thermodynamic properties of a set of variants of a common tertiary structural motif, the tetraloop/tetraloop-receptor (TL/TLR). Our results revealed a multistep TL/TLR folding pathway in which preorganization of the ubiquitous AA-platform submotif precedes the formation of the docking transition state and tertiary A-minor hydrogen bond interactions form after the docking transition state. Differences in ion dependences between TL/TLR variants indicated the occurrence of sequence-dependent conformational rearrangements prior to and after the formation of the docking transition state. Nevertheless, varying the junction connecting the TL/TLR produced a common kinetic and ionic effect for all variants, suggesting that the global conformational search and compaction electrostatics are energetically independent from the formation of the tertiary motif contacts. We also found that in vitro-selected variants, despite their similar stability at high Mg2+ concentrations, are considerably less stable than natural variants under near-physiological ionic conditions, and the occurrence of the TL/TLR sequence variants in Nature correlates with their thermodynamic stability in isolation. Overall, our findings are consistent with modular but complex energetic properties of RNA structural motifs and will aid in the eventual quantitative description of RNA folding from its secondary and tertiary structural elements.
View details for DOI 10.1021/jacs.7b08870
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC5748328
-
Determination of Ion Atmosphere Effects on the Nucleic Acid Electrostatic Potential and Ligand Association Using AH+·C Wobble Formation in Double-Stranded DNA
J. Am. Chem. Soc.
2017; 22 (139): 7540-7548
View details for DOI 10.1021/jacs.7b01830
-
Mechanistic and Evolutionary Insights from Comparative Enzymology of Phosphomonoesterases and Phosphodiesterases across the Alkaline Phosphatase Superfamily.
Journal of the American Chemical Society
2016; 138 (43): 14273-14287
Abstract
Naively one might have expected an early division between phosphate monoesterases and diesterases of the alkaline phosphatase (AP) superfamily. On the contrary, prior results and our structural and biochemical analyses of phosphate monoesterase PafA, from Chryseobacterium meningosepticum, indicate similarities to a superfamily phosphate diesterase [Xanthomonas citri nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase (NPP)] and distinct differences from the three metal ion AP superfamily monoesterase, from Escherichia coli AP (EcAP). We carried out a series of experiments to map out and learn from the differences and similarities between these enzymes. First, we asked why there would be independent instances of monoesterases in the AP superfamily? PafA has a much weaker product inhibition and slightly higher activity relative to EcAP, suggesting that different metabolic evolutionary pressures favored distinct active-site architectures. Next, we addressed the preferential phosphate monoester and diester catalysis of PafA and NPP, respectively. We asked whether the >80% sequence differences throughout these scaffolds provide functional specialization for each enzyme's cognate reaction. In contrast to expectations from this model, PafA and NPP mutants with the common subset of active-site groups embedded in each native scaffold had the same monoesterase:diesterase specificities; thus, the >10(7)-fold difference in native specificities appears to arise from distinct interactions at a single phosphoryl substituent. We also uncovered striking mechanistic similarities between the PafA and EcAP monoesterases, including evidence for ground-state destabilization and functional active-site networks that involve different active-site groups but may play analogous catalytic roles. Discovering common network functions may reveal active-site architectural connections that are critical for function, and identifying regions of functional modularity may facilitate the design of new enzymes from existing promiscuous templates. More generally, comparative enzymology and analysis of catalytic promiscuity can provide mechanistic and evolutionary insights.
View details for PubMedID 27670607
-
RNA Structural Modules Control the Rate and Pathway of RNA Folding and Assembly
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2016; 428 (20): 3972-3985
Abstract
Structured RNAs fold through multiple pathways, but we have little understanding of the molecular features that dictate folding pathways and determine rates along a given pathway. Here, we asked whether folding of a complex RNA can be understood from its structural modules. In a two-piece version of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme, the separated P5abc subdomain folds to local native secondary and tertiary structure in a linked transition and assembles with the ribozyme core via three tertiary contacts: a kissing loop (P14), a metal core-receptor interaction, and a tetraloop-receptor interaction, the first two of which are expected to depend on native P5abc structure from the local transition. Native gel, NMR, and chemical footprinting experiments showed that mutations that destabilize the native P5abc structure slowed assembly up to 100-fold, indicating that P5abc folds first and then assembles with the core by conformational selection. However, rate decreases beyond 100-fold were not observed because an alternative pathway becomes dominant, with nonnative P5abc binding the core and then undergoing an induced-fit rearrangement. P14 is formed in the rate-limiting step along the conformational selection pathway but after the rate-limiting step along the induced-fit pathway. Strikingly, the assembly rate along the conformational selection pathway resembles that of an isolated kissing loop similar to P14, and the rate along the induced-fit pathway resembles that of an isolated tetraloop-receptor interaction. Our results indicate substantial modularity in RNA folding and assembly and suggest that these processes can be understood in terms of underlying structural modules.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jmb.2016.07.013
View details for Web of Science ID 000385324000008
View details for PubMedID 27452365
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC5048535
-
Does Cation Size Affect Occupancy and Electrostatic Screening of the Nucleic Acid Ion Atmosphere?
Journal of the American Chemical Society
2016; 138 (34): 10925-10934
Abstract
Electrostatics are central to all aspects of nucleic acid behavior, including their folding, condensation, and binding to other molecules, and the energetics of these processes are profoundly influenced by the ion atmosphere that surrounds nucleic acids. Given the highly complex and dynamic nature of the ion atmosphere, understanding its properties and effects will require synergy between computational modeling and experiment. Prior computational models and experiments suggest that cation occupancy in the ion atmosphere depends on the size of the cation. However, the computational models have not been independently tested, and the experimentally observed effects were small. Here, we evaluate a computational model of ion size effects by experimentally testing a blind prediction made from that model, and we present additional experimental results that extend our understanding of the ion atmosphere. Giambasu et al. developed and implemented a three-dimensional reference interaction site (3D-RISM) model for monovalent cations surrounding DNA and RNA helices, and this model predicts that Na(+) would outcompete Cs(+) by 1.8-2.1-fold; i.e., with Cs(+) in 2-fold excess of Na(+) the ion atmosphere would contain an equal number of each cation (Nucleic Acids Res. 2015, 43, 8405). However, our ion counting experiments indicate that there is no significant preference for Na(+) over Cs(+). There is an ∼25% preferential occupancy of Li(+) over larger cations in the ion atmosphere but, counter to general expectations from existing models, no size dependence for the other alkali metal ions. Further, we followed the folding of the P4-P6 RNA and showed that differences in folding with different alkali metal ions observed at high concentration arise from cation-anion interactions and not cation size effects. Overall, our results provide a critical test of a computational prediction, fundamental information about ion atmosphere properties, and parameters that will aid in the development of next-generation nucleic acid computational models.
View details for DOI 10.1021/jacs.6b04289
View details for PubMedID 27479701
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC5010015
-
Kinetic and thermodynamic framework for P4-P6 RNA reveals tertiary motif modularity and modulation of the folding preferred pathway.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2016; 113 (34): E4956-65
Abstract
The past decade has seen a wealth of 3D structural information about complex structured RNAs and identification of functional intermediates. Nevertheless, developing a complete and predictive understanding of the folding and function of these RNAs in biology will require connection of individual rate and equilibrium constants to structural changes that occur in individual folding steps and further relating these steps to the properties and behavior of isolated, simplified systems. To accomplish these goals we used the considerable structural knowledge of the folded, unfolded, and intermediate states of P4-P6 RNA. We enumerated structural states and possible folding transitions and determined rate and equilibrium constants for the transitions between these states using single-molecule FRET with a series of mutant P4-P6 variants. Comparisons with simplified constructs containing an isolated tertiary contact suggest that a given tertiary interaction has a stereotyped rate for breaking that may help identify structural transitions within complex RNAs and simplify the prediction of folding kinetics and thermodynamics for structured RNAs from their parts. The preferred folding pathway involves initial formation of the proximal tertiary contact. However, this preference was only ∼10 fold and could be reversed by a single point mutation, indicating that a model akin to a protein-folding contact order model will not suffice to describe RNA folding. Instead, our results suggest a strong analogy with a modified RNA diffusion-collision model in which tertiary elements within preformed secondary structures collide, with the success of these collisions dependent on whether the tertiary elements are in their rare binding-competent conformations.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.1525082113
View details for PubMedID 27493222
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC5003260
-
Evaluation of the Catalytic Contribution from a Positioned General Base in Ketosteroid Isomerase.
Journal of the American Chemical Society
2016; 138 (31): 9902-9909
Abstract
Proton transfer reactions are ubiquitous in enzymes and utilize active site residues as general acids and bases. Crystal structures and site-directed mutagenesis are routinely used to identify these residues, but assessment of their catalytic contribution remains a major challenge. In principle, effective molarity measurements, in which exogenous acids/bases rescue the reaction in mutants lacking these residues, can estimate these catalytic contributions. However, these exogenous moieties can be restricted in reactivity by steric hindrance or enhanced by binding interactions with nearby residues, thereby resulting in over- or underestimation of the catalytic contribution, respectively. With these challenges in mind, we investigated the catalytic contribution of an aspartate general base in ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) by exogenous rescue. In addition to removing the general base, we systematically mutated nearby residues and probed each mutant with a series of carboxylate bases of similar pKa but varying size. Our results underscore the need for extensive and multifaceted variation to assess and minimize steric and positioning effects and determine effective molarities that estimate catalytic contributions. We obtained consensus effective molarities of ∼5 × 10(4) M for KSI from Comamonas testosteroni (tKSI) and ∼10(3) M for KSI from Pseudomonas putida (pKSI). An X-ray crystal structure of a tKSI general base mutant showed no additional structural rearrangements, and double mutant cycles revealed similar contributions from an oxyanion hole mutation in the wild-type and base-rescued reactions, providing no indication of mutational effects extending beyond the general base site. Thus, the high effective molarities suggest a large catalytic contribution associated with the general base. A significant portion of this effect presumably arises from positioning of the base, but its large magnitude suggests the involvement of additional catalytic mechanisms as well.
View details for DOI 10.1021/jacs.6b04796
View details for PubMedID 27410422
-
Tungstate as a Transition State Analog for Catalysis by Alkaline Phosphatase
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2016; 428 (13): 2758-2768
Abstract
The catalytic mechanisms underlying Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase's (AP) remarkable rate enhancement have been probed extensively. Past work indicated that whereas the serine nucleophile (Ser102) electrostatically repels the product phosphate, another oxyanion, tungstate, binds more strongly in the presence of Ser102. These results predict a covalent bond between the serine nucleophile and tungstate, a model that we test herein. The crystal structure of tungstate-bound alkaline phosphatase provides evidence for a covalent adduct model and further shows that the ligand adopts trigonal bipyramidal geometry, which is infrequently observed for tungstate in small molecules and other active sites but mirrors the geometry of the presumed phosphoryl transfer transition state. The AP active site is known to stabilize another oxyanion, vanadate, in trigonal bipyramidal geometry, but the extent to which binding of either ligand reproduces the energetics of the transition state cannot be deduced from structural inspection alone. To test for transition state analog behavior, we determined the relationship between catalytic activity and affinity for tungstate and vanadate for a series of 20 AP variants. Affinity and activity were highly correlated for tungstate (r(2) = 0.89) but not vanadate (r(2) = 0.23), indicating that the tungstate•AP complex may better mimic this enzyme's transition state properties. The results herein suggest that tungstate will be a valuable tool for further dissecting AP catalysis and may prove helpful in mechanistic studies of other phosphoryl transfer enzymes.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jmb.2016.05.007
View details for Web of Science ID 000378958500007
View details for PubMedID 27189921
-
Correction to "Evaluating the Catalytic Contribution from the Oxyanion Hole in Ketosteroid Isomerase".
Journal of the American Chemical Society
2016; 138 (24): 7801-7802
View details for DOI 10.1021/jacs.6b04665
View details for PubMedID 27299372
-
Visualizing the formation of an RNA folding intermediate through a fast highly modular secondary structure switch
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
2016; 7
Abstract
Intermediates play important roles in RNA folding but can be difficult to characterize when short-lived or not significantly populated. By combining (15)N relaxation dispersion NMR with chemical probing, we visualized a fast (kex=k1+k-1≈423 s(-1)) secondary structural switch directed towards a low-populated (∼3%) partially folded intermediate in tertiary folding of the P5abc subdomain of the 'Tetrahymena' group I intron ribozyme. The secondary structure switch changes the base-pairing register across the P5c hairpin, creating a native-like structure, and occurs at rates of more than two orders of magnitude faster than tertiary folding. The switch occurs robustly in the absence of tertiary interactions, Mg(2+) or even when the hairpin is excised from the three-way junction. Fast, highly modular secondary structural switches may be quite common during RNA tertiary folding where they may help smoothen the folding landscape by allowing folding to proceed efficiently via additional pathways.
View details for DOI 10.1038/ncomms11768
View details for Web of Science ID 000378386700001
View details for PubMedID 27292179
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4909931
-
The solution structural ensembles of RNA kink-turn motifs and their protein complexes.
Nature chemical biology
2016; 12 (3): 146-152
Abstract
With the growing number of crystal structures of RNA and RNA-protein complexes, a critical next step is understanding the dynamic solution behavior of these entities in terms of conformational ensembles and energy landscapes. To this end, we have used X-ray scattering interferometry (XSI) to probe the ubiquitous RNA kink-turn motif and its complexes with the canonical kink-turn binding protein L7Ae. XSI revealed that the folded kink-turn is best described as a restricted conformational ensemble. The ions present in solution alter the nature of this ensemble, and protein binding can perturb the kink-turn ensemble without collapsing it to a unique state. This study demonstrates how XSI can reveal structural and ensemble properties of RNAs and RNA-protein complexes and uncovers the behavior of an important RNA-protein motif. This type of information will be necessary to understand, predict and engineer the behavior and function of RNAs and their protein complexes.
View details for DOI 10.1038/nchembio.1997
View details for PubMedID 26727239
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4755865
-
High-throughput analysis and protein engineering using microcapillary arrays.
Nature chemical biology
2016; 12 (2): 76-81
Abstract
We describe a multipurpose technology platform, termed μSCALE (microcapillary single-cell analysis and laser extraction), that enables massively parallel, quantitative biochemical and biophysical measurements on millions of protein variants expressed from yeast or bacteria. μSCALE spatially segregates single cells within a microcapillary array, enabling repeated imaging, cell growth and protein expression. We performed high-throughput analysis of cells and their protein products using a range of fluorescent assays, including binding-affinity measurements and dynamic enzymatic assays. A precise laser-based extraction method allows rapid recovery of live clones and their genetic material from microcapillaries for further study. With μSCALE, we discovered a new antibody against a clinical cancer target, evolved a fluorescent protein biosensor and engineered an enzyme to reduce its sensitivity to its inhibitor. These protein analysis and engineering applications each have unique assay requirements and different host organisms, highlighting the flexibility and technical capabilities of the μSCALE platform.
View details for DOI 10.1038/nchembio.1978
View details for PubMedID 26641932
-
An active site rearrangement within the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme releases nonproductive interactions and allows formation of catalytic interactions.
RNA
2016; 22 (1): 32-48
Abstract
Biological catalysis hinges on the precise structural integrity of an active site that binds and transforms its substrates and meeting this requirement presents a unique challenge for RNA enzymes. Functional RNAs, including ribozymes, fold into their active conformations within rugged energy landscapes that often contain misfolded conformers. Here we uncover and characterize one such "off-pathway" species within an active site after overall folding of the ribozyme is complete. The Tetrahymena group I ribozyme (E) catalyzes cleavage of an oligonucleotide substrate (S) by an exogenous guanosine (G) cofactor. We tested whether specific catalytic interactions with G are present in the preceding E•S•G and E•G ground-state complexes. We monitored interactions with G via the effects of 2'- and 3'-deoxy (-H) and -amino (-NH(2)) substitutions on G binding. These and prior results reveal that G is bound in an inactive configuration within E•G, with the nucleophilic 3'-OH making a nonproductive interaction with an active site metal ion termed MA and with the adjacent 2'-OH making no interaction. Upon S binding, a rearrangement occurs that allows both -OH groups to contact a different active site metal ion, termed M(C), to make what are likely to be their catalytic interactions. The reactive phosphoryl group on S promotes this change, presumably by repositioning the metal ions with respect to G. This conformational transition demonstrates local rearrangements within an otherwise folded RNA, underscoring RNA's difficulty in specifying a unique conformation and highlighting Nature's potential to use local transitions of RNA in complex function.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.053710.115
View details for PubMedID 26567314
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4691833
-
Differential Assembly of Catalytic Interactions within the Conserved Active Sites of Two Ribozymes.
PloS one
2016; 11 (8)
Abstract
Molecular recognition is central to biology and a critical aspect of RNA function. Yet structured RNAs typically lack the preorganization needed for strong binding and precise positioning. A striking example is the group I ribozyme from Tetrahymena, which binds its guanosine substrate (G) orders of magnitude slower than diffusion. Binding of G is also thermodynamically coupled to binding of the oligonucleotide substrate (S) and further work has shown that the transition from E•G to E•S•G accompanies a conformational change that allows G to make the active site interactions required for catalysis. The group I ribozyme from Azoarcus has a similarly slow association rate but lacks the coupled binding observed for the Tetrahymena ribozyme. Here we test, using G analogs and metal ion rescue experiments, whether this absence of coupling arises from a higher degree of preorganization within the Azoarcus active site. Our results suggest that the Azoarcus ribozyme forms cognate catalytic metal ion interactions with G in the E•G complex, interactions that are absent in the Tetrahymena E•G complex. Thus, RNAs that share highly similar active site architectures and catalyze the same reactions can differ in the assembly of transition state interactions. More generally, an ability to readily access distinct local conformational states may have facilitated the evolutionary exploration needed to attain RNA machines that carry out complex, multi-step processes.
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0160457
View details for PubMedID 27501145
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4976970
-
Cation-Anion Interactions within the Nucleic Acid Ion Atmosphere Revealed by Ion Counting.
Journal of the American Chemical Society
2015; 137 (46): 14705-14715
View details for DOI 10.1021/jacs.5b08395
View details for PubMedID 26517731
-
Evolutionary Conservation and Diversification of Puf RNA Binding Proteins and Their mRNA Targets
PLOS BIOLOGY
2015; 13 (11)
Abstract
Reprogramming of a gene's expression pattern by acquisition and loss of sequences recognized by specific regulatory RNA binding proteins may be a major mechanism in the evolution of biological regulatory programs. We identified that RNA targets of Puf3 orthologs have been conserved over 100-500 million years of evolution in five eukaryotic lineages. Focusing on Puf proteins and their targets across 80 fungi, we constructed a parsimonious model for their evolutionary history. This model entails extensive and coordinated changes in the Puf targets as well as changes in the number of Puf genes and alterations of RNA binding specificity including that: 1) Binding of Puf3 to more than 200 RNAs whose protein products are predominantly involved in the production and organization of mitochondrial complexes predates the origin of budding yeasts and filamentous fungi and was maintained for 500 million years, throughout the evolution of budding yeast. 2) In filamentous fungi, remarkably, more than 150 of the ancestral Puf3 targets were gained by Puf4, with one lineage maintaining both Puf3 and Puf4 as regulators and a sister lineage losing Puf3 as a regulator of these RNAs. The decrease in gene expression of these mRNAs upon deletion of Puf4 in filamentous fungi (N. crassa) in contrast to the increase upon Puf3 deletion in budding yeast (S. cerevisiae) suggests that the output of the RNA regulatory network is different with Puf4 in filamentous fungi than with Puf3 in budding yeast. 3) The coregulated Puf4 target set in filamentous fungi expanded to include mitochondrial genes involved in the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and other nuclear-encoded RNAs with mitochondrial function not bound by Puf3 in budding yeast, observations that provide additional evidence for substantial rewiring of post-transcriptional regulation. 4) Puf3 also expanded and diversified its targets in filamentous fungi, gaining interactions with the mRNAs encoding the mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) complex I as well as hundreds of other mRNAs with nonmitochondrial functions. The many concerted and conserved changes in the RNA targets of Puf proteins strongly support an extensive role of RNA binding proteins in coordinating gene expression, as originally proposed by Keene. Rewiring of Puf-coordinated mRNA targets and transcriptional control of the same genes occurred at different points in evolution, suggesting that there have been distinct adaptations via RNA binding proteins and transcription factors. The changes in Puf targets and in the Puf proteins indicate an integral involvement of RNA binding proteins and their RNA targets in the adaptation, reprogramming, and function of gene expression.
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002307
View details for Web of Science ID 000365898900017
View details for PubMedID 26587879
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4654594
-
Comment on "Extreme electric fields power catalysis in the active site of ketosteroid isomerase"
SCIENCE
2015; 349 (6251)
View details for DOI 10.1126/science.aab1584
View details for Web of Science ID 000360646800033
-
Determination of Hydrogen Bond Structure in Water versus Aprotic Environments To Test the Relationship Between Length and Stability
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2015; 137 (17): 5730-5740
Abstract
Hydrogen bonds profoundly influence the architecture and activity of biological macromolecules. Deep appreciation of hydrogen bond contributions to biomolecular function thus requires a detailed understanding of hydrogen bond structure and energetics and the relationship between these properties. Hydrogen bond formation energies (ΔGf) are enormously more favorable in aprotic solvents than in water, and two classes of contributing factors have been proposed to explain this energetic difference, focusing respectively on the isolated and hydrogen-bonded species: (I) water stabilizes the dissociated donor and acceptor groups much better than aprotic solvents, thereby reducing the driving force for hydrogen bond formation; and (II) water lengthens hydrogen bonds compared to aprotic environments, thereby decreasing the potential energy within the hydrogen bond. Each model has been proposed to provide a dominant contribution to ΔGf, but incisive tests that distinguish the importance of these contributions are lacking. Here we directly test the structural basis of model II. Neutron crystallography, NMR spectroscopy, and quantum mechanical calculations demonstrate that O-H···O hydrogen bonds in crystals, chloroform, acetone, and water have nearly identical lengths and very similar potential energy surfaces despite ΔGf differences >8 kcal/mol across these solvents. These results rule out a substantial contribution from solvent-dependent differences in hydrogen bond structure and potential energy after association (model II) and thus support the conclusion that differences in hydrogen bond ΔGf are predominantly determined by solvent interactions with the dissociated groups (model I). These findings advance our understanding of universal hydrogen-bonding interactions and have important implications for biology and engineering.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja512980h
View details for Web of Science ID 000354338500017
View details for PubMedID 25871450
-
Extensive site-directed mutagenesis reveals interconnected functional units in the alkaline phosphatase active site
ELIFE
2015; 4
Abstract
Enzymes enable life by accelerating reaction rates to biological timescales. Conventional studies have focused on identifying the residues that have a direct involvement in an enzymatic reaction, but these so-called 'catalytic residues' are embedded in extensive interaction networks. Although fundamental to our understanding of enzyme function, evolution, and engineering, the properties of these networks have yet to be quantitatively and systematically explored. We dissected an interaction network of five residues in the active site of Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase. Analysis of the complex catalytic interdependence of specific residues identified three energetically independent but structurally interconnected functional units with distinct modes of cooperativity. From an evolutionary perspective, this network is orders of magnitude more probable to arise than a fully cooperative network. From a functional perspective, new catalytic insights emerge. Further, such comprehensive energetic characterization will be necessary to benchmark the algorithms required to rationally engineer highly efficient enzymes.
View details for DOI 10.7554/eLife.06181
View details for Web of Science ID 000372713000001
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4438272
-
Learning from ribozymes
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2015; 21 (4): 527-528
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.050914.115
View details for Web of Science ID 000351216800027
View details for PubMedID 25780124
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4371266
-
Probing the kinetic and thermodynamic consequences of the tetraloop/tetraloop receptor monovalent ion-binding site in P4-P6 RNA by smFRET
BIOCHEMICAL SOCIETY TRANSACTIONS
2015; 43: 172-178
Abstract
Structured RNA molecules play roles in central biological processes and understanding the basic forces and features that govern RNA folding kinetics and thermodynamics can help elucidate principles that underlie biological function. Here we investigate one such feature, the specific interaction of monovalent cations with a structured RNA, the P4-P6 domain of the Tetrahymena ribozyme. We employ single molecule FRET (smFRET) approaches as these allow determination of folding equilibrium and rate constants over a wide range of stabilities and thus allow direct comparisons without the need for extrapolation. These experiments provide additional evidence for specific binding of monovalent cations, Na+ and K+, to the RNA tetraloop-tetraloop receptor (TL-TLR) tertiary motif. These ions facilitate both folding and unfolding, consistent with an ability to help order the TLR for binding and further stabilize the tertiary contact subsequent to attainment of the folding transition state.
View details for DOI 10.1042/BST20140268
View details for Web of Science ID 000352293500008
View details for PubMedID 25849913
-
From static to dynamic: the need for structural ensembles and a predictive model of RNA folding and function
CURRENT OPINION IN STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY
2015; 30: 125-133
Abstract
To understand RNA, it is necessary to move beyond a descriptive categorization towards quantitative predictions of its molecular conformations and functional behavior. An incisive approach to understanding the function and folding of biological RNA systems involves characterizing small, simple components that are largely responsible for the behavior of complex systems including helix-junction-helix elements and tertiary motifs. State-of-the-art methods have permitted unprecedented insight into the conformational ensembles of these elements revealing, for example, that conformations of helix-junction-helix elements are confined to a small region of the ensemble, that this region is highly dependent on the junction's topology, and that the correct alignment of tertiary motifs may be a rare conformation on the overall folding landscape. Further characterization of RNA components and continued development of experimental and computational methods with the goal of quantitatively predicting RNA folding and functional behavior will be critical to understanding biological RNA systems.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.sbi.2015.02.006
View details for Web of Science ID 000354588800017
View details for PubMedID 25744941
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4416989
-
Three aSNAP and 10 ATP Molecules Are Used in SNARE Complex Disassembly by N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive Factor (NSF).
journal of biological chemistry
2015; 290 (4): 2175-2188
Abstract
The fusion of intracellular membranes is driven by the formation of a highly stable four-helix bundle of SNARE proteins embedded in the vesicle and target membranes. N-Ethylmaleimide sensitive factor recycles SNAREs after fusion by binding to the SNARE complex through an adaptor protein, αSNAP, and using the energy of ATP hydrolysis to disassemble the complex. Although only a single molecule of αSNAP binds to a soluble form of the SNARE complex, we find that three molecules of αSNAP are used for SNARE complex disassembly. We describe an engineered αSNAP trimer that supports more efficient SNARE complex disassembly than monomeric αSNAP. Using the trimerized αSNAP, we find that N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor hydrolyzes 10 ATP molecules on average to disassemble a single SNARE complex.
View details for DOI 10.1074/jbc.M114.620849
View details for PubMedID 25492864
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4303669
-
Quantifying Nucleic Acid Ensembles with X-ray Scattering Interferometry.
Methods in enzymology
2015; 558: 75-97
Abstract
The conformational ensemble of a macromolecule is the complete description of the macromolecule's solution structures and can reveal important aspects of macromolecular folding, recognition, and function. However, most experimental approaches determine an average or predominant structure, or follow transitions between states that each can only be described by an average structure. Ensembles have been extremely difficult to experimentally characterize. We present the unique advantages and capabilities of a new biophysical technique, X-ray scattering interferometry (XSI), for probing and quantifying structural ensembles. XSI measures the interference of scattered waves from two heavy metal probes attached site specifically to a macromolecule. A Fourier transform of the interference pattern gives the fractional abundance of different probe separations directly representing the multiple conformation states populated by the macromolecule. These probe-probe distance distributions can then be used to define the structural ensemble of the macromolecule. XSI provides accurate, calibrated distance in a model-independent fashion with angstrom scale sensitivity in distances. XSI data can be compared in a straightforward manner to atomic coordinates determined experimentally or predicted by molecular dynamics simulations. We describe the conceptual framework for XSI and provide a detailed protocol for carrying out an XSI experiment.
View details for DOI 10.1016/bs.mie.2015.02.001
View details for PubMedID 26068738
-
Single-molecule dataset (SMD): a generalized storage format for raw and processed single-molecule data.
BMC bioinformatics
2015; 16: 3-?
Abstract
Single-molecule techniques have emerged as incisive approaches for addressing a wide range of questions arising in contemporary biological research [Trends Biochem Sci 38:30-37, 2013; Nat Rev Genet 14:9-22, 2013; Curr Opin Struct Biol 2014, 28C:112-121; Annu Rev Biophys 43:19-39, 2014]. The analysis and interpretation of raw single-molecule data benefits greatly from the ongoing development of sophisticated statistical analysis tools that enable accurate inference at the low signal-to-noise ratios frequently associated with these measurements. While a number of groups have released analysis toolkits as open source software [J Phys Chem B 114:5386-5403, 2010; Biophys J 79:1915-1927, 2000; Biophys J 91:1941-1951, 2006; Biophys J 79:1928-1944, 2000; Biophys J 86:4015-4029, 2004; Biophys J 97:3196-3205, 2009; PLoS One 7:e30024, 2012; BMC Bioinformatics 288 11(8):S2, 2010; Biophys J 106:1327-1337, 2014; Proc Int Conf Mach Learn 28:361-369, 2013], it remains difficult to compare analysis for experiments performed in different labs due to a lack of standardization.Here we propose a standardized single-molecule dataset (SMD) file format. SMD is designed to accommodate a wide variety of computer programming languages, single-molecule techniques, and analysis strategies. To facilitate adoption of this format we have made two existing data analysis packages that are used for single-molecule analysis compatible with this format.Adoption of a common, standard data file format for sharing raw single-molecule data and analysis outcomes is a critical step for the emerging and powerful single-molecule field, which will benefit both sophisticated users and non-specialists by allowing standardized, transparent, and reproducible analysis practices.
View details for DOI 10.1186/s12859-014-0429-4
View details for PubMedID 25591752
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4384321
-
Probing the Origins of Catalytic Discrimination between Phosphate and Sulfate Monoester Hydrolysis: Comparative Analysis of Alkaline Phosphatase and Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases
BIOCHEMISTRY
2014; 53 (43): 6811-6819
Abstract
Catalytic promiscuity, the ability of enzymes to catalyze multiple reactions, provides an opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of the origins of catalysis and substrate specificity. Alkaline phosphatase (AP) catalyzes both phosphate and sulfate monoester hydrolysis reactions with a ∼10(10)-fold preference for phosphate monoester hydrolysis, despite the similarity between these reactions. The preponderance of formal positive charge in the AP active site, particularly from three divalent metal ions, was proposed to be responsible for this preference by providing stronger electrostatic interactions with the more negatively charged phosphoryl group versus the sulfuryl group. To test whether positively charged metal ions are required to achieve a high preference for the phosphate monoester hydrolysis reaction, the catalytic preference of three protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs), which do not contain metal ions, were measured. Their preferences ranged from 5 × 10(6) to 7 × 10(7), lower than that for AP but still substantial, indicating that metal ions and a high preponderance of formal positive charge within the active site are not required to achieve a strong catalytic preference for phosphate monoester over sulfate monoester hydrolysis. The observed ionic strength dependences of kcat/KM values for phosphate and sulfate monoester hydrolysis are steeper for the more highly charged phosphate ester with both AP and the PTP Stp1, following the dependence expected based on the charge difference of these two substrates. However, the dependences for AP were not greater than those of Stp1 and were rather shallow for both enzymes. These results suggest that overall electrostatics from formal positive charge within the active site is not the major driving force in distinguishing between these reactions and that substantial discrimination can be attained without metal ions. Thus, local properties of the active site, presumably including multiple positioned dipolar hydrogen bond donors within the active site, dominate in defining this reaction specificity.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi500765p
View details for Web of Science ID 000344510300011
View details for PubMedID 25299936
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4222534
-
A kinetic and thermodynamic framework for the Azoarcus group I ribozyme reaction
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2014; 20 (11): 1732-1746
Abstract
Determination of quantitative thermodynamic and kinetic frameworks for ribozymes derived from the Azoarcus group I intron and comparisons to their well-studied analogs from the Tetrahymena group I intron reveal similarities and differences between these RNAs. The guanosine (G) substrate binds to the Azoarcus and Tetrahymena ribozymes with similar equilibrium binding constants and similar very slow association rate constants. These and additional literature observations support a model in which the free ribozyme is not conformationally competent to bind G and in which the probability of assuming the binding-competent state is determined by tertiary interactions of peripheral elements. As proposed previously, the slow binding of guanosine may play a role in the specificity of group I intron self-splicing, and slow binding may be used analogously in other biological processes. The internal equilibrium between ribozyme-bound substrates and products is similar for these ribozymes, but the Azoarcus ribozyme does not display the coupling in the binding of substrates that is observed with the Tetrahymena ribozyme, suggesting that local preorganization of the active site and rearrangements within the active site upon substrate binding are different for these ribozymes. Our results also confirm the much greater tertiary binding energy of the 5'-splice site analog with the Azoarcus ribozyme, binding energy that presumably compensates for the fewer base-pairing interactions to allow the 5'-exon intermediate in self splicing to remain bound subsequent to 5'-exon cleavage and prior to exon ligation. Most generally, these frameworks provide a foundation for design and interpretation of experiments investigating fundamental properties of these and other structured RNAs.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.044362.114
View details for Web of Science ID 000344065900009
View details for PubMedID 25246656
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4201826
-
Understanding nucleic Acid-ion interactions.
Annual review of biochemistry
2014; 83: 813-841
Abstract
Ions surround nucleic acids in what is referred to as an ion atmosphere. As a result, the folding and dynamics of RNA and DNA and their complexes with proteins and with each other cannot be understood without a reasonably sophisticated appreciation of these ions' electrostatic interactions. However, the underlying behavior of the ion atmosphere follows physical rules that are distinct from the rules of site binding that biochemists are most familiar and comfortable with. The main goal of this review is to familiarize nucleic acid experimentalists with the physical concepts that underlie nucleic acid-ion interactions. Throughout, we provide practical strategies for interpreting and analyzing nucleic acid experiments that avoid pitfalls from oversimplified or incorrect models. We briefly review the status of theories that predict or simulate nucleic acid-ion interactions and experiments that test these theories. Finally, we describe opportunities for going beyond phenomenological fits to a next-generation, truly predictive understanding of nucleic acid-ion interactions.
View details for DOI 10.1146/annurev-biochem-060409-092720
View details for PubMedID 24606136
-
Using unnatural amino acids to probe the energetics of oxyanion hole hydrogen bonds in the ketosteroid isomerase active site.
Journal of the American Chemical Society
2014; 136 (21): 7643-7654
Abstract
Hydrogen bonds are ubiquitous in enzyme active sites, providing binding interactions and stabilizing charge rearrangements on substrate groups over the course of a reaction. But understanding the origin and magnitude of their catalytic contributions relative to hydrogen bonds made in aqueous solution remains difficult, in part because of complexities encountered in energetic interpretation of traditional site-directed mutagenesis experiments. It has been proposed for ketosteroid isomerase and other enzymes that active site hydrogen bonding groups provide energetic stabilization via "short, strong" or "low-barrier" hydrogen bonds that are formed due to matching of their pKa or proton affinity to that of the transition state. It has also been proposed that the ketosteroid isomerase and other enzyme active sites provide electrostatic environments that result in larger energetic responses (i.e., greater "sensitivity") to ground-state to transition-state charge rearrangement, relative to aqueous solution, thereby providing catalysis relative to the corresponding reaction in water. To test these models, we substituted tyrosine with fluorotyrosines (F-Tyr's) in the ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) oxyanion hole to systematically vary the proton affinity of an active site hydrogen bond donor while minimizing steric or structural effects. We found that a 40-fold increase in intrinsic F-Tyr acidity caused no significant change in activity for reactions with three different substrates. F-Tyr substitution did not change the solvent or primary kinetic isotope effect for proton abstraction, consistent with no change in mechanism arising from these substitutions. The observed shallow dependence of activity on the pKa of the substituted Tyr residues suggests that the KSI oxyanion hole does not provide catalysis by forming an energetically exceptional pKa-matched hydrogen bond. In addition, the shallow dependence provides no indication of an active site electrostatic environment that greatly enhances the energetic response to charge accumulation, consistent with prior experimental results.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja413174b
View details for PubMedID 24787954
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4046884
-
Assembly line polyketide synthases: mechanistic insights and unsolved problems.
Biochemistry
2014; 53 (18): 2875-2883
Abstract
Two hallmarks of assembly line polyketide synthases have motivated an interest in these unusual multienzyme systems, their stereospecificity and their capacity for directional biosynthesis. In this review, we summarize the state of knowledge regarding the mechanistic origins of these two remarkable features, using the 6-deoxyerythronolide B synthase as a prototype. Of the 10 stereocenters in 6-deoxyerythronolide B, the stereochemistry of nine carbon atoms is directly set by ketoreductase domains, which catalyze epimerization and/or diastereospecific reduction reactions. The 10th stereocenter is established by the sequential action of three enzymatic domains. Thus, the problem has been reduced to a challenge in mainstream enzymology, where fundamental gaps remain in our understanding of the structural basis for this exquisite stereochemical control by relatively well-defined active sites. In contrast, testable mechanistic hypotheses for the phenomenon of vectorial biosynthesis are only just beginning to emerge. Starting from an elegant theoretical framework for understanding coupled vectorial processes in biology [Jencks, W. P. (1980) Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 51, 75-106], we present a simple model that can explain assembly line polyketide biosynthesis as a coupled vectorial process. Our model, which highlights the important role of domain-domain interactions, not only is consistent with recent observations but also is amenable to further experimental verification and refinement. Ultimately, a definitive view of the coordinated motions within and between polyketide synthase modules will require a combination of structural, kinetic, spectroscopic, and computational tools and could be one of the most exciting frontiers in 21st Century enzymology.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi500290t
View details for PubMedID 24779441
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4020578
-
Roles of Long-Range Tertiary Interactions in Limiting Dynamics of the Tetrahymena Group I Ribozyme
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2014; 136 (18): 6643-6648
Abstract
We determined the effects of mutating the long-range tertiary contacts of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme on the dynamics of its substrate helix (referred to as P1) and on catalytic activity. Dynamics were assayed by fluorescence anisotropy of the fluorescent base analogue, 6-methyl isoxanthopterin, incorporated into the P1 helix, and fluorescence anisotropy and catalytic activity were measured for wild type and mutant ribozymes over a range of conditions. Remarkably, catalytic activity correlated with P1 anisotropy over 5 orders of magnitude of activity, with a correlation coefficient of 0.94. The functional and dynamic effects from simultaneous mutation of the two long-range contacts that weaken P1 docking are cumulative and, based on this RNA's topology, suggest distinct underlying origins for the mutant effects. Tests of mechanistic predictions via single molecule FRET measurements of rate constants for P1 docking and undocking suggest that ablation of the P14 tertiary interaction frees P2 and thereby enhances the conformational space explored by the undocked attached P1 helix. In contrast, mutation of the metal core tertiary interaction disrupts the conserved core into which the P1 helix docks. Thus, despite following a single correlation, the two long-range tertiary contacts facilitate P1 helix docking by distinct mechanisms. These results also demonstrate that a fluorescence anisotropy probe incorporated into a specific helix within a larger RNA can report on changes in local helical motions as well as differences in more global dynamics. This ability will help uncover the physical properties and behaviors that underlie the function of RNAs and RNA/protein complexes.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja413033d
View details for Web of Science ID 000335720200024
View details for PubMedID 24738560
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4021564
-
Experimental and Computational Mutagenesis To Investigate the Positioning of a General Base within an Enzyme Active Site
BIOCHEMISTRY
2014; 53 (15): 2541-2555
Abstract
The positioning of catalytic groups within proteins plays an important role in enzyme catalysis, and here we investigate the positioning of the general base in the enzyme ketosteroid isomerase (KSI). The oxygen atoms of Asp38, the general base in KSI, were previously shown to be involved in anion-aromatic interactions with two neighboring Phe residues. Here we ask whether those interactions are sufficient, within the overall protein architecture, to position Asp38 for catalysis or whether the side chains that pack against Asp38 and/or the residues of the structured loop that is capped by Asp38 are necessary to achieve optimal positioning for catalysis. To test positioning, we mutated each of the aforementioned residues, alone and in combinations, in a background with the native Asp general base and in a D38E mutant background, as Glu at position 38 was previously shown to be mispositioned for general base catalysis. These double-mutant cycles reveal positioning effects as large as 10(3)-fold, indicating that structural features in addition to the overall protein architecture and the Phe residues neighboring the carboxylate oxygen atoms play roles in positioning. X-ray crystallography and molecular dynamics simulations suggest that the functional effects arise from both restricting dynamic fluctuations and disfavoring potential mispositioned states. Whereas it may have been anticipated that multiple interactions would be necessary for optimal general base positioning, the energetic contributions from positioning and the nonadditive nature of these interactions are not revealed by structural inspection and require functional dissection. Recognizing the extent, type, and energetic interconnectivity of interactions that contribute to positioning catalytic groups has implications for enzyme evolution and may help reveal the nature and extent of interactions required to design enzymes that rival those found in biology.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi401671t
View details for Web of Science ID 000334991100013
View details for PubMedID 24597914
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4004248
-
From a structural average to the conformational ensemble of a DNA bulge.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2014; 111 (15): E1473-80
Abstract
Direct experimental measurements of conformational ensembles are critical for understanding macromolecular function, but traditional biophysical methods do not directly report the solution ensemble of a macromolecule. Small-angle X-ray scattering interferometry has the potential to overcome this limitation by providing the instantaneous distance distribution between pairs of gold-nanocrystal probes conjugated to a macromolecule in solution. Our X-ray interferometry experiments reveal an increasing bend angle of DNA duplexes with bulges of one, three, and five adenosine residues, consistent with previous FRET measurements, and further reveal an increasingly broad conformational ensemble with increasing bulge length. The distance distributions for the AAA bulge duplex (3A-DNA) with six different Au-Au pairs provide strong evidence against a simple elastic model in which fluctuations occur about a single conformational state. Instead, the measured distance distributions suggest a 3A-DNA ensemble with multiple conformational states predominantly across a region of conformational space with bend angles between 24 and 85 degrees and characteristic bend directions and helical twists and displacements. Additional X-ray interferometry experiments revealed perturbations to the ensemble from changes in ionic conditions and the bulge sequence, effects that can be understood in terms of electrostatic and stacking contributions to the ensemble and that demonstrate the sensitivity of X-ray interferometry. Combining X-ray interferometry ensemble data with molecular dynamics simulations gave atomic-level models of representative conformational states and of the molecular interactions that may shape the ensemble, and fluorescence measurements with 2-aminopurine-substituted 3A-DNA provided initial tests of these atomistic models. More generally, X-ray interferometry will provide powerful benchmarks for testing and developing computational methods.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.1317032111
View details for PubMedID 24706812
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3992658
-
Ion Counting from Explicit-Solvent Simulations and 3D-RISM
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
2014; 106 (4): 883-894
Abstract
The ionic atmosphere around nucleic acids remains only partially understood at atomic-level detail. Ion counting (IC) experiments provide a quantitative measure of the ionic atmosphere around nucleic acids and, as such, are a natural route for testing quantitative theoretical approaches. In this article, we replicate IC experiments involving duplex DNA in NaCl(aq) using molecular dynamics (MD) simulation, the three-dimensional reference interaction site model (3D-RISM), and nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann (NLPB) calculations and test against recent buffer-equilibration atomic emission spectroscopy measurements. Further, we outline the statistical mechanical basis for interpreting IC experiments and clarify the use of specific concentration scales. Near physiological concentrations, MD simulation and 3D-RISM estimates are close to experimental results, but at higher concentrations (>0.7 M), both methods underestimate the number of condensed cations and overestimate the number of excluded anions. The effect of DNA charge on ion and water atmosphere extends 20-25 Å from its surface, yielding layered density profiles. Overall, ion distributions from 3D-RISMs are relatively close to those from corresponding MD simulations, but with less Na(+) binding in grooves and tighter binding to phosphates. NLPB calculations, on the other hand, systematically underestimate the number of condensed cations at almost all concentrations and yield nearly structureless ion distributions that are qualitatively distinct from those generated by both MD simulation and 3D-RISM. These results suggest that MD simulation and 3D-RISM may be further developed to provide quantitative insight into the characterization of the ion atmosphere around nucleic acids and their effect on structure and stability.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.bpj.2014.01.021
View details for Web of Science ID 000331674700016
View details for PubMedID 24559991
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3944826
-
Site-Directed Mutagenesis Maps Interactions That Enhance Cognate and Limit Promiscuous Catalysis by an Alkaline Phosphatase Superfamily Phosphodiesterase
BIOCHEMISTRY
2013; 52 (51): 9167-9176
Abstract
Catalytic promiscuity, an evolutionary concept, also provides a powerful tool for gaining mechanistic insights into enzymatic reactions. Members of the alkaline phosphatase (AP) superfamily are highly amenable to such investigation, with several members having been shown to exhibit promiscuous activity for the cognate reactions of other superfamily members. Previous work has shown that nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase (NPP) exhibits a >10(6)-fold preference for the hydrolysis of phosphate diesters over phosphate monoesters, and that the reaction specificity is reduced 10(3)-fold when the size of the substituent on the transferred phosphoryl group of phosphate diester substrates is reduced to a methyl group. Here we show additional specificity contributions from the binding pocket for this substituent (herein termed the R' substituent) that account for an additional ~250-fold differential specificity with the minimal methyl substituent. Removal of four hydrophobic side chains suggested on the basis of structural inspection to interact favorably with R' substituents decreases phosphate diester reactivity 10(4)-fold with an optimal diester substrate (R' = 5'-deoxythymidine) and 50-fold with a minimal diester substrate (R' = CH3). These mutations also enhance the enzyme's promiscuous phosphate monoesterase activity by nearly an order of magnitude, an effect that is traced by mutation to the reduction of unfavorable interactions with the two residues closest to the nonbridging phosphoryl oxygen atoms. The quadruple R' pocket mutant exhibits the same activity toward phosphate diester and phosphate monoester substrates that have identical leaving groups, with substantial rate enhancements of ~10(11)-fold. This observation suggests that the Zn(2+) bimetallo core of AP superfamily enzymes, which is equipotent in phosphate monoester and diester catalysis, has the potential to become specialized for the hydrolysis of each class of phosphate esters via addition of side chains that interact with the substrate atoms and substituents that project away from the Zn(2+) bimetallo core.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi4010045
View details for Web of Science ID 000329137200009
View details for PubMedID 24261692
-
Uncovering the Determinants of a Highly Perturbed Tyrosine pKa in the Active Site of Ketosteroid Isomerase.
Biochemistry
2013; 52 (44): 7840-7855
Abstract
Within the idiosyncratic enzyme active-site environment, side chain and ligand pKa values can be profoundly perturbed relative to their values in aqueous solution. Whereas structural inspection of systems has often attributed perturbed pKa values to dominant contributions from placement near charged groups or within hydrophobic pockets, Tyr57 of a Pseudomonas putida ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) mutant, suggested to have a pKa perturbed by nearly 4 units to 6.3, is situated within a solvent-exposed active site devoid of cationic side chains, metal ions, or cofactors. Extensive comparisons among 45 variants with mutations in and around the KSI active site, along with protein semisynthesis, (13)C NMR spectroscopy, absorbance spectroscopy, and X-ray crystallography, was used to unravel the basis for this perturbed Tyr pKa. The results suggest that the origin of large energetic perturbations are more complex than suggested by visual inspection. For example, the introduction of positively charged residues near Tyr57 raises its pKa rather than lowers it; this effect, and part of the increase in the Tyr pKa from the introduction of nearby anionic groups, arises from accompanying active-site structural rearrangements. Other mutations with large effects also cause structural perturbations or appear to displace a structured water molecule that is part of a stabilizing hydrogen-bond network. Our results lead to a model in which three hydrogen bonds are donated to the stabilized ionized Tyr, with these hydrogen-bond donors, two Tyr side chains, and a water molecule positioned by other side chains and by a water-mediated hydrogen-bond network. These results support the notion that large energetic effects are often the consequence of multiple stabilizing interactions rather than a single dominant interaction. Most generally, this work provides a case study for how extensive and comprehensive comparisons via site-directed mutagenesis in a tight feedback loop with structural analysis can greatly facilitate our understanding of enzyme active-site energetics. The extensive data set provided may also be a valuable resource for those wishing to extensively test computational approaches for determining enzymatic pKa values and energetic effects.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi401083b
View details for PubMedID 24151972
-
The stanford institute for chemical biology.
ACS chemical biology
2013; 8 (9): 1860-1861
View details for DOI 10.1021/cb400641u
View details for PubMedID 24053754
-
Use of anion-aromatic interactions to position the general base in the ketosteroid isomerase active site
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2013; 110 (28): 11308-11313
Abstract
Although the cation-pi pair, formed between a side chain or substrate cation and the negative electrostatic potential of a pi system on the face of an aromatic ring, has been widely discussed and has been shown to be important in protein structure and protein-ligand interactions, there has been little discussion of the potential structural and functional importance in proteins of the related anion-aromatic pair (i.e., interaction of a negatively charged group with the positive electrostatic potential on the ring edge of an aromatic group). We posited, based on prior structural information, that anion-aromatic interactions between the anionic Asp general base and Phe54 and Phe116 might be used instead of a hydrogen-bond network to position the general base in the active site of ketosteroid isomerase from Comamonas testosteroni as there are no neighboring hydrogen-bonding groups. We have tested the role of the Phe residues using site-directed mutagenesis, double-mutant cycles, and high-resolution X-ray crystallography. These results indicate a catalytic role of these Phe residues. Extensive analysis of the Protein Data Bank provides strong support for a catalytic role of these and other Phe residues in providing anion-aromatic interactions that position anionic general bases within enzyme active sites. Our results further reveal a potential selective advantage of Phe in certain situations, relative to more traditional hydrogen-bonding groups, because it can simultaneously aid in the binding of hydrophobic substrates and positioning of a neighboring general base.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.1206710110
View details for Web of Science ID 000321827000037
View details for PubMedID 23798413
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3710852
-
Quantitative dissection of hydrogen bond-mediated proton transfer in the ketosteroid isomerase active site
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2013; 110 (28): E2552-E2561
Abstract
Hydrogen bond networks are key elements of protein structure and function but have been challenging to study within the complex protein environment. We have carried out in-depth interrogations of the proton transfer equilibrium within a hydrogen bond network formed to bound phenols in the active site of ketosteroid isomerase. We systematically varied the proton affinity of the phenol using differing electron-withdrawing substituents and incorporated site-specific NMR and IR probes to quantitatively map the proton and charge rearrangements within the network that accompany incremental increases in phenol proton affinity. The observed ionization changes were accurately described by a simple equilibrium proton transfer model that strongly suggests the intrinsic proton affinity of one of the Tyr residues in the network, Tyr16, does not remain constant but rather systematically increases due to weakening of the phenol-Tyr16 anion hydrogen bond with increasing phenol proton affinity. Using vibrational Stark spectroscopy, we quantified the electrostatic field changes within the surrounding active site that accompany these rearrangements within the network. We were able to model these changes accurately using continuum electrostatic calculations, suggesting a high degree of conformational restriction within the protein matrix. Our study affords direct insight into the physical and energetic properties of a hydrogen bond network within a protein interior and provides an example of a highly controlled system with minimal conformational rearrangements in which the observed physical changes can be accurately modeled by theoretical calculations.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.1302191110
View details for Web of Science ID 000321827000006
View details for PubMedID 23798390
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3710806
-
Ground State Destabilization by Anionic Nucleophiles Contributes to the Activity of Phosphoryl Transfer Enzymes
PLOS BIOLOGY
2013; 11 (7)
Abstract
Enzymes stabilize transition states of reactions while limiting binding to ground states, as is generally required for any catalyst. Alkaline Phosphatase (AP) and other nonspecific phosphatases are some of Nature's most impressive catalysts, achieving preferential transition state over ground state stabilization of more than 10(22)-fold while utilizing interactions with only the five atoms attached to the transferred phosphorus. We tested a model that AP achieves a portion of this preference by destabilizing ground state binding via charge repulsion between the anionic active site nucleophile, Ser102, and the negatively charged phosphate monoester substrate. Removal of the Ser102 alkoxide by mutation to glycine or alanine increases the observed Pi affinity by orders of magnitude at pH 8.0. To allow precise and quantitative comparisons, the ionic form of bound Pi was determined from pH dependencies of the binding of Pi and tungstate, a Pi analog lacking titratable protons over the pH range of 5-11, and from the (31)P chemical shift of bound Pi. The results show that the Pi trianion binds with an exceptionally strong femtomolar affinity in the absence of Ser102, show that its binding is destabilized by ≥10(8)-fold by the Ser102 alkoxide, and provide direct evidence for ground state destabilization. Comparisons of X-ray crystal structures of AP with and without Ser102 reveal the same active site and Pi binding geometry upon removal of Ser102, suggesting that the destabilization does not result from a major structural rearrangement upon mutation of Ser102. Analogous Pi binding measurements with a protein tyrosine phosphatase suggest the generality of this ground state destabilization mechanism. Our results have uncovered an important contribution of anionic nucleophiles to phosphoryl transfer catalysis via ground state electrostatic destabilization and an enormous capacity of the AP active site for specific and strong recognition of the phosphoryl group in the transition state.
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pbio.1001599
View details for Web of Science ID 000322592700003
View details for PubMedID 23843744
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3699461
-
Structural ensemble and microscopic elasticity of freely diffusing DNA by direct measurement of fluctuations.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2013; 110 (16): E1444-51
Abstract
Precisely measuring the ensemble of conformers that a macromolecule populates in solution is highly challenging. Thus, it has been difficult to confirm or falsify the predictions of nanometer-scale dynamical modeling. Here, we apply an X-ray interferometry technique to probe the solution structure and fluctuations of B-form DNA on a length scale comparable to a protein-binding site. We determine an extensive set of intrahelix distance distributions between pairs of probes placed at distinct points on the surface of the DNA duplex. The distributions of measured distances reveal the nature and extent of the thermally driven mechanical deformations of the helix. We describe these deformations in terms of elastic constants, as is common for DNA and other polymers. The average solution structure and microscopic elasticity measured by X-ray interferometry are in striking agreement with values derived from DNA-protein crystal structures and measured by force spectroscopy, with one exception. The observed microscopic torsional rigidity of DNA is much lower than is measured by single-molecule twisting experiments, suggesting that torsional rigidity increases when DNA is stretched. Looking forward, molecular-level interferometry can provide a general tool for characterizing solution-phase structural ensembles.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.1218830110
View details for PubMedID 23576725
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3631670
-
Fundamental challenges in mechanistic enzymology: progress toward understanding the rate enhancements of enzymes.
Biochemistry
2013; 52 (12): 2050-2067
Abstract
Enzymes are remarkable catalysts that lie at the heart of biology, accelerating chemical reactions to an astounding extent with extraordinary specificity. Enormous progress in understanding the chemical basis of enzymatic transformations and the basic mechanisms underlying rate enhancements over the past decades is apparent. Nevertheless, it has been difficult to achieve a quantitative understanding of how the underlying mechanisms account for the energetics of catalysis, because of the complexity of enzyme systems and the absence of underlying energetic additivity. We review case studies from our own work that illustrate the power of precisely defined and clearly articulated questions when dealing with such complex and multifaceted systems, and we also use this approach to evaluate our current ability to design enzymes. We close by highlighting a series of questions that help frame some of what remains to be understood, and we encourage the reader to define additional questions and directions that will deepen and broaden our understanding of enzymes and their catalysis.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi4000113
View details for PubMedID 23488725
-
Ground State Destabilization from a Positioned General Base in the Ketosteroid Isomerase Active Site
BIOCHEMISTRY
2013; 52 (6): 1074-1081
Abstract
We compared the binding affinities of ground state analogues for bacterial ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) with a wild-type anionic Asp general base and with uncharged Asn and Ala in the general base position to provide a measure of potential ground state destabilization that could arise from the close juxtaposition of the anionic Asp and hydrophobic steroid in the reaction's Michaelis complex. The analogue binding affinity increased ~1 order of magnitude for the Asp38Asn mutation and ~2 orders of magnitude for the Asp38Ala mutation, relative to the affinity with Asp38, for KSI from two sources. The increased level of binding suggests that the abutment of a charged general base and a hydrophobic steroid is modestly destabilizing, relative to a standard state in water, and that this destabilization is relieved in the transition state and intermediate in which the charge on the general base has been neutralized because of proton abstraction. Stronger binding also arose from mutation of Pro39, the residue adjacent to the Asp general base, consistent with an ability of the Asp general base to now reorient to avoid the destabilizing interaction. Consistent with this model, the Pro mutants reduced or eliminated the increased level of binding upon replacement of Asp38 with Asn or Ala. These results, supported by additional structural observations, suggest that ground state destabilization from the negatively charged Asp38 general base provides a modest contribution to KSI catalysis. They also provide a clear illustration of the well-recognized concept that enzymes evolve for catalytic function and not, in general, to maximize ground state binding. This ground state destabilization mechanism may be common to the many enzymes with anionic side chains that deprotonate carbon acids.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi301348x
View details for Web of Science ID 000315018600010
View details for PubMedID 23311398
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3651043
-
Nucleic Acid Conformation Ensembles Revealed by Au-SAXS Interferometry
57th Annual Meeting of the Biophysical-Society
CELL PRESS. 2013: 502A–502A
View details for Web of Science ID 000316074305052
-
RNA radiolabeling.
Methods in enzymology
2013; 530: 255-279
Abstract
Radioactive end-labeling is useful for visualizing and allowing the detection of nucleic acids at trace concentrations. Radioactive end-labeling can be carried out on RNA, DNA, or other modified nucleic acids. For RNA, the uses of end-labeling extend beyond simple detection of the intact RNA. A number of RNA molecules studied by biologists form three-dimensional structures in solution, and many of the techniques used to study these structures depend on the ability to visualize the RNA after fragmentation. Labeling at either the 5'- or 3'-end serves as a gateway into these structural analysis techniques (see Structural Analysis of RNA Backbone Using In-Line Probing), and protocols for these labeling procedures are described below (for a nonradiactive labeling protocol, see Fluorescently Labeling Synthetic RNAs).
View details for DOI 10.1016/B978-0-12-420037-1.00014-2
View details for PubMedID 24034326
-
Fluorescently Labeling Synthetic RNAs.
Methods in enzymology
2013; 530: 281-297
Abstract
This protocol covers the steps required to incorporate N-hydroxysuccinamide (NHS) functionalized fluorophores into synthetic RNAs containing a residue derivatized with a primary amine. This method has been widely used to label RNA oligonucleotides that are used directly, targeted to a complementary RNA using base pairing rules, or covalently ligated to a RNA of interest (Ha et al., 1999; Hodak et al., 2005; Baum and Silverman, 2007; Sattint et al., 2008; Akiyama and Stone, 2009; Solomatin and Herschlag, 2009). While this technique is quite general, the details of a particular experiment can vary, therefore, it is always important to keep in mind that other labeling strategies are available and should potentially be considered.
View details for DOI 10.1016/B978-0-12-420037-1.00015-4
View details for PubMedID 24034327
-
Salt dependence of the radius of gyration and flexibility of single-stranded DNA in solution probed by small-angle x-ray scattering
PHYSICAL REVIEW E
2012; 86 (2)
Abstract
Short single-stranded nucleic acids are ubiquitous in biological processes; understanding their physical properties provides insights to nucleic acid folding and dynamics. We used small-angle x-ray scattering to study 8-100 residue homopolymeric single-stranded DNAs in solution, without external forces or labeling probes. Poly-T's structural ensemble changes with increasing ionic strength in a manner consistent with a polyelectrolyte persistence length theory that accounts for molecular flexibility. For any number of residues, poly-A is consistently more elongated than poly-T, likely due to the tendency of A residues to form stronger base-stacking interactions than T residues.
View details for DOI 10.1103/PhysRevE.86.021901
View details for Web of Science ID 000307277300008
View details for PubMedID 23005779
-
Metal-ion rescue revisited: Biochemical detection of site-bound metal ions important for RNA folding
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2012; 18 (6): 1123-1141
Abstract
Within the three-dimensional architectures of RNA molecules, divalent metal ions populate specific locations, shedding their water molecules to form chelates. These interactions help the RNA adopt and maintain specific conformations and frequently make essential contributions to function. Defining the locations of these site-bound metal ions remains challenging despite the growing database of RNA structures. Metal-ion rescue experiments have provided a powerful approach to identify and distinguish catalytic metal ions within RNA active sites, but the ability of such experiments to identify metal ions that contribute to tertiary structure acquisition and structural stability is less developed and has been challenged. Herein, we use the well-defined P4-P6 RNA domain of the Tetrahymena group I intron to reevaluate prior evidence against the discriminatory power of metal-ion rescue experiments and to advance thermodynamic descriptions necessary for interpreting these experiments. The approach successfully identifies ligands within the RNA that occupy the inner coordination sphere of divalent metal ions and distinguishes them from ligands that occupy the outer coordination sphere. Our results underscore the importance of obtaining complete folding isotherms and establishing and evaluating thermodynamic models in order to draw conclusions from metal-ion rescue experiments. These results establish metal-ion rescue as a rigorous tool for identifying and dissecting energetically important metal-ion interactions in RNAs that are noncatalytic but critical for RNA tertiary structure.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.028738.111
View details for Web of Science ID 000304423000003
View details for PubMedID 22539523
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3358636
-
Exploring purine N7 interactions via atomic mutagenesis: The group I ribozyme as a case study
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2012; 18 (6): 1222-1229
Abstract
Atomic mutagenesis has emerged as a powerful tool to unravel specific interactions in complex RNA molecules. An early extensive study of analogs of the exogenous guanosine nucleophile in group I intron self-splicing by Bass and Cech demonstrated structure-function relationships analogous to those seen for protein ligands and provided strong evidence for a well-formed substrate binding site made of RNA. Subsequent functional and structural studies have confirmed these interacting sites and extended our understanding of them, with one notable exception. Whereas 7-methyl guanosine did not affect reactivity in the original study, a subsequent study revealed a deleterious effect of the seemingly more conservative 7-deaza substitution. Here we investigate this paradox, studying these and other analogs with the more thoroughly characterized ribozyme derived from the Tetrahymena group I intron. We found that the 7-deaza substitution lowers binding by ~20-fold, relative to the cognate exogenous guanosine nucleophile, whereas binding and reaction with 7-methyl and 8-aza-7-deaza substitutions have no effect. These and additional results suggest that there is no functionally important contact between the N7 atom of the exogenous guanosine and the ribozyme. Rather, they are consistent with indirect effects introduced by the N7 substitution on stacking interactions and/or solvation that are important for binding. The set of analogs used herein should be valuable in deciphering nucleic acid interactions and how they change through reaction cycles for other RNAs and RNA/protein complexes.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.031567.111
View details for Web of Science ID 000304423000011
View details for PubMedID 22543863
-
Robust design and optimization of retroaldol enzymes
PROTEIN SCIENCE
2012; 21 (5): 717-726
Abstract
Enzyme catalysts of a retroaldol reaction have been generated by computational design using a motif that combines a lysine in a nonpolar environment with water-mediated stabilization of the carbinolamine hydroxyl and β-hydroxyl groups. Here, we show that the design process is robust and repeatable, with 33 new active designs constructed on 13 different protein scaffold backbones. The initial activities are not high but are increased through site-directed mutagenesis and laboratory evolution. Mutational data highlight areas for improvement in design. Different designed catalysts give different borohydride-reduced reaction intermediates, suggesting a distribution of properties of the designed enzymes that may be further explored and exploited.
View details for DOI 10.1002/pro.2059
View details for Web of Science ID 000302620600012
View details for PubMedID 22407837
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3403469
-
Electrostatics of Nucleic Acid Folding under Conformational Constraint
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2012; 134 (10): 4607-4614
Abstract
RNA folding is enabled by interactions between the nucleic acid and its ion atmosphere, the mobile sheath of aqueous ions that surrounds and stabilizes it. Understanding the ion atmosphere requires the interplay of experiment and theory. However, even an apparently simple experiment to probe the ion atmosphere, measuring the dependence of DNA duplex stability upon ion concentration and identity, suffers from substantial complexity, because the unfolded ensemble contains many conformational states that are difficult to treat accurately with theory. To minimize this limitation, we measured the unfolding equilibrium of a DNA hairpin using a single-molecule optical trapping assay, in which the unfolded state is constrained to a limited set of elongated conformations. The unfolding free energy increased linearly with the logarithm of monovalent cation concentration for several cations, such that smaller cations tended to favor the folded state. Mg(2+) stabilized the hairpin much more effectively at low concentrations than did any of the monovalent cations. Poisson-Boltzmann theory captured trends in hairpin stability measured for the monovalent cation titrations with reasonable accuracy, but failed to do so for the Mg(2+) titrations. This finding is consistent with previous work, suggesting that Poisson-Boltzmann and other mean-field theories fail for higher valency cations where ion-ion correlation effects may become significant. The high-resolution data herein, because of the straightforward nature of both the folded and the unfolded states, should serve as benchmarks for the development of more accurate electrostatic theories that will be needed for a more quantitative and predictive understanding of nucleic acid folding.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja208466h
View details for Web of Science ID 000301990600036
View details for PubMedID 22369617
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3303965
-
Single Molecule Analysis Research Tool (SMART): An Integrated Approach for Analyzing Single Molecule Data
PLOS ONE
2012; 7 (2)
Abstract
Single molecule studies have expanded rapidly over the past decade and have the ability to provide an unprecedented level of understanding of biological systems. A common challenge upon introduction of novel, data-rich approaches is the management, processing, and analysis of the complex data sets that are generated. We provide a standardized approach for analyzing these data in the freely available software package SMART: Single Molecule Analysis Research Tool. SMART provides a format for organizing and easily accessing single molecule data, a general hidden Markov modeling algorithm for fitting an array of possible models specified by the user, a standardized data structure and graphical user interfaces to streamline the analysis and visualization of data. This approach guides experimental design, facilitating acquisition of the maximal information from single molecule experiments. SMART also provides a standardized format to allow dissemination of single molecule data and transparency in the analysis of reported data.
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0030024
View details for Web of Science ID 000302871500004
View details for PubMedID 22363412
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3282690
-
Thermodynamic evidence for negative charge stabilization by a catalytic metal ion within an RNA active site.
ACS chemical biology
2012; 7 (2): 294-299
Abstract
Protein and RNA enzymes that catalyze phosphoryl transfer reactions frequently contain active site metal ions that interact with the nucleophile and leaving group. Mechanistic models generally hinge upon the assumption that the metal ions stabilize negative charge buildup along the reaction coordinate. However, experimental data that test this assumption directly remain difficult to acquire. We have used an RNA substrate bearing a 3'-thiol group to investigate the energetics of a metal ion interaction directly relevant to transition state stabilization in the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme reaction. Our results show that this interaction lowers the pK(a) of the 3'-thiol by 2.6 units, stabilizing the bound 3'-thiolate by 3.6 kcal/mol. These data, combined with prior studies, provide strong evidence that this metal ion interaction facilitates the forward reaction by stabilization of negative charge buildup on the leaving group 3'-oxygen and facilitates the reverse reaction by deprotonation and activation of the nucleophilic 3'-hydroxyl group.
View details for DOI 10.1021/cb200202q
View details for PubMedID 22029738
-
Quantitative, directional measurement of electric field heterogeneity in the active site of ketosteroid isomerase
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2012; 109 (6): E299-E308
Abstract
Understanding the electrostatic forces and features within highly heterogeneous, anisotropic, and chemically complex enzyme active sites and their connection to biological catalysis remains a longstanding challenge, in part due to the paucity of incisive experimental probes of electrostatic properties within proteins. To quantitatively assess the landscape of electrostatic fields at discrete locations and orientations within an enzyme active site, we have incorporated site-specific thiocyanate vibrational probes into multiple positions within bacterial ketosteroid isomerase. A battery of X-ray crystallographic, vibrational Stark spectroscopy, and NMR studies revealed electrostatic field heterogeneity of 8 MV/cm between active site probe locations and widely differing sensitivities of discrete probes to common electrostatic perturbations from mutation, ligand binding, and pH changes. Electrostatic calculations based on active site ionization states assigned by literature precedent and computational pK(a) prediction were unable to quantitatively account for the observed vibrational band shifts. However, electrostatic models of the D40N mutant gave qualitative agreement with the observed vibrational effects when an unusual ionization of an active site tyrosine with a pK(a) near 7 was included. UV-absorbance and (13)C NMR experiments confirmed the presence of a tyrosinate in the active site, in agreement with electrostatic models. This work provides the most direct measure of the heterogeneous and anisotropic nature of the electrostatic environment within an enzyme active site, and these measurements provide incisive benchmarks for further developing accurate computational models and a foundation for future tests of electrostatics in enzymatic catalysis.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.1111566109
View details for Web of Science ID 000299925000004
View details for PubMedID 22308339
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3277571
-
A Role for a Single-Stranded Junction in RNA Binding and Specificity by the Tetrahymena Group I Ribozyme
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2012; 134 (4): 1910-1913
Abstract
We have investigated the role of a single-stranded RNA junction, J1/2, that connects the substrate-containing P1 duplex to the remainder of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme. Single-turnover kinetics, fluorescence anisotropy, and single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer studies of a series of J1/2 mutants were used to probe the sequence dependence of the catalytic activity, the P1 dynamics, and the thermodynamics of docking of the P1 duplex into the ribozyme's catalytic core. We found that A29, the center A of three adenosine residues in J1/2, contributes 2 orders of magnitude to the overall ribozyme activity, and double-mutant cycles suggested that J1/2 stabilizes the docked state of P1 over the undocked state via a tertiary interaction involving A29 and the first base pair in helix P2 of the ribozyme, A31·U56. Comparative sequence analysis of this group I intron subclass suggests that the A29 interaction sets one end of a molecular ruler whose other end specifies the 5'-splice site and that this molecular ruler is conserved among a subclass of group I introns related to the Tetrahymena intron. Our results reveal substantial functional effects from a seemingly simple single-stranded RNA junction and suggest that junction sequences may evolve rapidly to provide important interactions in functional RNAs.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja2083575
View details for Web of Science ID 000301084600005
View details for PubMedID 22220837
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3277301
-
High-Resolution Analysis of Zn2+ Coordination in the Alkaline Phosphatase Superfamily by EXAFS and X-ray Crystallography
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2012; 415 (1): 102-117
Abstract
Comparisons among evolutionarily related enzymes offer opportunities to reveal how structural differences produce different catalytic activities. Two structurally related enzymes, Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) and Xanthomonas axonopodis nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase (NPP), have nearly identical binuclear Zn(2+) catalytic centers but show tremendous differential specificity for hydrolysis of phosphate monoesters or phosphate diesters. To determine if there are differences in Zn(2+) coordination in the two enzymes that might contribute to catalytic specificity, we analyzed both x-ray absorption spectroscopic and x-ray crystallographic data. We report a 1.29-Å crystal structure of AP with bound phosphate, allowing evaluation of interactions at the AP metal site with high resolution. To make systematic comparisons between AP and NPP, we measured zinc extended x-ray absorption fine structure for AP and NPP in the free-enzyme forms, with AMP and inorganic phosphate ground-state analogs and with vanadate transition-state analogs. These studies yielded average zinc-ligand distances in AP and NPP free-enzyme forms and ground-state analog forms that were identical within error, suggesting little difference in metal ion coordination among these forms. Upon binding of vanadate to both enzymes, small increases in average metal-ligand distances were observed, consistent with an increased coordination number. Slightly longer increases were observed in NPP relative to AP, which could arise from subtle rearrangements of the active site or differences in the geometry of the bound vanadyl species. Overall, the results suggest that the binuclear Zn(2+) catalytic site remains very similar between AP and NPP during the course of a reaction cycle.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jmb.2011.10.040
View details for PubMedID 22056344
-
Evaluating the Catalytic Contribution from the Oxyanion Hole in Ketosteroid Isomerase
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2011; 133 (50): 20052-20055
Abstract
Prior site-directed mutagenesis studies in bacterial ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) reported that substitution of both oxyanion hole hydrogen bond donors gives a 10(5)- to 10(8)-fold rate reduction, suggesting that the oxyanion hole may provide the major contribution to KSI catalysis. But these seemingly conservative mutations replaced the oxyanion hole hydrogen bond donors with hydrophobic side chains that could lead to suboptimal solvation of the incipient oxyanion in the mutants, thereby potentially exaggerating the apparent energetic benefit of the hydrogen bonds relative to water-mediated hydrogen bonds in solution. We determined the functional and structural consequences of substituting the oxyanion hole hydrogen bond donors and several residues surrounding the oxyanion hole with smaller residues in an attempt to create a local site that would provide interactions more analogous to those in aqueous solution. These more drastic mutations created an active-site cavity estimated to be ~650 Å(3) and sufficient for occupancy by 15-17 water molecules and led to a rate decrease of only ~10(3)-fold for KSI from two different species, a much smaller effect than that observed from more traditional conservative mutations. The results underscore the strong context dependence of hydrogen bond energetics and suggest that the oxyanion hole provides an important, but moderate, catalytic contribution relative to the interactions in the corresponding solution reaction.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja208050t
View details for Web of Science ID 000298713600008
View details for PubMedID 22053826
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3241876
-
Structure-Function Analysis from the Outside In: Long-Range Tertiary Contacts in RNA Exhibit Distinct Catalytic Roles
BIOCHEMISTRY
2011; 50 (40): 8733-8755
Abstract
The conserved catalytic core of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme is encircled by peripheral elements. We have conducted a detailed structure-function study of the five long-range tertiary contacts that fasten these distal elements together. Mutational ablation of each of the tertiary contacts destabilizes the folded ribozyme, indicating a role of the peripheral elements in overall stability. Once folded, three of the five tertiary contact mutants exhibit defects in overall catalysis that range from 20- to 100-fold. These and the subsequent results indicate that the structural ring of peripheral elements does not act as a unitary element; rather, individual connections have distinct roles as further revealed by kinetic and thermodynamic dissection of the individual reaction steps. Ablation of P14 or the metal ion core/metal ion core receptor (MC/MCR) destabilizes docking of the substrate-containing P1 helix into tertiary interactions with the ribozyme's conserved core. In contrast, ablation of the L9/P5 contact weakens binding of the guanosine nucleophile by slowing its association, without affecting P1 docking. The P13 and tetraloop/tetraloop receptor (TL/TLR) mutations had little functional effect and small, local structural changes, as revealed by hydroxyl radical footprinting, whereas the P14, MC/MCR, and L9/P5 mutants show structural changes distal from the mutation site. These changes extended into regions of the catalytic core involved in docking or guanosine binding. Thus, distinct allosteric pathways couple the long-range tertiary contacts to functional sites within the conserved core. This modular functional specialization may represent a fundamental strategy in RNA structure-function interrelationships.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi2008245
View details for Web of Science ID 000295487700022
View details for PubMedID 21815635
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3186870
-
2 '-Fluoro Substituents Can Mimic Native 2 '-Hydroxyls within Structured RNA
CHEMISTRY & BIOLOGY
2011; 18 (8): 949-954
Abstract
The ability of fluorine in a C-F bond to act as a hydrogen bond acceptor is controversial. To test such ability in complex RNA macromolecules, we have replaced native 2'-OH groups with 2'-F and 2'-H groups in two related systems, the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme and the ΔC209 P4-P6 RNA domain. In three cases the introduced 2'-F mimics the native 2'-OH group, suggesting that the fluorine atom can accept a hydrogen bond. In each of these cases the native hydroxyl group interacts with a purine exocyclic amine. Our results give insight about the properties of organofluorine and suggest a possible general biochemical signature for tertiary interactions between 2'-hydroxyl groups and exocyclic amino groups within RNA.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.chembiol.2011.07.014
View details for Web of Science ID 000295203200005
View details for PubMedID 21867910
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3167488
-
Isotope-Edited FTIR of Alkaline Phosphatase Resolves Paradoxical Ligand Binding Properties and Suggests a Role for Ground-State Destabilization
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2011; 133 (30): 11621-11631
Abstract
Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) can hydrolyze a variety of chemically diverse phosphate monoesters while making contacts solely to the transferred phosphoryl group and its incoming and outgoing atoms. Strong interactions between AP and the transferred phosphoryl group are not present in the ground state despite the apparent similarity of the phosphoryl group in the ground and transition states. Such modest ground-state affinity is required to curtail substrate saturation and product inhibition and to allow efficient catalysis. To investigate how AP achieves limited affinity for its ground state, we first compared binding affinities of several related AP ligands. This comparison revealed a paradox: AP has a much stronger affinity for inorganic phosphate (P(i)) than for related compounds that are similar to P(i) geometrically and in overall charge but lack a transferable proton. We postulated that the P(i) proton could play an important role via transfer to the nearby anion, the active site serine nucleophile (Ser102), resulting in the attenuation of electrostatic repulsion between bound P(i) and the Ser102 oxyanion and the binding of P(i) in its trianionic form adjacent to a now neutral Ser residue. To test this model, isotope-edited Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy was used to investigate the ionic structure of AP-bound P(i). The FTIR results indicate that the P(i) trianion is bound and, in conjunction with previous studies of pH-dependent P(i) binding and other results, suggest that P(i) dianion transfers its proton to the Ser102 anion of AP. This internal proton-transfer results in stronger P(i) binding presumably because the additional negative charge on the trianionic P(i) allows stronger electrostatic interactions within the AP active site and because the electrostatic repulsion between bound P(i) and anionic Ser102 is eliminated when the transferred P(i) proton neutralizes Ser102. Indeed, when Ser102 is neutralized the P(i) trianion binds AP with a calculated K(d) of ≤290 fM. These results suggest that electrostatic repulsion between Ser102 and negatively charged phosphate ester substrates contributes to catalysis by the preferential destabilization of the reaction's E·S ground state.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja203370b
View details for Web of Science ID 000293872800042
View details for PubMedID 21692505
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3152580
-
Removal of Covalent Heterogeneity Reveals Simple Folding Behavior for P4-P6 RNA
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
2011; 286 (22): 19872-19879
Abstract
RNA folding landscapes have been described alternately as simple and as complex. The limited diversity of RNA residues and the ability of RNA to form stable secondary structures prior to adoption of a tertiary structure would appear to simplify folding relative to proteins. Nevertheless, there is considerable evidence for long-lived misfolded RNA states, and these observations have suggested rugged energy landscapes. Recently, single molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (smFRET) studies have exposed heterogeneity in many RNAs, consistent with deeply furrowed rugged landscapes. We turned to an RNA of intermediate complexity, the P4-P6 domain from the Tetrahymena group I intron, to address basic questions in RNA folding. P4-P6 exhibited long-lived heterogeneity in smFRET experiments, but the inability to observe exchange in the behavior of individual molecules led us to probe whether there was a non-conformational origin to this heterogeneity. We determined that routine protocols in RNA preparation and purification, including UV shadowing and heat annealing, cause covalent modifications that alter folding behavior. By taking measures to avoid these treatments and by purifying away damaged P4-P6 molecules, we obtained a population of P4-P6 that gave near-uniform behavior in single molecule studies. Thus, the folding landscape of P4-P6 lacks multiple deep furrows that would trap different P4-P6 molecules in different conformations and contrasts with the molecular heterogeneity that has been seen in many smFRET studies of structured RNAs. The simplicity of P4-P6 allowed us to reliably determine the thermodynamic and kinetic effects of metal ions on folding and to now begin to build more detailed models for RNA folding behavior.
View details for DOI 10.1074/jbc.M111.235465
View details for Web of Science ID 000291027700067
View details for PubMedID 21478155
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3103363
-
Implications of molecular heterogeneity for the cooperativity of biological macromolecules
NATURE STRUCTURAL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2011; 18 (6): 732-734
Abstract
Cooperativity, a universal property of biological macromolecules, is typically characterized by a Hill slope, which can provide fundamental information about binding sites and interactions. We demonstrate, through simulations and single-molecule FRET (smFRET) experiments, that molecular heterogeneity lowers bulk cooperativity from the intrinsic value for the individual molecules. As heterogeneity is common in smFRET experiments, appreciation of its influence on fundamental measures of cooperativity is critical for deriving accurate molecular models.
View details for DOI 10.1038/nsmb.2052
View details for Web of Science ID 000291308000016
View details for PubMedID 21572445
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3109240
-
Tightening of Active Site Interactions En Route to the Transition State Revealed by Single-Atom Substitution in the Guanosine-Binding Site of the Tetrahymena Group I Ribozyme
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2011; 133 (20): 7791-7800
Abstract
Protein enzymes establish intricate networks of interactions to bind and position substrates and catalytic groups within active sites, enabling stabilization of the chemical transition state. Crystal structures of several RNA enzymes also suggest extensive interaction networks, despite RNA's structural limitations, but there is little information on the functional and the energetic properties of these inferred networks. We used double mutant cycles and presteady-state kinetic analyses to probe the putative interaction between the exocyclic amino group of the guanosine nucleophile and the N7 atom of residue G264 of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme. As expected, the results supported the presence of this interaction, but remarkably, the energetic penalty for introducing a CH group at the 7-position of residue G264 accumulates as the reaction proceeds toward the chemical transition state to a total of 6.2 kcal/mol. Functional tests of neighboring interactions revealed that the presence of the CH group compromises multiple contacts within the interaction network that encompass the reactive elements, apparently forcing the nucleophile to bind and attack from an altered, suboptimal orientation. The energetic consequences of this indirect disruption of neighboring interactions as the reaction proceeds demonstrate that linkage between binding interactions and catalysis hinges critically on the precise structural integrity of a network of interacting groups.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja111316y
View details for Web of Science ID 000291580400035
View details for PubMedID 21539364
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3119543
-
Identification of RNA recognition elements in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae transcriptome
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
2011; 39 (4): 1501-1509
Abstract
Post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression, including mRNA localization, translation and decay, is ubiquitous yet still largely unexplored. How is the post-transcriptional regulatory program of each mRNA encoded in its sequence? Hundreds of specific RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) appear to play roles in mediating the post-transcriptional regulatory program, akin to the roles of specific DNA-binding proteins in transcription. As a step toward decoding the regulatory programs encoded in each mRNA, we focused on specific mRNA-protein interactions. We computationally analyzed the sequences of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mRNAs bound in vivo by 29 specific RBPs, identifying eight novel candidate motifs and confirming or extending six earlier reported recognition elements. Biochemical selections for RNA sequences selectively recognized by 12 yeast RBPs yielded novel motifs bound by Pin4, Nsr1, Hrb1, Gbp2, Sgn1 and Mrn1, and recovered the known recognition elements for Puf3, She2, Vts1 and Whi3. Most of the RNA elements we uncovered were associated with coherent mRNA expression changes and were significantly conserved in related yeasts, supporting their functional importance and suggesting that the corresponding RNA-protein interactions are evolutionarily conserved.
View details for DOI 10.1093/nar/gkq920
View details for Web of Science ID 000288019400036
View details for PubMedID 20959291
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3045596
-
RNA Structure, Function, and (Thermo-) Dynamics: A SAXS and Single-Molecule Perspective
55th Annual Meeting of the Biophysical-Society
CELL PRESS. 2011: 1–2
View details for Web of Science ID 000306288600007
-
Biological Phosphoryl-Transfer Reactions: Understanding Mechanism and Catalysis
ANNUAL REVIEW OF BIOCHEMISTRY, VOL 80
2011; 80: 669-702
Abstract
Phosphoryl-transfer reactions are central to biology. These reactions also have some of the slowest nonenzymatic rates and thus require enormous rate accelerations from biological catalysts. Despite the central importance of phosphoryl transfer and the fascinating catalytic challenges it presents, substantial confusion persists about the properties of these reactions. This confusion exists despite decades of research on the chemical mechanisms underlying these reactions. Here we review phosphoryl-transfer reactions with the goal of providing the reader with the conceptual and experimental background to understand this body of work, to evaluate new results and proposals, and to apply this understanding to enzymes. We describe likely resolutions to some controversies, while emphasizing the limits of our current approaches and understanding. We apply this understanding to enzyme-catalyzed phosphoryl transfer and provide illustrative examples of how this mechanistic background can guide and deepen our understanding of enzymes and their mechanisms of action. Finally, we present important future challenges for this field.
View details for DOI 10.1146/annurev-biochem-060409-092741
View details for Web of Science ID 000292895600028
View details for PubMedID 21513457
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3418923
-
Hydrogen Bonding in the Active Site of Ketosteroid Isomerase: Electronic Inductive Effects and Hydrogen Bond Coupling
BIOCHEMISTRY
2010; 49 (48): 10339-10348
Abstract
Computational studies are performed to analyze the physical properties of hydrogen bonds donated by Tyr16 and Asp103 to a series of substituted phenolate inhibitors bound in the active site of ketosteroid isomerase (KSI). As the solution pK(a) of the phenolate increases, these hydrogen bond distances decrease, the associated nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) chemical shifts increase, and the fraction of protonated inhibitor increases, in agreement with prior experiments. The quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical calculations provide insight into the electronic inductive effects along the hydrogen bonding network that includes Tyr16, Tyr57, and Tyr32, as well as insight into hydrogen bond coupling in the active site. The calculations predict that the most-downfield NMR chemical shift observed experimentally corresponds to the Tyr16-phenolate hydrogen bond and that Tyr16 is the proton donor when a bound naphtholate inhibitor is observed to be protonated in electronic absorption experiments. According to these calculations, the electronic inductive effects along the hydrogen bonding network of tyrosines cause the Tyr16 hydroxyl to be more acidic than the Asp103 carboxylic acid moiety, which is immersed in a relatively nonpolar environment. When one of the distal tyrosine residues in the network is mutated to phenylalanine, thereby diminishing this inductive effect, the Tyr16-phenolate hydrogen bond becomes longer and the Asp103-phenolate hydrogen bond shorter, as observed in NMR experiments. Furthermore, the calculations suggest that the differences in the experimental NMR data and electronic absorption spectra for pKSI and tKSI, two homologous bacterial forms of the enzyme, are due predominantly to the third tyrosine that is present in the hydrogen bonding network of pKSI but not tKSI. These studies also provide experimentally testable predictions about the impact of mutating the distal tyrosine residues in this hydrogen bonding network on the NMR chemical shifts and electronic absorption spectra.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi101428e
View details for Web of Science ID 000284717600010
View details for PubMedID 21049962
-
Decomposition of Vibrational Shifts of Nitriles into Electrostatic and Hydrogen-Bonding Effects
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2010; 132 (37): 12811-12813
Abstract
Infrared (IR) band shifts of isolated vibrational transitions can serve as quantitative and directional probes of local electrostatic fields, due to the vibrational Stark effect. However, departures from the Stark model can arise when the probe participates in specific, chemical interactions, such as direct hydrogen bonding. We present a method to identify and correct for these departures based on comparison of (13)C NMR chemical shifts and IR frequencies each calibrated in turn by a solvatochromic model. We demonstrate how the tandem use of these experimental observables can be applied to a thiocyanate-modified protein, ketosteroid isomerase, and show, by comparison to structural models, that changes in electrostatic field can be measured within the complex protein environment even in the background of direct hydrogen bonding to the probe.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja104573b
View details for Web of Science ID 000282013700018
View details for PubMedID 20806897
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2943212
-
Multiple Unfolding Events during Native Folding of the Tetrahymena Group I Ribozyme
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2010; 400 (5): 1067-1077
Abstract
Despite the ubiquitous nature of misfolded intermediates in RNA folding, little is known about their physical properties or the folding transitions that allow them to continue folding productively. Folding of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme includes sequential accumulation of two intermediates, termed I(trap) and misfolded (M). Here, we probe the structure and folding transition of I(trap) and compare them to those of M. Hydroxyl radical and dimethyl sulfate footprinting show that both I(trap) and M are extensively structured and crudely resemble the native RNA. However, regions of the core P3-P8 domain are more exposed to solvent in I(trap) than in M. I(trap) rearranges to continue folding nearly 1000-fold faster than M, and urea accelerates folding of I(trap) much less than M. Thus, the rate-limiting transition from I(trap) requires a smaller increase in exposed surface. Mutations that disrupt peripheral tertiary contacts give large and nearly uniform increases in re-folding of M, whereas the same mutations give at most modest increases in folding from I(trap). Intriguingly, mutations within the peripheral element P5abc give 5- to 10-fold accelerations in escape from I(trap), whereas ablation of P13, which lies on the opposite surface in the native structure, near the P3-P8 domain, has no effect. Thus, the unfolding required from I(trap) appears to be local, whereas the unfolding of M appears to be global. Further, the modest effects from several mutations suggest that there are multiple pathways for escape from I(trap) and that escape is aided by loosening nearby native structural constraints, presumably to facilitate local movements of nucleotides or segments that have not formed native contacts. Overall, these and prior results suggest a model in which the global architecture and peripheral interactions of the RNA are achieved relatively early in folding. Multiple folding and re-folding events occur on the predominant pathway to the native state, with increasing native core interactions and cooperativity as folding progresses.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jmb.2010.06.010
View details for Web of Science ID 000280533200011
View details for PubMedID 20541557
-
How enzymes work
FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL. 2010
View details for Web of Science ID 000208675501778
-
Dissecting electrostatic screening, specific ion binding, and ligand binding in an energetic model for glycine riboswitch folding
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2010; 16 (4): 708-719
Abstract
Riboswitches are gene-regulating RNAs that are usually found in the 5'-untranslated regions of messenger RNA. As the sugar-phosphate backbone of RNA is highly negatively charged, the folding and ligand-binding interactions of riboswitches are strongly dependent on the presence of cations. Using small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and hydroxyl radical footprinting, we examined the cation dependence of the different folding stages of the glycine-binding riboswitch from Vibrio cholerae. We found that the partial folding of the tandem aptamer of this riboswitch in the absence of glycine is supported by all tested mono- and divalent ions, suggesting that this transition is mediated by nonspecific electrostatic screening. Poisson-Boltzmann calculations using SAXS-derived low-resolution structural models allowed us to perform an energetic dissection of this process. The results showed that a model with a constant favorable contribution to folding that is opposed by an unfavorable electrostatic term that varies with ion concentration and valency provides a reasonable quantitative description of the observed folding behavior. Glycine binding, on the other hand, requires specific divalent ions binding based on the observation that Mg(2+), Ca(2+), and Mn(2+) facilitated glycine binding, whereas other divalent cations did not. The results provide a case study of how ion-dependent electrostatic relaxation, specific ion binding, and ligand binding can be coupled to shape the energetic landscape of a riboswitch and can begin to be quantitatively dissected.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.1985110
View details for Web of Science ID 000275951000006
View details for PubMedID 20194520
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2844619
-
A Rearrangement of the Guanosine-Binding Site Establishes an Extended Network of Functional Interactions in the Tetrahymena Group I Ribozyme Active Site
BIOCHEMISTRY
2010; 49 (12): 2753-2762
Abstract
Protein enzymes appear to use extensive packing and hydrogen bonding interactions to precisely position catalytic groups within active sites. Because of their inherent backbone flexibility and limited side chain repertoire, RNA enzymes face additional challenges relative to proteins in precisely positioning substrates and catalytic groups. Here, we use the group I ribozyme to probe the existence, establishment, and functional consequences of an extended network of interactions in an RNA active site. The group I ribozyme catalyzes a site-specific attack of guanosine on an oligonucleotide substrate. We previously determined that the hydrogen bond between the exocyclic amino group of guanosine and the 2'-hydroxyl group at position A261 of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme contributes to overall catalysis. We now use functional data, aided by double mutant cycles, to probe this hydrogen bond in the individual reaction steps of the catalytic cycle. Our results indicate that this hydrogen bond is not formed upon guanosine binding to the ribozyme but instead forms at a later stage of the catalytic cycle. Formation of this hydrogen bond is correlated with other structural rearrangements in the ribozyme's active site that are promoted by docking of the oligonucleotide substrate into the ribozyme's active site, and disruption of this interaction has deleterious consequences for the chemical transformation within the ternary complex. These results, combined with earlier results, provide insight into the nature of the multiple conformational steps used by the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme to achieve its active structure and reveal an intricate, extended network of interactions that is used to establish catalytic interactions within this RNA's active site.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi902200n
View details for Web of Science ID 000275858400015
View details for PubMedID 20175542
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2860537
-
Origins of catalysis by computationally designed retroaldolase enzymes
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2010; 107 (11): 4937-4942
Abstract
We have investigated recently reported computationally designed retroaldolase enzymes with the goal of understanding the extent and the origins of their catalytic power. Direct comparison of the designed enzymes to primary amine catalysts in solution revealed a rate acceleration of 10(5)-fold for the most active of the designed retroaldolases. Through pH-rate studies of the designed retroaldolases and evaluation of a Brønsted correlation for a series of amine catalysts, we found that lysine pK(a) values are shifted by 3-4 units in the enzymes but that the catalytic contributions from the shifted pK(a) values are estimated to be modest, about 10-fold. For the most active of the reported enzymes, we evaluated the catalytic contribution of two other design components: a motif intended to stabilize a bound water molecule and hydrophobic substrate binding interactions. Mutational analysis suggested that the bound water motif does not contribute to the rate acceleration. Comparison of the rate acceleration of the designed substrate relative to a minimal substrate suggested that hydrophobic substrate binding interactions contribute around 10(3)-fold to the enzymatic rate acceleration. Altogether, these results suggest that substrate binding interactions and shifting the pK(a) of the catalytic lysine can account for much of the enzyme's rate acceleration. Additional observations suggest that these interactions are limited in the specificity of placement of substrate and active site catalytic groups. Thus, future design efforts may benefit from a focus on achieving precision in binding interactions and placement of catalytic groups.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.0913638107
View details for Web of Science ID 000275714300027
View details for PubMedID 20194782
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2841948
-
The Ligand-Free State of the TPP Riboswitch: A Partially Folded RNA Structure
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2010; 396 (1): 153-165
Abstract
Riboswitches are elements of mRNA that regulate gene expression by undergoing structural changes upon binding of small ligands. Although the structures of several riboswitches have been solved with their ligands bound, the ligand-free states of only a few riboswitches have been characterized. The ligand-free state is as important for the functionality of the riboswitch as the ligand-bound form, but the ligand-free state is often a partially folded structure of the RNA, with conformational heterogeneity that makes it particularly challenging to study. Here, we present models of the ligand-free state of a thiamine pyrophosphate riboswitch that are derived from a combination of complementary experimental and computational modeling approaches. We obtain a global picture of the molecule using small-angle X-ray scattering data and use an RNA structure modeling software, MC-Sym, to fit local structural details to these data on an atomic scale. We have used two different approaches to obtaining these models. Our first approach develops a model of the RNA from the structures of its constituent junction fragments in isolation. The second approach treats the RNA as a single entity, without bias from the structure of its individual constituents. We find that both approaches give similar models for the ligand-free form, but the ligand-bound models differ for the two approaches, and only the models from the second approach agree with the ligand-bound structure known previously from X-ray crystallography. Our models provide a picture of the conformational changes that may occur in the riboswitch upon binding of its ligand. Our results also demonstrate the power of combining experimental small-angle X-ray scattering data with theoretical structure prediction tools in the determination of RNA structures beyond riboswitches.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jmb.2009.11.030
View details for PubMedID 19925806
-
Multiple native states reveal persistent ruggedness of an RNA folding landscape
NATURE
2010; 463 (7281): 681-U117
Abstract
According to the 'thermodynamic hypothesis', the sequence of a biological macromolecule defines its folded, active (or 'native') structure as a global energy minimum in the folding landscape. However, the enormous complexity of folding landscapes of large macromolecules raises the question of whether there is in fact a unique global minimum corresponding to a unique native conformation or whether there are deep local minima corresponding to alternative active conformations. The folding of many proteins is well described by two-state models, leading to highly simplified representations of protein folding landscapes with a single native conformation. Nevertheless, accumulating experimental evidence suggests a more complex topology of folding landscapes with multiple active conformations that can take seconds or longer to interconvert. Here we demonstrate, using single-molecule experiments, that an RNA enzyme folds into multiple distinct native states that interconvert on a timescale much longer than that of catalysis. These data demonstrate that severe ruggedness of RNA folding landscapes extends into conformational space occupied by native conformations.
View details for DOI 10.1038/nature08717
View details for Web of Science ID 000274193900040
View details for PubMedID 20130651
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2818749
-
Dissecting the paradoxical effects of hydrogen bond mutations in the ketosteroid isomerase oxyanion hole
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2010; 107 (5): 1960-1965
Abstract
The catalytic importance of enzyme active-site interactions is frequently assessed by mutating specific residues and measuring the resulting rate reductions. This approach has been used in bacterial ketosteroid isomerase to probe the energetic importance of active-site hydrogen bonds donated to the dienolate reaction intermediate. The conservative Tyr16Phe mutation impairs catalysis by 10(5)-fold, far larger than the effects of hydrogen bond mutations in other enzymes. However, the less-conservative Tyr16Ser mutation, which also perturbs the Tyr16 hydrogen bond, results in a less-severe 10(2)-fold rate reduction. To understand the paradoxical effects of these mutations and clarify the energetic importance of the Tyr16 hydrogen bond, we have determined the 1.6-A resolution x-ray structure of the intermediate analogue, equilenin, bound to the Tyr16Ser mutant and measured the rate effects of mutating Tyr16 to Ser, Thr, Ala, and Gly. The nearly identical 200-fold rate reductions of these mutations, together with the 6.4-A distance observed between the Ser16 hydroxyl and equilenin oxygens in the x-ray structure, strongly suggest that the more moderate rate effect of this mutant is not due to maintenance of a hydrogen bond from Ser at position 16. These results, additional spectroscopic observations, and prior structural studies suggest that the Tyr16Phe mutation results in unfavorable interactions with the dienolate intermediate beyond loss of a hydrogen bond, thereby exaggerating the apparent energetic benefit of the Tyr16 hydrogen bond relative to the solution reaction. These results underscore the complex energetics of hydrogen bonding interactions and site-directed mutagenesis experiments.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.0911168107
View details for Web of Science ID 000274296300030
View details for PubMedID 20080683
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2836627
-
MEASURING THE ENERGETIC COUPLING OF TERTIARY CONTACTS IN RNA FOLDING USING SINGLE MOLECULE FLUORESCENCE RESONANCE ENERGY TRANSFER
METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY, VOL 472: SINGLE MOLECULE TOOLS, PT A: FLUORESCENCE BASED APPROACHES
2010; 472: 205-220
Abstract
Tertiary contacts are critical to stabilizing the folded conformations of structured RNAs. In some cases, these contacts have been shown to interact with positive cooperativity. Measuring the energetic coupling of tertiary contact formation is among the most basic physical characterizations of a structured RNA. With proper experimental design, single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (smFRET) allows the rigorous determination of the energetic coupling. This chapter aims to provide a general experimental approach to measuring the energetic coupling of tertiary contacts, using smFRET.
View details for DOI 10.1016/S0076-6879(10)72009-7
View details for Web of Science ID 000279058600011
View details for PubMedID 20580966
-
Do conformational biases of simple helical junctions influence RNA folding stability and specificity?
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2009; 15 (12): 2195-2205
Abstract
Structured RNAs must fold into their native structures and discriminate against a large number of alternative ones, an especially difficult task given the limited information content of RNA's nucleotide alphabet. The simplest motifs within structured RNAs are two helices joined by nonhelical junctions. To uncover the fundamental behavior of these motifs and to elucidate the underlying physical forces and challenges faced by structured RNAs, we computationally and experimentally studied a tethered duplex model system composed of two helices joined by flexible single- or double-stranded polyethylene glycol tethers, whose lengths correspond to those typically observed in junctions from structured RNAs. To dissect the thermodynamic properties of these simple motifs, we computationally probed how junction topology, electrostatics, and tertiary contact location influenced folding stability. Small-angle X-ray scattering was used to assess our predictions. Single- or double-stranded junctions, independent of sequence, greatly reduce the space of allowed helical conformations and influencing the preferred location and orientation of their adjoining helices. A double-stranded junction guides the helices along a hinge-like pathway. In contrast, a single-stranded junction samples a broader set of conformations and has different preferences than the double-stranded junction. In turn, these preferences determine the stability and distinct specificities of tertiary structure formation. These sequence-independent effects suggest that properties as simple as a junction's topology can generally define the accessible conformational space, thereby stabilizing desired structures and assisting in discriminating against misfolded structures. Thus, junction topology provides a fundamental strategy for transcending the limitations imposed by the low information content of RNA primary sequence.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.1747509
View details for Web of Science ID 000272169000011
View details for PubMedID 19850914
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2779674
-
Concordant Regulation of Translation and mRNA Abundance for Hundreds of Targets of a Human microRNA
PLOS BIOLOGY
2009; 7 (11)
Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) regulate gene expression posttranscriptionally by interfering with a target mRNA's translation, stability, or both. We sought to dissect the respective contributions of translational inhibition and mRNA decay to microRNA regulation. We identified direct targets of a specific miRNA, miR-124, by virtue of their association with Argonaute proteins, core components of miRNA effector complexes, in response to miR-124 transfection in human tissue culture cells. In parallel, we assessed mRNA levels and obtained translation profiles using a novel global approach to analyze polysomes separated on sucrose gradients. Analysis of translation profiles for approximately 8,000 genes in these proliferative human cells revealed that basic features of translation are similar to those previously observed in rapidly growing Saccharomyces cerevisiae. For approximately 600 mRNAs specifically recruited to Argonaute proteins by miR-124, we found reductions in both the mRNA abundance and inferred translation rate spanning a large dynamic range. The changes in mRNA levels of these miR-124 targets were larger than the changes in translation, with average decreases of 35% and 12%, respectively. Further, there was no identifiable subgroup of mRNA targets for which the translational response was dominant. Both ribosome occupancy (the fraction of a given gene's transcripts associated with ribosomes) and ribosome density (the average number of ribosomes bound per unit length of coding sequence) were selectively reduced for hundreds of miR-124 targets by the presence of miR-124. Changes in protein abundance inferred from the observed changes in mRNA abundance and translation profiles closely matched changes directly determined by Western analysis for 11 of 12 proteins, suggesting that our assays captured most of miR-124-mediated regulation. These results suggest that miRNAs inhibit translation initiation or stimulate ribosome drop-off preferentially near the start site and are not consistent with inhibition of polypeptide elongation, or nascent polypeptide degradation contributing significantly to miRNA-mediated regulation in proliferating HEK293T cells. The observation of concordant changes in mRNA abundance and translational rate for hundreds of miR-124 targets is consistent with a functional link between these two regulatory outcomes of miRNA targeting, and the well-documented interrelationship between translation and mRNA decay.
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pbio.1000238
View details for Web of Science ID 000272032000004
View details for PubMedID 19901979
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2766070
-
Determining the catalytic role of remote substrate binding interactions in ketosteroid isomerase
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2009; 106 (34): 14271-14275
Abstract
A fundamental difference between enzymes and small chemical catalysts is the ability of enzymes to use binding interactions with nonreactive portions of substrates to accelerate chemical reactions. Remote binding interactions can localize substrates to the active site, position substrates relative to enzymatic functional groups and other substrates, trigger conformational changes, induce local destabilization, and modulate an active site environment by solvent exclusion. We investigated the role of remote substrate binding interactions in the reaction catalyzed by the enzyme ketosteroid isomerase (KSI), which catalyzes a double bond migration of steroid substrates through a dienolate intermediate that is stabilized in an oxyanion hole. Comparison of a single-ring and multiple-ring substrate allowed the catalytic contribution of binding interactions with the distal substrate rings to be determined. The value of k(cat)/K(M) for a single-ring substrate is reduced 27,000-fold relative to a multiple-ring steroid substrate, suggesting that remote binding interactions with the steroid substrate contribute substantially to the KSI reaction. Nevertheless, the reaction rates for KSI-bound single- and multiple-ring substrates (k(cat)) are within 2-fold. Further, oxyanion hole mutations have the same effect on reactions of the single- and multiple-ring substrates. These results suggest that remote binding interactions contribute >5 kcal/mol to catalysis by KSI but that local rather than remote interactions dictate the catalytic contributions from KSI's general base and oxyanion hole.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.0901032106
View details for Web of Science ID 000269295100021
View details for PubMedID 19706511
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2732871
-
The far reaches of enzymology
NATURE CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
2009; 5 (8): 516-520
View details for DOI 10.1038/nchembio0809-516
View details for Web of Science ID 000268209200002
View details for PubMedID 19620986
-
Hydrogen Bond Coupling in the Ketosteroid Isomerase Active Site
BIOCHEMISTRY
2009; 48 (29): 6932-6939
Abstract
Hydrogen bond networks are key elements of biological structure and function. Nevertheless, their structural properties are challenging to assess within complex macromolecules. Hydrogen-bonded protons are not observed in the vast majority of protein X-ray structures, and static crystallographic models provide limited information regarding the dynamical coupling within hydrogen bond networks. We have brought together 1.1-1.3 A resolution X-ray crystallography, (1)H NMR, site-directed mutagenesis, and deuterium isotope effects on the geometry and chemical shifts of hydrogen-bonded protons to probe the conformational coupling of hydrogen bonds donated by Y16 and D103 in the oxyanion hole of bacterial ketosteroid isomerase. Our results suggest a robust physical coupling of the equilibrium structures of these two hydrogen bonds such that a lengthening of one hydrogen bond by as little as 0.01 A results in a shortening of the neighbor by a similar magnitude. Furthermore, the structural rearrangements detected by NMR in response to mutations within the active site hydrogen bond network can be explained on the basis of the observed coupling. The results herein elucidate fundamental structural properties of hydrogen bonds within the idiosyncratic environment of an enzyme active site and provide a foundation for future experimental and computational explorations of the role of coupled motions within hydrogen bond networks.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi900713j
View details for Web of Science ID 000268175600023
View details for PubMedID 19469568
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3393856
-
Probing the Dynamics of the P1 Helix within the Tetrahymena Group I Intron
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2009; 131 (27): 9571-9578
Abstract
RNA conformational transformations are integral to RNA's biological functions. Further, structured RNA molecules exist as a series of dynamic intermediates in the course of folding or complexation with proteins. Thus, an understanding of RNA folding and function will require deep and incisive understanding of its dynamic behavior. However, existing tools to investigate RNA dynamics are limited. Here, we introduce a powerful fluorescence polarization anisotropy approach that utilizes a rare base analogue that retains substantial fluorescence when incorporated into helices. We show that 6-methylisoxanthopterin (6-MI) can be used to follow the nanosecond dynamics of individual helices. We then use 6-MI to probe the dynamics of an individual helix, referred to as P1, within the 400nt Tetrahymena group I ribozyme. Comparisons of the dynamics of the P1 helix in wild type and mutant ribozymes and in model constructs reveal a highly immobilized docked state of the P1 helix, as expected, and a relatively mobile "open complex" or undocked state. This latter result rules out a model in which slow docking of the P1 helix into its cognate tertiary interactions arises from a stable alternatively docked conformer. The results are consistent with a model in which stacking and tertiary interactions of the A(3) tether connecting the P1 helix to the body of the ribozyme limit P1 mobility and slow its docking, and this model is supported by cross-linking results. The ability to isolate the nanosecond motions of individual helices within complex RNAs and RNA/protein complexes will be valuable in distinguishing between functional models and in discerning the fundamental behavior of important biological species.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja902797j
View details for Web of Science ID 000268239400026
View details for PubMedID 19537712
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2758093
-
Hydrogen bond dynamics in the active site of photoactive yellow protein
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2009; 106 (23): 9232-9237
Abstract
Hydrogen bonds play major roles in biological structure and function. Nonetheless, hydrogen-bonded protons are not typically observed by X-ray crystallography, and most structural studies provide limited insight into the conformational plasticity of individual hydrogen bonds or the dynamical coupling present within hydrogen bond networks. We report the NMR detection of the hydrogen-bonded protons donated by Tyr-42 and Glu-46 to the chromophore oxygen in the active site of the bacterial photoreceptor, photoactive yellow protein (PYP). We have used the NMR resonances for these hydrogen bonds to probe their conformational properties and ability to rearrange in response to nearby electronic perturbation. The detection of geometric isotope effects transmitted between the Tyr-42 and Glu-46 hydrogen bonds provides strong evidence for robust coupling of their equilibrium conformations. Incorporation of a modified chromophore containing an electron-withdrawing cyano group to delocalize negative charge from the chromophore oxygen, analogous to the electronic rearrangement detected upon photon absorption, results in a lengthening of the Tyr-42 and Glu-46 hydrogen bonds and an attenuated hydrogen bond coupling. The results herein elucidate fundamental properties of hydrogen bonds within the complex environment of a protein interior. Furthermore, the robust conformational coupling and plasticity of hydrogen bonds observed in the PYP active site may facilitate the larger-scale dynamical coupling and signal transduction inherent to the biological function that PYP has evolved to carry out and may provide a model for other coupled dynamic systems.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.0900168106
View details for Web of Science ID 000266817500025
View details for PubMedID 19470452
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2695108
-
Force and Form in RNA Folding
ADENINE PRESS. 2009: 813–13
View details for Web of Science ID 000266300700056
-
Evaluating the Potential for Halogen Bonding in the Oxyanion Hole of Ketosteroid Isomerase Using Unnatural Amino Acid Mutagenesis
ACS CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
2009; 4 (4): 269-273
Abstract
There has recently been an increasing interest in controlling macromolecular conformations and interactions through halogen bonding. Halogen bonds are favorable electrostatic interactions between polarized, electropositive chlorine, bromine, or iodine atoms and electronegative atoms such as oxygen or nitrogen. These interactions have been likened to hydrogen bonds in terms of their favored acceptor molecules, their geometries, and their energetics. We asked whether a halogen bond could replace a hydrogen bond in the oxyanion hole of ketosteroid isomerase, using semisynthetic enzymes containing para-halogenated phenylalanine derivatives to replace the tyrosine hydrogen bond donor. Formation of a halogen bond to the oxyanion in the transition state would be expected to rescue the effects of mutation to phenylalanine, but all of the halogenated enzymes were comparable in activity to the phenylalanine mutant. We conclude that, at least in this active site, a halogen bond cannot functionally replace a hydrogen bond.
View details for DOI 10.1021/cb900016q
View details for Web of Science ID 000265444200006
View details for PubMedID 19260691
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2708088
-
Motions of the Substrate Recognition Duplex in a Group I Intron Assessed by Site-Directed Spin Labeling
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2009; 131 (9): 3136-?
Abstract
The Tetrahymena group I intron recognizes its oligonucleotide substrate in a two-step process. First, a substrate recognition duplex, called the P1 duplex, is formed. The P1 duplex then docks into the prefolded ribozyme core by forming tertiary contacts. P1 docking controls both the rate and the fidelity of substrate cleavage and has been extensively studied as a model for the formation of RNA tertiary structure. However, previous work has been limited to studying millisecond or slower motions. Here we investigated nanosecond P1 motions in the context of the ribozyme using site-directed spin labeling (SDSL) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. A nitroxide spin label (R5a) was covalently attached to a specific site of the substrate oligonucleotide, the labeled substrate was bound to a prefolded ribozyme to form the P1 duplex, and X-band EPR spectroscopy was used to monitor nitroxide motions in the 0.1-50 ns regime. Using substrates that favor the docked or the undocked states, it was established that R5a was capable of reporting P1 duplex motions. Using R5a-labeled substrates it was found that the J1/2 junction connecting P1 to the ribozyme core controls nanosecond P1 mobility in the undocked state. This may account for previous observations that J1/2 mutations weaken substrate binding and give rise to cryptic cleavage. This study establishes the use of SDSL to probe nanosecond dynamic behaviors of individual helices within large RNA and RNA/protein complexes. This approach may help in understanding the relationship between RNA structure, dynamics, and function.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja808217s
View details for Web of Science ID 000264792400008
View details for PubMedID 19220053
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2788000
-
Coarse-grained modeling of large RNA molecules with knowledge-based potentials and structural filters
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2009; 15 (2): 189-199
Abstract
Understanding the function of complex RNA molecules depends critically on understanding their structure. However, creating three-dimensional (3D) structural models of RNA remains a significant challenge. We present a protocol (the nucleic acid simulation tool [NAST]) for RNA modeling that uses an RNA-specific knowledge-based potential in a coarse-grained molecular dynamics engine to generate plausible 3D structures. We demonstrate NAST's capabilities by using only secondary structure and tertiary contact predictions to generate, cluster, and rank structures. Representative structures in the best ranking clusters averaged 8.0 +/- 0.3 A and 16.3 +/- 1.0 A RMSD for the yeast phenylalanine tRNA and the P4-P6 domain of the Tetrahymena thermophila group I intron, respectively. The coarse-grained resolution allows us to model large molecules such as the 158-residue P4-P6 or the 388-residue T. thermophila group I intron. One advantage of NAST is the ability to rank clusters of structurally similar decoys based on their compatibility with experimental data. We successfully used ideal small-angle X-ray scattering data and both ideal and experimental solvent accessibility data to select the best cluster of structures for both tRNA and P4-P6. Finally, we used NAST to build in missing loops in the crystal structures of the Azoarcus and Twort ribozymes, and to incorporate crystallographic data into the Michel-Westhof model of the T. thermophila group I intron, creating an integrated model of the entire molecule. Our software package is freely available at https://simtk.org/home/nast.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.1270809
View details for Web of Science ID 000262463200001
View details for PubMedID 19144906
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2648710
-
Biophysical, chemical, and functional probes of RNA structure, interactions and folding: Part A. Preface.
Methods in enzymology
2009; 468: xv-?
View details for DOI 10.1016/S0076-6879(09)68020-4
View details for PubMedID 19925921
-
THE DIVERSITY OF NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY
NATO Advanced Study Institute on Biophysics and the Challenges of Emerging Threats
SPRINGER. 2009: 65–81
View details for Web of Science ID 000267755300005
-
RNA. Preface.
Methods in enzymology
2009; 469: xvii-?
View details for DOI 10.1016/S0076-6879(09)69028-5
View details for PubMedID 19925922
-
PROBING NUCLEIC ACID-ION INTERACTIONS WITH BUFFER EXCHANGE-ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROSCOPY
METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY, VOL 469: BIOPHYSICAL, CHEMICAL, AND FUNCTIONAL PROBES OF RNA STRUCTURE, INTERACTIONS AND FOLDING, PT B
2009; 469: 375-389
Abstract
The ion atmosphere of nucleic acids directly affects measured biochemical and biophysical properties. However, study of the ion atmosphere is difficult due to its diffuse and dynamic nature. Standard techniques available have significant limitations in sensitivity, specificity, and directness of the assays. Buffer exchange-atomic emission spectroscopy (BE-AES) was developed to overcome many of the limitations of previously available techniques. This technique can provide a complete accounting of all ions constituting the ionic atmosphere of a nucleic acid at thermodynamic equilibrium. Although initially developed for the study of the ion atmosphere of nucleic acids, BE-AES has also been applied to study site-bound ions in RNA and protein.
View details for DOI 10.1016/S0076-6879(09)69018-2
View details for Web of Science ID 000272797000018
View details for PubMedID 20946799
-
Structure and Function Converge To Identify a Hydrogen Bond in a Group I Ribozyme Active Site
ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION
2009; 48 (39): 7171-7175
View details for DOI 10.1002/anie.200903006
View details for Web of Science ID 000269979100006
View details for PubMedID 19708048
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2862986
-
USE OF PHOSPHOROTHIOATES TO IDENTIFY SITES OF METAL-ION BINDING IN RNA
METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY, VOL 468: BIOPHYSICAL, CHEMICAL, AND FUNCTIONAL PROBES OF RNA STRUCTURE, INTERACTIONS AND FOLDING, PT A
2009; 468: 311-333
Abstract
Single atom substitutions provide an exceptional opportunity to investigate RNA structure and function. Replacing a phosphoryl oxygen with a sulfur represents one of the most common and powerful single atom substitutions and can be used to determine the sites of metal-ion binding. Using functional assays of ribozyme catalysis, based on pre-steady-state kinetics, it is possible to extend this analysis to the transition state, capturing ligands for catalytic metal ions in this fleeting state. In conjunction with data determined from X-ray crystallography, this technique can provide a picture of the environment surrounding catalytic metal ions in both the ground state and the transition state at atomic resolution. Here, we describe the principles of such analysis, explain limitations of the method, and provide a practical example based on our results with the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme.
View details for DOI 10.1016/S0076-6879(09)68015-0
View details for Web of Science ID 000272435500016
View details for PubMedID 20946776
-
METAL ION-BASED RNA CLEAVAGE AS A STRUCTURAL PROBE
METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY, VOL 468: BIOPHYSICAL, CHEMICAL, AND FUNCTIONAL PROBES OF RNA STRUCTURE, INTERACTIONS AND FOLDING, PT A
2009; 468: 91-106
Abstract
It is well established that many metal ions accelerate the spontaneous degradation of RNA. This property has been exploited in several ways to garner information about RNA structure, especially in regards to the location of site-specifically bound metal ions, the presence of defined structural motifs, and the occurrence of conformational changes in structured RNAs. In this chapter, we review this information, briefly giving strengths and limitations for each of these approaches. Finally, we provide a general protocol to perform metal ion-mediated cleavage of RNA.
View details for DOI 10.1016/S0076-6879(09)68005-8
View details for Web of Science ID 000272435500006
View details for PubMedID 20946766
-
Riboswitch conformations revealed by small-angle X-ray scattering.
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)
2009; 540: 141-159
Abstract
Riboswitches are functional RNA molecules that control gene expression through conformational changes in response to small-molecule ligand binding. In addition, riboswitch 3D structure, like that of other RNA molecules, is dependent on cation-RNA interactions as the RNA backbone is highly negatively charged. Here, we show how small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) can be used to probe RNA conformations as a function of ligand and ion concentration. In a recent study of a glycine-binding tandem aptamer from Vibrio cholerae, we have used SAXS data and thermodynamic modeling to investigate how Mg(2+)-dependent folding and glycine binding are energetically coupled. In addition, we have employed ab initio shape reconstruction algorithms to obtain low-resolution models of the riboswitch structure from SAXS data under different solution conditions.
View details for DOI 10.1007/978-1-59745-558-9_11
View details for PubMedID 19381558
-
FLUORESCENCE POLARIZATION ANISOTROPY TO MEASURE RNA DYNAMICS
METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY, VOL 469: BIOPHYSICAL, CHEMICAL, AND FUNCTIONAL PROBES OF RNA STRUCTURE, INTERACTIONS AND FOLDING, PT B
2009; 469: 287-302
Abstract
RNA requires helical motion to fold and carry out its function. As RNA helical motion occurs on the nanosecond timescale, the timescale probed by fluorescence dyes, fluorescence polarization anisotropy (FPA) is a simple, yet powerful, technique to study helical dynamics in RNA. With the recent development of several fluorescent base analogs that have a nanosecond timescale lifetime in a duplex, FPA has begun to be used for characterizing RNA dynamics. Using the probe 6-methylisoxanthopterin (6-MI) as an example, we describe the procedure for carrying out FPA experiments on model oligonucleotide systems and in a complex RNA, the Tetrahymena group I intron. For smaller RNA systems, isolating the motion of the target helix from the overall tumbling of the whole RNA system is necessary, and nucleic acids binding proteins can be incorporated into the RNA system to increase the overall size of the system, slow the overall tumbling, and thereby reduce the anisotropy contribution from the overall tumbling to negligible. The procedure for incorporating one such protein, the Lac Repressor, is given as an example.
View details for DOI 10.1016/S0076-6879(09)69014-5
View details for Web of Science ID 000272797000014
View details for PubMedID 20946795
-
METHODS OF SITE-SPECIFIC LABELING OF RNA WITH FLUORESCENT DYES
METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY, VOL 469: BIOPHYSICAL, CHEMICAL, AND FUNCTIONAL PROBES OF RNA STRUCTURE, INTERACTIONS AND FOLDING, PT B
2009; 469: 47-68
Abstract
Single molecule fluorescence techniques offer unique insights into mechanisms of conformational changes of RNA. Knowing how to make fluorescently labeled RNA molecules and understanding potential limitations of different labeling strategies is essential for successful implementation of single molecule fluorescence techniques. This chapter offers a step by step overview of the process of obtaining RNA constructs ready for single molecule measurements. Several alternative methods are described for each step, and ways of troubleshooting the most common problems, in particular, splinted RNA ligation, are suggested.
View details for DOI 10.1016/S0076-6879(09)69003-0
View details for Web of Science ID 000272797000003
View details for PubMedID 20946784
-
Comparative Enzymology in the Alkaline Phosphatase Superfamily to Determine the Catalytic Role of an Active-Site Metal Ion
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2008; 384 (5): 1174-1189
Abstract
Mechanistic models for biochemical systems are frequently proposed from structural data. Site-directed mutagenesis can be used to test the importance of proposed functional sites, but these data do not necessarily indicate how these sites contribute to function. In this study, we applied an alternative approach to the catalytic mechanism of alkaline phosphatase (AP), a widely studied prototypical bimetallo enzyme. A third metal ion site in AP has been suggested to provide general base catalysis, but comparison of AP with an evolutionarily related enzyme casts doubt on this model. Removal of this metal site from AP has large differential effects on reactions of cognate and promiscuous substrates, and the results are inconsistent with general base catalysis. Instead, these and additional results suggest that the third metal ion stabilizes the transferred phosphoryl group in the transition state. These results establish a new mechanistic model for this prototypical bimetallo enzyme and demonstrate the power of a comparative approach for probing biochemical function.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jmb.2008.09.059
View details for Web of Science ID 000262016600014
View details for PubMedID 18851975
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2622731
-
Promiscuous Sulfatase Activity and Thio-Effects in a Phosphodiesterase of the Alkaline Phosphatase Superfamily
BIOCHEMISTRY
2008; 47 (48): 12853-12859
Abstract
The nucleotide phosphodiesterase/pyrophosphatase from Xanthomonas axonopodis (NPP) is a structural and evolutionary relative of alkaline phosphatase that preferentially hydrolyzes phosphate diesters. With the goal of understanding how these two enzymes with nearly identical Zn(2+) bimetallo sites achieve high selectivity for hydrolysis of either phosphate monoesters or diesters, we have measured a promiscuous sulfatase activity in NPP. Sulfate esters are nearly isosteric with phosphate esters but carry less charge, offering a probe of electrostatic contributions to selectivity. NPP exhibits sulfatase activity with k(cat)/K(M) value of 2 x 10(-5) M(-1) s(-1), similar to the R166S mutant of alkaline phosphatase. We further report the effects of thio-substitution on phosphate monoester and diester reactions. Reactivities with these noncognate substrates illustrate a reduced dependence of NPP reactivity on the charge of the nonbridging oxygen situated between the Zn(2+) ions relative to that in alkaline phosphatase. This reduced charge dependence can explain about 10(2) of the 10(7)-fold differential catalytic proficiency for the most similar monoester and diester substrates in the two enzymes. The results further suggest that active site contacts to substrate oxygen atoms that do not contact the Zn(2+) ions may play an important role in defining the selectivity of the enzymes.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi801488c
View details for Web of Science ID 000261202300024
View details for PubMedID 18975918
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2662379
-
A repulsive field: advances in the electrostatics of the ion atmosphere
CURRENT OPINION IN CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
2008; 12 (6): 619-625
Abstract
The large electrostatic repulsion arising from the negatively charged backbone of RNA molecules presents a large barrier to folding. Solution counterions assist in the folding process by screening this electrostatic repulsion. While early research interpreted the effect of these counterions in terms of an empirical ligand-binding model, theories based on physical models have supplanted them and revised our view of the roles that ions play in folding. Instead of specific ion-binding sites, most ions in solution interact inside an 'ion atmosphere'--a fluctuating cloud of nonspecifically associated ions surrounding any charged molecule. Recent advances in experiments have begun the task of characterizing the ion atmosphere, yielding valuable data that have revealed deficiencies in Poisson-Boltzmann theory, the most widely used theory of the ion atmosphere. The continued development of experiments will help guide the development of improved theories, with the ultimate goal of understanding RNA folding and function and nucleic acid/protein interactions from a quantitative perspective.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.cbpa.2008.10.010
View details for Web of Science ID 000262541300004
View details for PubMedID 19081286
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2976615
-
Testing geometrical discrimination within an enzyme active site: Constrained hydrogen bonding in the ketosterold isomerase oxyanion hole
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2008; 130 (41): 13696-13708
Abstract
Enzymes are classically proposed to accelerate reactions by binding substrates within active-site environments that are structurally preorganized to optimize binding interactions with reaction transition states rather than ground states. This is a remarkably formidable task considering the limited 0.1-1 A scale of most substrate rearrangements. The flexibility of active-site functional groups along the coordinate of substrate rearrangement, the distance scale on which enzymes can distinguish structural rearrangement, and the energetic significance of discrimination on that scale remain open questions that are fundamental to a basic physical understanding of enzyme active sites and catalysis. We bring together 1.2-1.5 A resolution X-ray crystallography, (1)H and (19)F NMR spectroscopy, quantum mechanical calculations, and transition-state analogue binding measurements to test the distance scale on which noncovalent forces can constrain the structural relaxation or translation of side chains and ligands along a specific coordinate and the energetic consequences of such geometric constraints within the active site of bacterial ketosteroid isomerase (KSI). Our results strongly suggest that packing and binding interactions within the KSI active site can constrain local side-chain reorientation and prevent hydrogen bond shortening by 0.1 A or less. Further, this constraint has substantial energetic effects on ligand binding and stabilization of negative charge within the oxyanion hole. These results provide evidence that subtle geometric effects, indistinguishable in most X-ray crystallographic structures, can have significant energetic consequences and highlight the importance of using synergistic experimental approaches to dissect enzyme function.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja803928m
View details for Web of Science ID 000259924000040
View details for PubMedID 18808119
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2700827
-
Diverse RNA-Binding Proteins Interact with Functionally Related Sets of RNAs, Suggesting an Extensive Regulatory System
PLOS BIOLOGY
2008; 6 (10): 2297-2313
Abstract
RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) have roles in the regulation of many post-transcriptional steps in gene expression, but relatively few RBPs have been systematically studied. We searched for the RNA targets of 40 proteins in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae: a selective sample of the approximately 600 annotated and predicted RBPs, as well as several proteins not annotated as RBPs. At least 33 of these 40 proteins, including three of the four proteins that were not previously known or predicted to be RBPs, were reproducibly associated with specific sets of a few to several hundred RNAs. Remarkably, many of the RBPs we studied bound mRNAs whose protein products share identifiable functional or cytotopic features. We identified specific sequences or predicted structures significantly enriched in target mRNAs of 16 RBPs. These potential RNA-recognition elements were diverse in sequence, structure, and location: some were found predominantly in 3'-untranslated regions, others in 5'-untranslated regions, some in coding sequences, and many in two or more of these features. Although this study only examined a small fraction of the universe of yeast RBPs, 70% of the mRNA transcriptome had significant associations with at least one of these RBPs, and on average, each distinct yeast mRNA interacted with three of the RBPs, suggesting the potential for a rich, multidimensional network of regulation. These results strongly suggest that combinatorial binding of RBPs to specific recognition elements in mRNAs is a pervasive mechanism for multi-dimensional regulation of their post-transcriptional fate.
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pbio.0060255
View details for Web of Science ID 000260423900021
View details for PubMedID 18959479
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2573929
-
Critical assessment of nucleic acid electrostatics via experimental and computational investigation of an unfolded state ensemble
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2008; 130 (37): 12334-12341
Abstract
Electrostatic forces, acting between helices and modulated by the presence of the ion atmosphere, are key determinants in the energetic balance that governs RNA folding. Previous studies have employed Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) theory to compute the energetic contribution of these forces in RNA folding. However, the complex interaction of these electrostatic forces with RNA features such as tertiary contact formation, specific ion-binding, and complex interhelical junctions present in prior studies precluded a rigorous evaluation of PB theory, especially in physiologically important Mg(2+) solutions. To critically assess PB theory, we developed a model system that isolates these electrostatic forces. The model system, composed of two DNA duplexes tethered by a polyethylene glycol junction, is an analog for the unfolded state of canonical helix-junction-helix motifs found in virtually all structured RNAs. This model system lacks the complicating features that have precluded a critical assessment of PB in prior studies, ensuring that interhelical electrostatic forces dominate the behavior of the system. The system's simplicity allows PB predictions to be directly compared with small-angle X-ray scattering experiments over a range of monovalent and divalent ion concentrations. These comparisons indicate that PB is a reasonable description of the underlying electrostatic energies for monovalent ions, but large deviations are observed for divalent ions. The validation of PB for monovalent solutions allows analysis of the change in the conformational ensemble of this simple motif as salt concentration is changed. Addition of ions allows the motif to sample more compact microstates, increasing its conformational entropy. The increase of conformational entropy presents an additional barrier to folding by stabilizing the unfolded state. Neglecting this effect will adversely impact the accuracy of folding analyses and models.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja800854u
View details for Web of Science ID 000259139900046
View details for PubMedID 18722445
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3167486
-
BIOL 102-Demystifying RNA folding
236th National Meeting of the American-Chemical-Society
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 2008
View details for Web of Science ID 000270256301443
-
BIOL 100-Transition state complementarity revisited: Dissecting electrostatic and geometrical catalysis in enzyme active sites
236th National Meeting of the American-Chemical-Society
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 2008
View details for Web of Science ID 000270256301442
-
Arginine coordination in enzymatic phosphoryl transfer: Evaluation of the effect of Arg166 mutations in Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase
BIOCHEMISTRY
2008; 47 (29): 7663-7672
Abstract
Arginine residues are commonly found in the active sites of enzymes catalyzing phosphoryl transfer reactions. Numerous site-directed mutagenesis experiments establish the importance of these residues for efficient catalysis, but their role in catalysis is not clear. To examine the role of arginine residues in the phosphoryl transfer reaction, we have measured the consequences of mutations to arginine 166 in Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase on hydrolysis of ethyl phosphate, on individual reaction steps in the hydrolysis of the covalent enzyme-phosphoryl intermediate, and on thio substitution effects. The results show that the role of the arginine side chain extends beyond its positive charge, as the Arg166Lys mutant is as compromised in activity as Arg166Ser. Through measurement of individual reaction steps, we construct a free energy profile for the hydrolysis of the enzyme-phosphate intermediate. This analysis indicates that the arginine side chain strengthens binding by approximately 3 kcal/mol and provides an additional 1-2 kcal/mol stabilization of the chemical transition state. A 2.1 A X-ray diffraction structure of Arg166Ser AP is presented, which shows little difference in enzyme structure compared to the wild-type enzyme but shows a significant reorientation of the bound phosphate. Altogether, these results support a model in which the arginine contributes to catalysis through binding interactions and through additional transition state stabilization that may arise from complementarity of the guanidinum group to the geometry of the trigonal bipyramidal transition state.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi800545n
View details for Web of Science ID 000257665100008
View details for PubMedID 18627128
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2587100
-
Functional identification of ligands for a catalytic metal ion in group I introns
BIOCHEMISTRY
2008; 47 (26): 6883-6894
Abstract
Many enzymes use metal ions within their active sites to achieve enormous rate acceleration. Understanding how metal ions mediate catalysis requires elucidation of metal ion interactions with both the enzyme and the substrate(s). The three-dimensional arrangement determined by X-ray crystallography provides a powerful starting point for identifying ground state interactions, but only functional studies can establish and interrogate transition state interactions. The Tetrahymena group I ribozyme is a paradigm for the study of RNA catalysis, and previous work using atomic mutagenesis and quantitative analysis of metal ion rescue behavior identified catalytic metal ions making five contacts with the substrate atoms. Here, we have combined atomic mutagenesis with site-specific phosphorothioate substitutions in the ribozyme backbone to establish transition state ligands on the ribozyme for one of the catalytic metal ions, referred to as M A. We identified the pro-S P oxygen atoms at nucleotides C208, A304, and A306 as ground state ligands for M A, verifying interactions suggested by the Azoarcus crystal structures. We further established that these interactions are present in the chemical transition state, a conclusion that requires functional studies, such as those carried out herein. Elucidating these active site connections is a crucial step toward an in-depth understanding of how specific structural features of the group I intron lead to catalysis.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi800519a
View details for Web of Science ID 000257095400017
View details for PubMedID 18517225
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2758101
-
Coupling between ATP binding and DNA cleavage by DNA topoisomerase II - A unifying kinetic and structural mechanism
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
2008; 283 (25): 17463-17476
Abstract
DNA topoisomerase II is a molecular machine that couples ATP hydrolysis to the transport of one DNA segment through a transient break in another segment. To learn about the energetic connectivity that underlies this coupling, we investigated how the ATPase domains exert control over DNA cleavage. We dissected the DNA cleavage reaction by measuring rate and equilibrium constants for the individual reaction steps utilizing defined DNA duplexes in the presence and absence of the nonhydrolyzable ATP analog 5'-adenylyl-beta,gamma-imidodiphosphate (AMPPNP). Our results revealed the existence of two enzyme conformations whose relative abundance is sensitive to the presence of nucleotides. The predominant species in the absence of nucleotides binds DNA at a diffusion limited rate but cannot efficiently cleave DNA. In the presence of AMPPNP, most of the enzyme is converted to a state in which DNA binding and release is extremely slow but which allows DNA cleavage. A minimal kinetic and thermodynamic framework is established that accounts for the cooperativity of cleavage of the two DNA strands in the presence and absence of bound AMPPNP and includes conformational steps revealed in the kinetic studies. The model unifies available kinetic, thermodynamic, and structural data to provide a description for the reaction in terms of the order and rate of individual reaction steps and the physical nature of the species on the reaction path. Furthermore, this reaction framework provides a foundation for a future in-depth analysis of energy transduction by topoisomerase II, for guiding and interpreting future structural studies, and for analyzing the mechanism of drugs that convert topoisomerase into a cellular poison.
View details for DOI 10.1074/jbc.M710014200
View details for Web of Science ID 000256720600054
View details for PubMedID 18403371
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2427340
-
Unwinding RNA's secrets: advances in the biology, physics, and modeling of complex RNAs
CURRENT OPINION IN STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY
2008; 18 (3): 305-314
Abstract
The rapid development of our understanding of the diverse biological roles fulfilled by non-coding RNA has motivated interest in the basic macromolecular behavior, structure, and function of RNA. We focus on two areas in the behavior of complex RNAs. First, we present advances in the understanding of how RNA folding is accomplished in vivo by presenting a mechanism for the action of DEAD-box proteins. Members of this family are intimately associated with almost all cellular processes involving RNA, mediating RNA structural rearrangements and chaperoning their folding. Next, we focus on advances in understanding, and characterizing the basic biophysical forces that govern the folding of complex RNAs. Ultimately we expect that a confluence and synergy between these approaches will lead to profound understanding of RNA and its biology.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.sbi.2008.05.002
View details for Web of Science ID 000257539100005
View details for PubMedID 18555681
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2574980
-
Direct measurement of tertiary contact cooperativity in RNA folding
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2008; 130 (19): 6085-?
Abstract
All structured biological macromolecules must overcome the thermodynamic folding problem to populate a unique functional state among a vast ensemble of unfolded and alternate conformations. The exploration of cooperativity in protein folding has helped reveal and distinguish the underlying mechanistic solutions to this folding problem. Analogous dissections of RNA tertiary stability remain elusive, however, despite the central biological importance of folded RNA molecules and the potential to reveal fundamental properties of structured macromolecules via comparisons of protein and RNA folding. We report a direct quantitative measure of tertiary contact cooperativity in a folded RNA. We precisely measured the stability of an independently folding P4-P6 domain from the Tetrahymena thermophila group I intron by single molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (smFRET). Using wild-type and mutant RNAs, we found that cooperativity between the two tertiary contacts enhances P4-P6 stability by 3.2 +/- 0.2 kcal/mol.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja800919q
View details for Web of Science ID 000255620200014
View details for PubMedID 18429611
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2835547
-
Systematic Identification of mRNAs Recruited to Argonaute 2 by Specific microRNAs and Corresponding Changes in Transcript Abundance
PLOS ONE
2008; 3 (5)
Abstract
microRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs that regulate mRNA stability and translation through the action of the RNAi-induced silencing complex (RISC). Our current understanding of miRNA function is inferred largely from studies of the effects of miRNAs on steady-state mRNA levels and from seed match conservation and context in putative targets. Here we have taken a more direct approach to these issues by comprehensively assessing the miRNAs and mRNAs that are physically associated with Argonaute 2 (Ago2), which is a core RISC component. We transfected HEK293T cells with epitope-tagged Ago2, immunopurified Ago2 together with any associated miRNAs and mRNAs, and quantitatively determined the levels of these RNAs by microarray analyses. We found that Ago2 immunopurified samples contained a representative repertoire of the cell's miRNAs and a select subset of the cell's total mRNAs. Transfection of the miRNAs miR-1 and miR-124 caused significant changes in the association of scores of mRNAs with Ago2. The mRNAs whose association with Ago2 increased upon miRNA expression were much more likely to contain specific miRNA seed matches and to have their overall mRNA levels decrease in response to the miRNA transfection than expected by chance. Hundreds of mRNAs were recruited to Ago2 by each miRNA via seed sequences in 3'-untranslated regions and coding sequences and a few mRNAs appear to be targeted via seed sequences in 5'-untranslated regions. Microarray analysis of Ago2 immunopurified samples provides a simple, direct method for experimentally identifying the targets of miRNAs and for elucidating roles of miRNAs in cellular regulation.
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0002126
View details for Web of Science ID 000261642400047
View details for PubMedID 18461144
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2330160
-
Structural inference of native and partially folded RNA by high-throughput contact mapping
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2008; 105 (11): 4144-4149
Abstract
The biological behaviors of ribozymes, riboswitches, and numerous other functional RNA molecules are critically dependent on their tertiary folding and their ability to sample multiple functional states. The conformational heterogeneity and partially folded nature of most of these states has rendered their characterization by high-resolution structural approaches difficult or even intractable. Here we introduce a method to rapidly infer the tertiary helical arrangements of large RNA molecules in their native and non-native solution states. Multiplexed hydroxyl radical (.OH) cleavage analysis (MOHCA) enables the high-throughput detection of numerous pairs of contacting residues via random incorporation of radical cleavage agents followed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. We validated this technology by recapitulating the unfolded and native states of a well studied model RNA, the P4-P6 domain of the Tetrahymena ribozyme, at subhelical resolution. We then applied MOHCA to a recently discovered third state of the P4-P6 RNA that is stabilized by high concentrations of monovalent salt and whose partial order precludes conventional techniques for structure determination. The three-dimensional portrait of a compact, non-native RNA state reveals a well ordered subset of native tertiary contacts, in contrast to the dynamic but otherwise similar molten globule states of proteins. With its applicability to nearly any solution state, we expect MOHCA to be a powerful tool for illuminating the many functional structures of large RNA molecules and RNA/protein complexes.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.0709032105
View details for Web of Science ID 000254263300015
View details for PubMedID 18322008
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2393762
-
Semiautomated and rapid quantification of nucleic acid footprinting and structure mapping experiments
NATURE PROTOCOLS
2008; 3 (9): 1395-1401
Abstract
We have developed protocols for rapidly quantifying the band intensities from nucleic acid chemical mapping gels at single-nucleotide resolution. These protocols are implemented in the software SAFA (semi-automated footprinting analysis) that can be downloaded without charge from http://safa.stanford.edu. The protocols implemented in SAFA have five steps: (i) lane identification, (ii) gel rectification, (iii) band assignment, (iv) model fitting and (v) band-intensity normalization. SAFA enables the rapid quantitation of gel images containing thousands of discrete bands, thereby eliminating a bottleneck to the analysis of chemical mapping experiments. An experienced user of the software can quantify a gel image in approximately 20 min. Although SAFA was developed to analyze hydroxyl radical (*OH) footprints, it effectively quantifies the gel images obtained with other types of chemical mapping probes. We also present a series of tutorial movies that illustrate the best practices and different steps in the SAFA analysis as a supplement to this protocol.
View details for DOI 10.1038/nprot.2008.134
View details for Web of Science ID 000258424100003
View details for PubMedID 18772866
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2652576
-
Quantitative and comprehensive decomposition of the ion atmosphere around nucleic acids
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2007; 129 (48): 14981-14988
Abstract
The ion atmosphere around nucleic acids critically affects biological and physical processes such as chromosome packing, RNA folding, and molecular recognition. However, the dynamic nature of the ion atmosphere renders it difficult to characterize. The basic thermodynamic description of this atmosphere, a full accounting of the type and number of associated ions, has remained elusive. Here we provide the first complete accounting of the ion atmosphere, using buffer equilibration and atomic emission spectroscopy (BE-AES) to accurately quantitate the cation association and anion depletion. We have examined the influence of ion size and charge on ion occupancy around simple, well-defined DNA molecules. The relative affinity of monovalent and divalent cations correlates inversely with their size. Divalent cations associate preferentially over monovalent cations; e.g., with Na+ in 4-fold excess of Mg2+ (20 vs 5 mM), the ion atmosphere nevertheless has 3-fold more Mg2+ than Na+. Further, the dicationic polyamine putrescine2+ does not compete effectively for association relative to divalent metal ions, presumably because of its lower charge density. These and other BE-AES results can be used to evaluate and guide the improvement of electrostatic treatments. As a first step, we compare the BE-AES results to predictions from the widely used nonlinear Poisson Boltzmann (NLPB) theory and assess the applicability and precision of this theory. In the future, BE-AES in conjunction with improved theoretical models, can be applied to complex binding and folding equilibria of nucleic acids and their complexes, to parse the electrostatic contribution from the overall thermodynamics of important biological processes.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja075020g
View details for Web of Science ID 000251293500034
View details for PubMedID 17990882
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3167487
-
Evaluation of ion binding to DNA duplexes using a size-modified Poisson-Boltzmann theory
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
2007; 93 (9): 3202-3209
Abstract
Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) theory is among the most widely applied electrostatic theories in biological and chemical science. Despite its reasonable success in explaining a wide variety of phenomena, it fails to incorporate two basic physical effects, ion size and ion-ion correlations, into its theoretical treatment. Recent experimental work has shown significant deviations from PB theory in competitive monovalent and divalent ion binding to a DNA duplex. The experimental data for monovalent binding are consistent with a hypothesis that attributes these deviations to counterion size. To model the observed differences, we have generalized an existing size-modified Poisson-Boltzmann (SMPB) theory and developed a new numerical implementation that solves the generalized theory around complex, atomistic representations of biological molecules. The results of our analysis show that good agreement to data at monovalent ion concentrations up to approximately 150 mM can be attained by adjusting the ion-size parameters in the new size-modified theory. SMPB calculations employing calibrated ion-size parameters predict experimental observations for other nucleic acid structures and salt conditions, demonstrating that the theory is predictive. We are, however, unable to model the observed deviations in the divalent competition data with a theory that only accounts for size but neglects ion-ion correlations, highlighting the need for theoretical descriptions that further incorporate ion-ion correlations. The accompanying numerical solver has been released publicly, providing the general scientific community the ability to compute SMPB solutions around a variety of different biological structures with only modest computational resources.
View details for DOI 10.1529/biophysj.106.099168
View details for Web of Science ID 000250199300024
View details for PubMedID 17604318
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2025650
-
Do ligand binding and solvent exclusion alter the electrostatic character within the oxyanion hole of an enzymatic active site?
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2007; 129 (40): 12104-?
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja075605a
View details for Web of Science ID 000249949600025
View details for PubMedID 17854190
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3171184
-
Modulation of individual steps in group I intron catalysis by a peripheral metal ion
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2007; 13 (10): 1656-1667
Abstract
Enzymes are complex macromolecules that catalyze chemical reactions at their active sites. Important information about catalytic interactions is commonly gathered by perturbation or mutation of active site residues that directly contact substrates. However, active sites are engaged in intricate networks of interactions within the overall structure of the macromolecule, and there is a growing body of evidence about the importance of peripheral interactions in the precise structural organization of the active site. Here, we use functional studies, in conjunction with published structural information, to determine the effect of perturbation of a peripheral metal ion binding site on catalysis in a well-characterized catalytic RNA, the Tetrahymena thermophila group I ribozyme. We perturbed the metal ion binding site by site-specifically introducing a phosphorothioate substitution in the ribozyme's backbone, replacing the native ligands (the pro-R (P) oxygen atoms at positions 307 and 308) with sulfur atoms. Our data reveal that these perturbations affect several reaction steps, including the chemical step, despite the absence of direct contacts of this metal ion with the atoms involved in the chemical transformation. As structural probing with hydroxyl radicals did not reveal significant change in the three-dimensional structure upon phosphorothioate substitution, the effects are likely transmitted through local, rather subtle conformational rearrangements. Addition of Cd(2+), a thiophilic metal ion, rescues some reaction steps but has deleterious effects on other steps. These results suggest that native interactions in the active site may have been aligned by the naturally occurring peripheral residues and interactions to optimize the overall catalytic cycle.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.632007
View details for Web of Science ID 000249920600007
View details for PubMedID 17720880
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1986806
-
PHYS 212-Traversing the RNA folding landscape
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 2007
View details for Web of Science ID 000207593907090
-
Kinetic isotope effects for alkaline phosphatase reactions: Implications for the role of active-site metal ions in catalysis
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2007; 129 (31): 9789-9798
Abstract
Enzyme-catalyzed phosphoryl transfer reactions have frequently been suggested to proceed through transition states that are altered from their solution counterparts, with the alterations presumably arising from interactions with active-site functional groups. In particular, the phosphate monoester hydrolysis reaction catalyzed by Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) has been the subject of intensive scrutiny. Recent linear free energy relationship (LFER) studies suggest that AP catalyzes phosphate monoester hydrolysis through a loose transition state, similar to that in solution. To gain further insight into the nature of the transition state and active-site interactions, we have determined kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) for AP-catalyzed hydrolysis reactions with several phosphate monoester substrates. The LFER and KIE data together provide a consistent picture for the nature of the transition state for AP-catalyzed phosphate monoester hydrolysis and support previous models suggesting that the enzymatic transition state is similar to that in solution. Moreover, the KIE data provides unique information regarding specific interactions between the transition state and the active-site Zn2+ ions. These results provide strong support for a model in which electrostatic interactions between the bimetallo Zn2+ site and a nonbridging phosphate ester oxygen atom make a significant contribution to the large rate enhancement observed for AP-catalyzed phosphate monoester hydrolysis.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja072196+
View details for Web of Science ID 000248484400061
View details for PubMedID 17630738
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3171187
-
Low specificity of metal ion binding in the metal ion core of a folded RNA
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2007; 13 (8): 1205-1213
Abstract
The structure and activity of nucleic acids depend on their interactions with metal ions. Fundamental to these interactions is the degree of specificity observed between the metal ions and nucleic acids, and a complete description of nucleic acid folding requires that we understand the nature of the interactions with metal ions, including specificity. The prior demonstration that high concentrations of monovalent cations prevent nonspecific association of divalent ions with nucleic acids provides a novel and powerful means to examine site-specific metal ion binding isolated from complicating effects of the ion atmosphere. Using these high monovalent cation solution conditions we have monitored the affinity of a series of divalent metal ions for two site-specific metal ion binding sites in the P4-P6 domain of the Tetrahymena group I intron ribozyme. The metal ion core of this highly structured RNA binds two divalent metal ions under these conditions. Despite multiple metal ion-RNA interactions observed in the X-ray crystallographic structure of P4-P6 RNA at the metal ion binding sites, these sites exhibit low specificity among Mn(2+), Mg(2+), Ca(2+), Ni(2+), and Zn(2+). Nevertheless, the largest divalent metal ions tested, Sr(2+) and Ba(2+), were excluded from binding, exhibiting affinities at least two orders of magnitude weaker than observed for the other metal ions. Thus, a picture emerges of two metal ion binding sites, each with a high tolerance for metal ions with different properties but also with limits to accommodation. These limits presumably arise from steric or electrostatic features of the metal ion binding sites.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.566007
View details for Web of Science ID 000248093500008
View details for PubMedID 17616553
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1924890
-
DNA topoisomerase II selects DNA cleavage sites based on reactivity rather than binding affinity
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
2007; 35 (11): 3764-3773
Abstract
DNA topoisomerase II modulates DNA topology by relieving supercoil stress and by unknotting or decatenating entangled DNA. During its reaction cycle, the enzyme creates a transient double-strand break in one DNA segment, the G-DNA. This break serves as a gate through which another DNA segment is transported. Defined topoisomerase II cleavage sites in genomic and plasmid DNA have been previously mapped. To dissect the G-DNA recognition mechanism, we studied the affinity and reactivity of a series of DNA duplexes of varied sequence under conditions that only allow G-DNA to bind. These DNA duplexes could be cleaved to varying extents ranging from undetectable (<0.5%) to 80%. The sequence that defines a cleavage site resides within the central 20 bp of the duplex. The DNA affinity does not correlate with the ability of the enzyme to cleave DNA, suggesting that the binding step does not contribute significantly to the selection mechanism. Kinetic experiments show that the selectivity interactions are formed before rather than subsequent to cleavage. Presumably the binding energy of the cognate interactions is used to promote a conformational change that brings the enzyme into a cleavage competent state. The ability to modulate the extent of DNA cleavage by varying the DNA sequence may be valuable for future structural and mechanistic studies that aim to determine topoisomerase structures with DNA bound in pre- and post-cleavage states and to understand the conformational changes associated with DNA binding and cleavage.
View details for DOI 10.1093/nar/gkm335
View details for Web of Science ID 000247817500024
View details for PubMedID 17517767
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1920260
-
Probing the origin of the compromised catalysis of E-coli Alkaline phosphatase in its promiscuous sulfatase reaction
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2007; 129 (17): 5760-5765
Abstract
The catalytic promiscuity of E. coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) and many other enzymes provides a unique opportunity to dissect the origin of enzymatic rate enhancements via a comparative approach. Here, we use kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) to explore the origin of the 109-fold greater catalytic proficiency by AP for phosphate monoester hydrolysis relative to sulfate monoester hydrolysis. The primary 18O KIEs for the leaving group oxygen atoms in the AP-catalyzed hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate (pNPP) and p-nitrophenylsulfate (pNPS) decrease relative to the values observed for nonenzymatic hydrolysis reactions. Prior linear free energy relationship results suggest that the transition states for AP-catalyzed reactions of phosphate and sulfate esters are "loose" and indistinguishable from that in solution, suggesting that the decreased primary KIEs do not reflect a change in the nature of the transition state but rather a strong interaction of the leaving group oxygen atom with an active site Zn2+ ion. Furthermore, the primary KIEs for the two reactions are identical within error, suggesting that the differential catalysis of these reactions cannot be attributed to differential stabilization of the leaving group. In contrast, AP perturbs the KIE for the nonbridging oxygen atoms in the reaction of pNPP but not pNPS, suggesting a differential interaction with the transferred group in the transition state. These and prior results are consistent with a strong electrostatic interaction between the active site bimetallo Zn2+ cluster and one of the nonbridging oxygen atoms on the transferred group. We suggest that the lower charge density of this oxygen atom on a transferred sulfuryl group accounts for a large fraction of the decreased stabilization of the transition state for its reaction relative to phosphoryl transfer.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja069111+
View details for Web of Science ID 000245946400086
View details for PubMedID 17411045
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2532492
-
Measuring the folding transition time of single RNA molecules
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
2007; 92 (9): 3275-3283
Abstract
We describe a new, time-apertured photon correlation method for resolving the transition time between two states of RNA in folding--i.e., the time of the transition between states rather than the time spent in each state. Single molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy are used to obtain these measurements. Individual RNA molecules are labeled with fluorophores such as Cy3 and Cy5. Those molecules are then immobilized on a surface and observed for many seconds during which time the molecules spontaneously switch between two conformational states with different levels of flourescence resonance energy transfer efficiency. Single photons are counted from each fluorophore and cross correlated in a small window around a transition. The average of over 1000 cross correlations can be fit to a polynomial, which can determine transition times as short as the average photon emission interval. We applied the method to the P4-P6 domain of the Tetrahymena group I self-splicing intron to yield the folding transition time of 240 micros. The unfolding time is found to be too short to measure with this method.
View details for DOI 10.1529/biophysj.106.094623
View details for Web of Science ID 000245544100034
View details for PubMedID 17307831
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1852359
-
Probing the role of a secondary structure element at the 5 '- and 3 '-splice sites in group I intron self-splicing: The Tetrahymena L-16 ScaI ribozyme reveals a new role of the G center dot U pair in self-splicing
BIOCHEMISTRY
2007; 46 (16): 4861-4875
Abstract
Several ribozyme constructs have been used to dissect aspects of the group I self-splicing reaction. The Tetrahymena L-21 ScaI ribozyme, the best studied of these intron analogues, catalyzes a reaction analogous to the first step of self-splicing, in which a 5'-splice site analogue (S) and guanosine (G) are converted into a 5'-exon analogue (P) and GA. This ribozyme preserves the active site but lacks a short 5'-terminal segment (called the IGS extension herein) that forms dynamic helices, called the P1 extension and P10 helix. The P1 extension forms at the 5'-splice site in the first step of self-splicing, and P10 forms at the 3'-splice site in the second step of self-splicing. To dissect the contributions from the IGS extension and the helices it forms, we have investigated the effects of each of these elements at each reaction step. These experiments were performed with the L-16 ScaI ribozyme, which retains the IGS extension, and with 5'- and 3'-splice site analogues that differ in their ability to form the helices. The presence of the IGS extension strengthens binding of P by 40-fold, even when no new base pairs are formed. This large effect was especially surprising, as binding of S is essentially unaffected for S analogues that do not form additional base pairs with the IGS extension. Analysis of a U.U pair immediately 3' to the cleavage site suggests that a previously identified deleterious effect from a dangling U residue on the L-21 ScaI ribozyme arises from a fortuitous active site interaction and has implications for RNA tertiary structure specificity. Comparisons of the affinities of 5'-splice site analogues that form only a subset of base pairs reveal that inclusion of the conserved G.U base pair at the cleavage site of group I introns destabilizes the P1 extension >100-fold relative to the stability of a helix with all Watson-Crick base pairs. Previous structural data with model duplexes and the recent intron structures suggest that this effect can be attributed to partial unstacking of the P1 extension at the G.U step. These results suggest a previously unrecognized role of the G.U wobble pair in self-splicing: breaking cooperativity in base pair formation between P1 and the P1 extensions. This effect may facilitate replacement of the P1 extension with P10 after the first chemical step of self-splicing and release of the ligated exons after the second step of self-splicing.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi062169g
View details for Web of Science ID 000245735900018
View details for PubMedID 17385892
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2597287
-
Low-resolution models for nucleic acids from small-angle X-ray scattering with applications to electrostatic modeling
13th International Conference on Small-Angle Scattering
WILEY-BLACKWELL. 2007: S229–S234
View details for DOI 10.1107/S0021889807001707
View details for Web of Science ID 000246059800045
-
Insights from global studies of eukaryotic translation
Experimental Biology 2007 Annual Meeting
FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL. 2007: A92–A92
View details for Web of Science ID 000245708500443
-
Traversing the RNA folding landscape
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 2007
View details for Web of Science ID 000207722807555
-
Structural transitions and thermodynamics of a glycine-dependent riboswitch from Vibrio cholerae
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2007; 365 (5): 1393-1406
Abstract
Riboswitches are complex folded RNA domains found in noncoding regions of mRNA that regulate gene expression upon small molecule binding. Recently, Breaker and coworkers reported a tandem aptamer riboswitch (VCI-II) that binds glycine cooperatively. Here, we use hydroxyl radical footprinting and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) to study the conformations of this tandem aptamer as a function of Mg(2+) and glycine concentration. We fit a simple three-state thermodynamic model that describes the energetic coupling between magnesium-induced folding and glycine binding. Furthermore, we characterize the structural conformations of each of the three states: In low salt with no magnesium present, the VCI-II construct has an extended overall conformation, presumably representing unfolded structures. Addition of millimolar concentrations of Mg(2+) in the absence of glycine leads to a significant compaction and partial folding as judged by hydroxyl radical protections. In the presence of millimolar Mg(2+) concentrations, the tandem aptamer binds glycine cooperatively. The glycine binding transition involves a further compaction, additional tertiary packing interactions and further uptake of magnesium ions relative to the state in high Mg(2+) but no glycine. Employing density reconstruction algorithms, we obtain low resolution 3-D structures for all three states from the SAXS measurements. These data provide a first glimpse into the structural conformations of the VCI-II aptamer, establish rigorous constraints for further modeling, and provide a framework for future mechanistic studies.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jmb.2006.10.022
View details for Web of Science ID 000243749600013
View details for PubMedID 17118400
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1941672
-
Modeling RNA low resolution structure and thermodynamics from small-angle X-ray scattering
51st Annual Meeting of the Biophysical-Society
CELL PRESS. 2007: 417A–417A
View details for Web of Science ID 000243972402518
-
Direct measurement of the full sequence-dependent folding landscape of single nucleic acids using an optical trap
51st Annual Meeting of the Biophysical-Society
CELL PRESS. 2007: 351A–351A
View details for Web of Science ID 000243972402192
-
Direct measurement of the full, sequence-dependent folding landscape of a nucleic acid
SCIENCE
2006; 314 (5801): 1001-1004
Abstract
Nucleic acid hairpins provide a powerful model system for understanding macromolecular folding, with free-energy landscapes that can be readily manipulated by changing the hairpin sequence. The full shapes of energy landscapes for the reversible folding of DNA hairpins under controlled loads exerted by an optical force clamp were obtained by deconvolution from high-resolution, single-molecule trajectories. The locations and heights of the energy barriers for hairpin folding could be tuned by adjusting the number and location of G:C base pairs, and the presence and position of folding intermediates were controlled by introducing single-nucleotide mismatches.
View details for DOI 10.1126/science.1133601
View details for Web of Science ID 000241896000056
View details for PubMedID 17095702
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2656380
-
The paradoxical behavior of a highly structured misfolded intermediate in RNA folding
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2006; 363 (2): 531-544
Abstract
Like many structured RNAs, the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme is prone to misfolding. Here we probe a long-lived misfolded species, referred to as M, and uncover paradoxical aspects of its structure and folding. Previous work indicated that a non-native local secondary structure, termed alt P3, led to formation of M during folding in vitro. Surprisingly, hydroxyl radical footprinting, fluorescence measurements with site-specifically incorporated 2-aminopurine, and functional assays indicate that the native P3, not alt P3, is present in the M state. The paradoxical behavior of alt P3 presumably arises because alt P3 biases folding toward M, but, after commitment to this folding pathway and before formation of M, alt P3 is replaced by P3. Further, structural and functional probes demonstrate that the misfolded ribozyme contains extensive native structure, with only local differences between the two states, and the misfolded structure even possesses partial catalytic activity. Despite the similarity of these structures, re-folding of M to the native state is very slow and is strongly accelerated by urea, Na+, and increased temperature and strongly impeded by Mg2+ and the presence of native peripheral contacts. The paradoxical observations of extensive native structure within the misfolded species but slow conversion of this species to the native state are readily reconciled by a model in which the misfolded state is a topological isomer of the native state, and computational results support the feasibility of this model. We speculate that the complex topology of RNA secondary structures and the inherent rigidity of RNA helices render kinetic traps due to topological isomers considerably more common for RNA than for proteins.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jmb.2006.08.024
View details for Web of Science ID 000241324500019
View details for PubMedID 16963081
-
The wide reach of enzymology: from bioorganic chemistry to chemical biology and beyond mechanisms - Editorial overview
CURRENT OPINION IN CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
2006; 10 (5): 453-454
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.cbpa.2006.08.019
View details for Web of Science ID 000241652200011
-
Interdomain communication in DNA topoisomerase II - DNA binding and enzyme activation
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
2006; 281 (33): 23395-23404
Abstract
Topoisomerase II catalyzes the ATP-dependent transport of a DNA segment (T-DNA) through a transient double strand break in another DNA segment (G-DNA). A fundamental mechanistic question is how the individual steps in this process are coordinated. We probed communication between the DNA binding sites and the individual enzymatic activities, ATP hydrolysis, and DNA cleavage. We employed short DNA duplexes to control occupancy at the two binding sites of wild-type enzyme and a variant with a G-DNA site mutation. The DNA concentration dependence of ATP hydrolysis and a fluorescence anisotropy assay provided thermodynamic information about DNA binding. The results suggest that G-DNA binds with higher affinity than T-DNA. Enzyme with only G-DNA bound is competent to cleave DNA, indicating that T-DNA is dispensable for DNA cleavage. The ATPase activity of enzyme bound solely to G-DNA is partially stimulated. Full stimulation requires binding of T-DNA. Both DNA binding sites therefore signal to the ATPase domains. The results support and extend current mechanistic models for topoisomerase II-catalyzed DNA transport and provide a framework for future mechanistic dissection.
View details for DOI 10.1074/jbc.M604119200
View details for Web of Science ID 000239702900014
View details for PubMedID 16782968
-
Structural and functional comparisons of nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase and alkaline phosphatase: Implications for mechanism and evolution
BIOCHEMISTRY
2006; 45 (32): 9788-9803
Abstract
The rapid expansion of the amount of genomic and structural data has provided many examples of enzymes with evolutionarily related active sites that catalyze different reactions. Functional comparisons of these active sites can provide insight into the origins of the enormous catalytic proficiency of enzymes and the evolutionary changes that can lead to different enzyme activities. The alkaline phosphatase (AP) superfamily is an ideal system to use in making such comparisons given the extensive data available on both nonenzymatic and enzymatic phosphoryl transfer reactions. Some superfamily members, such as AP itself, preferentially hydrolyze phosphate monoesters, whereas others, such as nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase (NPP), preferentially hydrolyze phosphate diesters. We have measured rate constants for NPP-catalyzed hydrolysis of phosphate diesters and monoesters. NPP preferentially catalyzes diester hydrolysis by factors of 10(2)-10(6), depending on the identity of the diester substrate. To identify features of the NPP active site that could lead to preferential phosphate diester hydrolysis, we have determined the structure of NPP in the absence of ligands and in complexes with vanadate and AMP. Comparisons to existing structures of AP reveal bimetallo cores that are structurally indistinguishable, but there are several distinct structural features outside of the conserved bimetallo site. The structural and functional data together suggest that some of these distinct functional groups provide specific substrate binding interactions, whereas others tune the properties of the bimetallo active site itself to discriminate between phosphate diester and monoester substrates.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi060847t
View details for Web of Science ID 000239596600016
View details for PubMedID 16893180
-
Nanomechanical measurements of the sequence-dependent folding landscapes of single nucleic acid hairpins
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2006; 103 (16): 6190-6195
Abstract
Nucleic acid hairpins provide a powerful model system for probing the formation of secondary structure. We report a systematic study of the kinetics and thermodynamics of the folding transition for individual DNA hairpins of varying stem length, loop length, and stem GC content. Folding was induced mechanically in a high-resolution optical trap using a unique force clamp arrangement with fast response times. We measured 20 different hairpin sequences with quasi-random stem sequences that were 6-30 bp long, polythymidine loops that were 3-30 nt long, and stem GC content that ranged from 0% to 100%. For all hairpins studied, folding and unfolding were characterized by a single transition. From the force dependence of these rates, we determined the position and height of the energy barrier, finding that the transition state for duplex formation involves the formation of 1-2 bp next to the loop. By measuring unfolding energies spanning one order of magnitude, transition rates covering six orders of magnitude, and hairpin opening distances with subnanometer precision, our results define the essential features of the energy landscape for folding. We find quantitative agreement over the entire range of measurements with a hybrid landscape model that combines thermodynamic nearest-neighbor free energies and nanomechanical DNA stretching energies.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.0511048103
View details for Web of Science ID 000236999000025
View details for PubMedID 16606839
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1458853
-
Testing electrostatic complementarity in enzyme catalysis: Hydrogen bonding in the ketosteroid isomerase oxyanion hole
PLOS BIOLOGY
2006; 4 (4): 501-519
Abstract
A longstanding proposal in enzymology is that enzymes are electrostatically and geometrically complementary to the transition states of the reactions they catalyze and that this complementarity contributes to catalysis. Experimental evaluation of this contribution, however, has been difficult. We have systematically dissected the potential contribution to catalysis from electrostatic complementarity in ketosteroid isomerase. Phenolates, analogs of the transition state and reaction intermediate, bind and accept two hydrogen bonds in an active site oxyanion hole. The binding of substituted phenolates of constant molecular shape but increasing pK(a) models the charge accumulation in the oxyanion hole during the enzymatic reaction. As charge localization increases, the NMR chemical shifts of protons involved in oxyanion hole hydrogen bonds increase by 0.50-0.76 ppm/pK(a) unit, suggesting a bond shortening of 0.02 A/pK(a) unit. Nevertheless, there is little change in binding affinity across a series of substituted phenolates (DeltaDeltaG = -0.2 kcal/mol/pK(a) unit). The small effect of increased charge localization on affinity occurs despite the shortening of the hydrogen bonds and a large favorable change in binding enthalpy (DeltaDeltaH = -2.0 kcal/mol/pK(a) unit). This shallow dependence of binding affinity suggests that electrostatic complementarity in the oxyanion hole makes at most a modest contribution to catalysis of 300-fold. We propose that geometrical complementarity between the oxyanion hole hydrogen-bond donors and the transition state oxyanion provides a significant catalytic contribution, and suggest that KSI, like other enzymes, achieves its catalytic prowess through a combination of modest contributions from several mechanisms rather than from a single dominant contribution.
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pbio.0040099
View details for Web of Science ID 000237066500005
View details for PubMedID 16602823
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1413570
-
Genome-wide identification of mRNAs associated with the translational regulator PUMILIO in Drosophila melanogaster
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2006; 103 (12): 4487-4492
Abstract
Genome-wide identification of RNAs associated with RNA-binding proteins is crucial for deciphering posttranscriptional regulatory systems. PUMILIO is a member of the evolutionary conserved Puf-family of RNA-binding proteins that repress gene expression posttranscriptionally. We generated transgenic flies expressing affinity-tagged PUMILIO under the control of an ovary-specific promoter, and we purified PUMILIO from whole adult flies and embryos and analyzed associated mRNAs by using DNA microarrays. Distinct sets comprising hundreds of mRNAs were associated with PUMILIO at the two developmental stages. Many of these mRNAs encode functionally related proteins, supporting a model for coordinated regulation of posttranscriptional modules by specific RNA-binding proteins. We identified a characteristic sequence motif in the 3'-untranslated regions of mRNAs associated with PUMILIO, and the sufficiency of this motif for interaction with PUMILIO was confirmed by RNA pull-down experiments with biotinylated synthetic RNAs. The RNA motif strikingly resembles the one previously identified for Puf3p, one of five Saccharomyces cerevisiae Puf proteins; however, proteins encoded by the associated mRNAs in yeast and Drosophila do not appear to be related. The results suggest extensive posttranscriptional regulation by PUMILIO and uncover evolutionary features of this conserved family of RNA-binding proteins.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.0509260103
View details for Web of Science ID 000236362600031
View details for PubMedID 16537387
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1400586
-
Alkaline phosphatase mono- and diesterase reactions: Comparative transition state analysis
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2006; 128 (4): 1293-1303
Abstract
Enzyme-catalyzed phosphoryl transfer reactions have frequently been suggested to proceed through transition states that are altered from their solution counterparts. Previous work with Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (AP), however, suggests that this enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of phosphate monoesters through a loose, dissociative transition state, similar to that in solution. AP also exhibits catalytic promiscuity, with a low level of phosphodiesterase activity, despite the tighter, more associative transition state for phosphate diester hydrolysis in solution. Because AP is evolutionarily optimized for phosphate monoester hydrolysis, it is possible that the active site environment alters the transition state for diester hydrolysis to be looser in its bonding to the incoming and outgoing groups. To test this possibility, we have measured the nonenzymatic and AP-catalyzed rate of reaction for a series of substituted methyl phenyl phosphate diesters. The values of beta(lg) and additional data suggest that the transition state for AP-catalyzed phosphate diester hydrolysis is indistinguishable from that in solution. Instead of altering transition state structure, AP catalyzes phosphoryl transfer reactions by recognizing and stabilizing transition states similar to those in aqueous solution. The AP active site therefore has the ability to recognize different transition states, a property that could assist in the evolutionary optimization of promiscuous activities.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja056528r
View details for Web of Science ID 000234941100056
View details for PubMedID 16433548
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2538955
-
Functional identification of catalytic metal ion binding sites within RNA
PLOS BIOLOGY
2005; 3 (9): 1536-1548
Abstract
The viability of living systems depends inextricably on enzymes that catalyze phosphoryl transfer reactions. For many enzymes in this class, including several ribozymes, divalent metal ions serve as obligate cofactors. Understanding how metal ions mediate catalysis requires elucidation of metal ion interactions with both the enzyme and the substrate(s). In the Tetrahymena group I intron, previous work using atomic mutagenesis and quantitative analysis of metal ion rescue behavior identified three metal ions (MA, MB, and MC) that make five interactions with the ribozyme substrates in the reaction's transition state. Here, we combine substrate atomic mutagenesis with site-specific phosphorothioate substitutions in the ribozyme backbone to develop a powerful, general strategy for defining the ligands of catalytic metal ions within RNA. In applying this strategy to the Tetrahymena group I intron, we have identified the pro-SP phosphoryl oxygen at nucleotide C262 as a ribozyme ligand for MC. Our findings establish a direct connection between the ribozyme core and the functionally defined model of the chemical transition state, thereby extending the known set of transition-state interactions and providing information critical for the application of the recent group I intron crystallographic structures to the understanding of catalysis.
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pbio.0030277
View details for Web of Science ID 000231820900005
View details for PubMedID 16092891
-
Structural specificity conferred by a group I RNA peripheral element
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2005; 102 (29): 10176-10181
Abstract
Like proteins, structured RNAs must specify a native conformation that is more stable than all other possible conformations. Local structure is much more stable for RNA than for protein, so it is likely that the principal challenge for RNA is to stabilize the native structure relative to misfolded and partially folded intermediates rather than unfolded structures. Many structured RNAs contain peripheral structural elements, which surround the core elements. Although it is clear that peripheral elements stabilize structure within RNAs that contain them, it has not yet been explored whether they specifically stabilize the native states relative to alternative folds. A two-piece version of the group I intron RNA from Tetrahymena is used here to show that the peripheral element P5abc binds to the native conformation of the rest of the RNA 50,000 times more tightly than it binds to a long-lived misfolded conformation. Thus, P5abc stabilizes the native conformation by approximately 6 kcal/mol relative to this misfolded conformation. Further, activity measurements show that for the RNA lacking P5abc, the native conformation is only marginally preferred over the misfolded conformation (<0.5 kcal/mol), indicating that the peripheral structure of this RNA is required to achieve a significant thermodynamic preference for the native state. Such "structural specificity" may be a general function of RNA peripheral domains.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.0501498102
View details for Web of Science ID 000230665800035
View details for PubMedID 16009943
-
Alkaline phosphatase catalysis is ultrasensitive to charge sequestered between the active site zinc ions
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2005; 127 (26): 9314-9315
Abstract
Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) is a prototypical bimetalloenzyme, facilitating catalysis of phosphate monoester hydrolysis with two Zn2+ metal ions that are only 4 A apart. In the reaction's transition state, one of the nonbridging oxygen atoms of the transferred group appears to interact directly with the Zn2+ ion metallocluster. To determine the importance and the energetic properties of this interaction, we systematically varied the charge on this oxygen atom, exploiting the ability of AP to catalyze reactions of different classes of substrates. We observed that the AP catalytic proficiency correlates very well (R2 = 0.98) with the charge on this oxygen atom, over 8 orders of magnitude of catalytic proficiency. The slope of this linear correlation (31 +/- 2 kcal/mol per unit charge) is extraordinarily steep, indicating that AP greatly discriminates between differentially charged substrates. We suggest that this discrimination arises via an electrostatic interaction with the bimetallocluster. The dependence of the AP catalytic proficiency on the nonbridging oxygen charge is much larger than charge perturbation effects observed previously for other proteins. We propose that AP uses folding energy to position the two Zn2+ metal ions in close proximity, thereby creating an active site with a high electrostatic potential that is extraordinarily sensitive to the charge that "solvates" the metallocluster. The sensitivity of enzyme energetics to systematic variation in electrostatic properties provides a powerful measure of the active site environment. Future work comparing the sensitivity of related enzymes that have been optimized to catalyze different reactions will help reveal how natural selection has tuned related active sites to favor different reactions.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja051603j
View details for Web of Science ID 000230220900002
View details for PubMedID 15984827
-
Determining the Mg2+ stoichiometry for folding an RNA metal ion core
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2005; 127 (23): 8272-8273
Abstract
The folding and catalytic function of RNA molecules depend on their interactions with divalent metal ions, such as magnesium. As with every molecular process, the most basic knowledge required for understanding the close relationship of an RNA with its metal ions is the stoichiometry of the interaction. Unfortunately, inventories of the numbers of divalent ions associated with unfolded and folded RNA states have been unattainable. A common approach has been to interpret Hill coefficients fit to folding equilibria as the number of metal ions bound upon folding. However, this approach is vitiated by the presence of diffusely associated divalent ions in a dynamic ion atmosphere and by the likelihood of multiple transitions along a folding pathway. We demonstrate that the use of molar concentrations of background monovalent salt can alleviate these complications. These simplifying solution conditions allow a precise determination of the stoichiometry of the magnesium ions involved in folding the metal ion core of the P4-P6 domain of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme. Hill analysis of hydroxyl radical footprinting data suggests that the P4-P6 RNA core folds cooperatively upon the association of two metal ions. This unexpectedly small stoichiometry is strongly supported by counting magnesium ions associated with the P4-P6 RNA via fluorescence titration and atomic emission spectroscopy. By pinpointing the metal ion stoichiometry, these measurements provide a critical but previously missing step in the thermodynamic dissection of the coupling between metal ion binding and RNA folding.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja051422h
View details for Web of Science ID 000229751100020
View details for PubMedID 15941246
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2538950
-
Promiscuous catalysis by the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2005; 127 (17): 6160-6161
Abstract
Catalytic promiscuity, the ability of an enzyme to catalyze alternative reactions, has been suggested to have played an important role in the evolution of new catalytic activities in protein enzymes. Similarly, promiscuous activities may have been advantageous in an earlier RNA world. The Tetrahymena Group I ribozyme naturally catalyzes the site-specific guanosine attack on an anionic phosphate diester and has been shown to also catalyze aminoacyl transfer to water, albeit with a small rate acceleration (<10-fold). This inefficient catalysis could be due to the differences in charge and/or geometry requirements for the two reactions. Herein, we describe a new promiscuous activity of this ribozyme, the site-specific guanosine attack on a neutral phosphonate diester. This alternative substrate lacks the negative charge at the reaction center but, in contrast to the aminoacyl substrate, can undergo nucleophilic attack with the same geometry as the natural substrate. Our results show that the neutral phosphonate reaction is catalyzed about 1 x 106-fold, substantially better than the acyl transfer but far below the normal anionic substrate. We conclude that both charge and geometry are important factors for catalysis of the normal reaction and that promiscuous catalytic activities of ribozymes could have been created or enhanced by reorienting and swapping RNA domains.
View details for Web of Science ID 000228755300012
View details for PubMedID 15853307
-
SAFA: Semi-automated footprinting analysis software for high-throughput quantification of nucleic acid footprinting experiments
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2005; 11 (3): 344-354
Abstract
Footprinting is a powerful and widely used tool for characterizing the structure, thermodynamics, and kinetics of nucleic acid folding and ligand binding reactions. However, quantitative analysis of the gel images produced by footprinting experiments is tedious and time-consuming, due to the absence of informatics tools specifically designed for footprinting analysis. We have developed SAFA, a semi-automated footprinting analysis software package that achieves accurate gel quantification while reducing the time to analyze a gel from several hours to 15 min or less. The increase in analysis speed is achieved through a graphical user interface that implements a novel methodology for lane and band assignment, called "gel rectification," and an optimized band deconvolution algorithm. The SAFA software yields results that are consistent with published methodologies and reduces the investigator-dependent variability compared to less automated methods. These software developments simplify the analysis procedure for a footprinting gel and can therefore facilitate the use of quantitative footprinting techniques in nucleic acid laboratories that otherwise might not have considered their use. Further, the increased throughput provided by SAFA may allow a more comprehensive understanding of molecular interactions. The software and documentation are freely available for download at http://safa.stanford.edu.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.7214405
View details for Web of Science ID 000227190000011
View details for PubMedID 15701734
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1262685
-
Probing counterion modulated repulsion and attraction between nucleic acid duplexes in solution
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2005; 102 (4): 1035-1040
Abstract
Understanding biological and physical processes involving nucleic acids, such as the binding of proteins to DNA and RNA, DNA condensation, and RNA folding, requires an understanding of the ion atmosphere that surrounds nucleic acids. We have used a simple model DNA system to determine how the ion atmosphere modulates interactions between duplexes in the absence of specific metal ion-binding sites and other complicated interactions. In particular, we have tested whether the Coulomb repulsion between nucleic acids can be reversed by counterions to give a net attraction, as has been proposed recently for the rapid collapse observed early in RNA folding. The conformation of two DNA duplexes tethered by a flexible neutral linker was determined in the presence of a series of cations by small angle x-ray scattering. The small angle x-ray scattering profiles of two control molecules with distinct shapes (a continuous duplex and a mimic of the compact DNA) were in good agreement with predictions, establishing the applicability of this approach. Under low-salt conditions (20 mM Na+), the tethered duplexes are extended because of a Coulombic repulsion estimated to be 2-5 kT/bp. Addition of high concentrations of Na+ (1.2 M), Mg2+ (0.6 M), and spermidine3+ (75 mM) resulted in electrostatic relaxation to a random state. These results indicate that a counterion-induced attractive force between nucleic acid duplexes is not significant under physiological conditions. An upper limit on the magnitude of the attractive potential under all tested ionic conditions is estimated.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.0404448102
View details for Web of Science ID 000226617900016
View details for PubMedID 15647360
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC545826
-
Dissecting eukaryotic translation and its control by ribosome density mapping
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
2005; 33 (8): 2421-2432
Abstract
Translation of an mRNA is generally divided into three stages: initiation, elongation and termination. The relative rates of these steps determine both the number and position of ribosomes along the mRNA, but traditional velocity sedimentation assays for the translational status of mRNA determine only the number of bound ribosomes. We developed a procedure, termed Ribosome Density Mapping (RDM), that uses site-specific cleavage of polysomal mRNA followed by separation on a sucrose gradient and northern analysis, to determine the number of ribosomes associated with specified portions of a particular mRNA. This procedure allows us to test models for translation and its control, and to examine properties of individual steps of translation in vivo. We tested specific predictions from the current model for translational control of GCN4 expression in yeast and found that ribosomes were differentially associated with the uORFs elements and coding region under different growth conditions, consistent with this model. We also mapped ribosome density along the ORF of several mRNAs, to probe basic kinetic properties of translational steps in yeast. We found no detectable decline in ribosome density between the 5' and 3' ends of the ORFs, suggesting that the average processivity of elongation is very high. Conversely, there was no queue of ribosomes at the termination site, suggesting that termination is not very slow relative to elongation and initiation. Finally, the RDM results suggest that less frequent initiation of translation on mRNAs with longer ORFs is responsible for the inverse correlation between ORF length and ribosomal density that we observed in a global analysis of translation. These results provide new insights into eukaryotic translation in vivo.
View details for DOI 10.1093/nar/gki331
View details for Web of Science ID 000229113100017
View details for PubMedID 15860778
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1087779
-
Spatial distribution of competing ions around DNA in solution
PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
2004; 93 (24)
Abstract
The competition of monovalent and divalent cations for proximity to negatively charged DNA is of biological importance and can provide strong constraints for theoretical treatments of polyelectrolytes. Resonant x-ray scattering experiments have allowed us to monitor the number and distribution of each cation in a mixed ion cloud around DNA. These measurements provide experimental evidence to support a general theoretical prediction: the normalized distribution of each ion around polyelectrolytes remains constant when ions are mixed at different ratios. In addition, the amplitudes of the scattering signals throughout the competition provide a measurement of the surface concentration parameter that predicts the competition behavior of these cations. The data suggest that ion size needs to be taken into account in applying Poisson-Boltzmann treatments to polyelectrolytes such as DNA.
View details for DOI 10.1103/PhysRevLett.93.248103
View details for Web of Science ID 000225661100083
View details for PubMedID 15697865
-
Principles of RNA compaction: Insights from the equilibrium folding pathway of the P4-P6 RNA domain in monovalent cations
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2004; 343 (5): 1195-1206
Abstract
Counterions are required for RNA folding, and divalent metal ions such as Mg(2+) are often critical. To dissect the role of counterions, we have compared global and local folding of wild-type and mutant variants of P4-P6 RNA derived from the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme in monovalent and in divalent metal ions. A remarkably simple picture of the folding thermodynamics emerges. The equilibrium folding pathway in monovalent ions displays two phases. In the first phase, RNA molecules that are initially in an extended conformation enforced by charge-charge repulsion are relaxed by electrostatic screening to a state with increased flexibility but without formation of long-range tertiary contacts. At higher concentrations of monovalent ions, a state that is nearly identical to the native folded state in the presence of Mg(2+) is formed, with tertiary contacts that involve base and backbone interactions but without the subset of interactions that involve specific divalent metal ion-binding sites. The folding model derived from these and previous results provides a robust framework for understanding the equilibrium and kinetic folding of RNA.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jmb.2004.08.080
View details for Web of Science ID 000224838800004
View details for PubMedID 15491606
-
A base triple in the Tetrahymena group I core affects the reaction equilibrium via a threshold effect
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2004; 10 (11): 1730-1739
Abstract
Previous work on group I introns has suggested that a central base triple might be more important for the first rather than the second step of self-splicing, leading to a model in which the base triple undergoes a conformational change during self-splicing. Here, we use the well-characterized L-21 ScaI ribozyme derived from the Tetrahymena group I intron to probe the effects of base-triple disruption on individual reaction steps. Consistent with previous results, reaction of a ternary complex mimicking the first chemical step in self-splicing is slowed by mutations in this base triple, whereas reaction of a ternary complex mimicking the second step of self-splicing is not. Paradoxically, mechanistic dissection of the base-triple disruption mutants indicates that active site binding is weakened uniformly for the 5'-splice site and the 5'-exon analog, mimics for the species bound in the first and second step of self-splicing. Nevertheless, the 5'-exon analog remains bound at the active site, whereas the 5'-splice site analog does not. This differential effect arises despite the uniform destabilization, because the wild-type ribozyme binds the 5'-exon analog more strongly in the active site than in the 5'-splice site analog. Thus, binding into the active site constitutes an additional barrier to reaction of the 5'-splice site analog, but not the 5'-exon analog, resulting in a reduced reaction rate constant for the first step analog, but not the second step analog. This threshold model explains the self-splicing observations without the need to invoke a conformational change involving the base triple, and underscores the importance of quantitative dissection for the interpretation of effects from mutations.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.7118104
View details for Web of Science ID 000224746300009
View details for PubMedID 15496521
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1370661
-
Do electrostatic interactions with positively charged active site groups tighten the transition state for enzymatic phosphoryl transfer?
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2004; 126 (38): 11814-11819
Abstract
The effect of electrostatic interactions on the transition-state character for enzymatic phosphoryl transfer has been a subject of much debate. In this work, we investigate the transition state for alkaline phosphatase (AP) using linear free-energy relationships (LFERs). We determined k(cat)/K(M) for a series of aryl sulfate ester monoanions to obtain the Brønsted coefficient, beta(lg), and compared the value to that obtained previously for a series of aryl phosphorothioate ester dianion substrates. Despite the difference in substrate charge, the observed Brønsted coefficients for AP-catalyzed aryl sulfate and aryl phosphorothioate hydrolysis (-0.76 +/- 0.14 and -0.77 +/- 0.10, respectively) are strikingly similar, with steric effects being responsible for the uncertainties in these values. Aryl sulfates and aryl phosphates react via similar loose transition states in solution. These observations suggest an apparent equivalency of the transition states for phosphorothioate and sulfate hydrolysis reactions at the AP active site and, thus, negligible effects of active site electrostatic interactions on charge distribution in the transition state.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja0480421
View details for Web of Science ID 000224103900032
View details for PubMedID 15382915
-
Extensive association of functionally and cytotopically related mRNAs with Puf family RNA-binding proteins in yeast
PLOS BIOLOGY
2004; 2 (3): 342-354
Abstract
Genes encoding RNA-binding proteins are diverse and abundant in eukaryotic genomes. Although some have been shown to have roles in post-transcriptional regulation of the expression of specific genes, few of these proteins have been studied systematically. We have used an affinity tag to isolate each of the five members of the Puf family of RNA-binding proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and DNA microarrays to comprehensively identify the associated mRNAs. Distinct groups of 40-220 different mRNAs with striking common themes in the functions and subcellular localization of the proteins they encode are associated with each of the five Puf proteins: Puf3p binds nearly exclusively to cytoplasmic mRNAs that encode mitochondrial proteins; Puf1p and Puf2p interact preferentially with mRNAs encoding membrane-associated proteins; Puf4p preferentially binds mRNAs encoding nucleolar ribosomal RNA-processing factors; and Puf5p is associated with mRNAs encoding chromatin modifiers and components of the spindle pole body. We identified distinct sequence motifs in the 3'-untranslated regions of the mRNAs bound by Puf3p, Puf4p, and Puf5p. Three-hybrid assays confirmed the role of these motifs in specific RNA-protein interactions in vivo. The results suggest that combinatorial tagging of transcripts by specific RNA-binding proteins may be a general mechanism for coordinated control of the localization, translation, and decay of mRNAs and thus an integral part of the global gene expression program.
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pbio.0020079
View details for Web of Science ID 000220512000010
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC368173
-
Adenosine 5 '-O-(3-thio)triphosphate (ATP-gamma S) is a substrate for the nucleotide hydrolysis and RNA unwinding activities of eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF4A
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2003; 9 (10): 1180-1187
Abstract
Whereas ATPgammaS is often considered a nonhydrolyzable substrate for ATPases, we present evidence that ATPgammaS is a good substrate for the RNA-stimulated nucleotide hydrolysis and RNA unwinding activities of eIF4A. In the presence of saturating single-stranded poly(U) RNA, eIF4A hydrolyzes ATPgammaS.Mg and ATP.Mg with similar steady-state parameters (KM(NTP.Mg) = 66 and 58 microM and kcat = 1.0 and 0.97 min(-1), respectively). ATPgammaS.Mg also supports catalysis of RNA unwinding within 10-fold of the rate supported by ATP.Mg. The identical steady-state rate parameters, in comparison with the expected difference in the intrinsic rate of hydrolysis for ATP and ATPgammaS, suggest a nonchemical rate-limiting step for nucleotide hydrolysis. These results raise caution concerning the assumption that ATPgammaS is a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog and underscore the utility of thio-substituted NTPs as mechanistic probes.
View details for DOI 10.1261/rna.2103703
View details for Web of Science ID 000185471400003
View details for PubMedID 13130132
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1370482
-
Widespread cytoplasmic mRNA transport in yeast: Identification of 22 bud-localized transcripts using DNA microarray analysis
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2003; 100 (20): 11429-11434
Abstract
Cytoplasmic mRNA localization provides a means of generating cell asymmetry and segregating protein activity. Previous studies have identified two mRNAs that localize to the bud tips of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. To identify additional localized mRNAs, we immunoprecipitated the RNA transport components She2p, She3p, and Myo4p and performed DNA microarray analysis of their associated RNAs. A secondary screen, using a GFP-tagged RNA reporter assay, identified 22 mRNAs that are localized to bud tips. These messages encode a wide variety of proteins, including several involved in stress responses and cell wall maintenance. Many of these proteins are asymmetrically localized to buds. However, asymmetric localization also occurs in the absence of RNA transport, suggesting the existence of redundant protein localization mechanisms. In contrast to findings in metazoans, the untranslated regions are dispensable for mRNA localization in yeast. This study reveals an unanticipated widespread use of RNA transport in budding yeast.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.2033246100
View details for Web of Science ID 000185685700047
View details for PubMedID 13679573
-
The fastest global events in RNA folding: Electrostatic relaxation and tertiary collapse of the tetrahymena ribozyme
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2003; 332 (2): 311-319
Abstract
Large RNAs can collapse into compact conformations well before the stable formation of the tertiary contacts that define their final folds. This study identifies likely physical mechanisms driving these early compaction events in RNA folding. We have employed time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering to monitor the fastest global shape changes of the Tetrahymena ribozyme under different ionic conditions and with RNA mutations that remove long-range tertiary contacts. A partial collapse in each of the folding time-courses occurs within tens of milliseconds with either monovalent or divalent cations. Combined with comparison to predictions from structural models, this observation suggests a relaxation of the RNA to a more compact but denatured conformational ensemble in response to enhanced electrostatic screening at higher ionic concentrations. Further, the results provide evidence against counterion-correlation-mediated attraction between RNA double helices, a recently proposed model for early collapse. A previous study revealed a second 100 ms phase of collapse to a globular state. Surprisingly, we find that progression to this second early folding intermediate requires RNA sequence motifs that eventually mediate native long-range tertiary interactions, even though these regions of the RNA were observed to be solvent-accessible in previous footprinting studies under similar conditions. These results help delineate an analogy between the early conformational changes in RNA folding and the "burst phase" changes and molten globule formation in protein folding.
View details for DOI 10.1016/S0022-2836(03)00854-4
View details for Web of Science ID 000185306700002
View details for PubMedID 12948483
-
Exploration of the transition state for tertiary structure formation between an RNA helix and a large structured RNA
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2003; 328 (5): 1011-1026
Abstract
Docking of the P1 duplex into the pre-folded core of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme exemplifies the formation of tertiary interactions in the context of a complex, structured RNA. We have applied Phi-analysis to P1 docking, which compares the effects of modifications on the rate constant for docking (k(dock)) with the effects on the docking equilibrium (K(dock)). To accomplish this we used a single molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer assay that allows direct determination of the rate constants for formation of thermodynamically favorable, as well as unfavorable, states. Modification of the eight groups of the P1 duplex that make tertiary interactions with the core and changes in solution conditions decrease K(dock) up to 500-fold, whereas k(dock) changes by =2-fold. The absence of effects on k(dock), both from atomic modifications and global perturbations, strongly suggests that the transition state for docking is early and does not closely resemble the docked state. These results, the slow rate of docking of 3s(-1), and the observation that a modification that is expected to increase the degrees of freedom between the P1 duplex and the ribozyme core accelerates docking, suggest a model in which a kinetic trap(s) slows docking substantially. Nonetheless, urea does not increase k(dock), suggesting that there is little change in the exposed surface area between the trapped, undocked state and the transition state. The findings highlight that urea and temperature dependencies can be inadequate to diagnose the presence of kinetic traps in a folding process. The results described here, combined with previous work, provide an in-depth view of an RNA tertiary structure formation event and suggest that large, highly structured RNAs may have local regions that are misordered.
View details for Web of Science ID 000182767000004
View details for PubMedID 12729738
-
Counterion distribution around DNA probed by solution X-ray scattering
PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
2003; 90 (18)
Abstract
Counterion atmospheres condensed onto charged biopolymers strongly affect their physical properties and biological functions, but have been difficult to quantify experimentally. Here, monovalent and divalent counterion atmospheres around DNA double helices in solution are probed using small-angle x-ray scattering techniques. Modulation of the ion scattering factors by anomalous (resonant) x-ray scattering and by interchanging ion identities yields direct measurements of the scattering signal due to the spatial correlation of surrounding ions to the DNA. The quality of the data permit, for the first time, quantitative tests of extended counterion distributions calculated from atomic-scale models of biologically relevant molecules.
View details for DOI 10.1103/PhysRevLett.90.188103
View details for Web of Science ID 000182823900054
View details for PubMedID 12786045
-
Genome-wide analysis of mRNA translation profiles in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2003; 100 (7): 3889-3894
Abstract
We have analyzed the translational status of each mRNA in rapidly growing Saccharomyces cerevisiae. mRNAs were separated by velocity sedimentation on a sucrose gradient, and 14 fractions across the gradient were analyzed by quantitative microarray analysis, providing a profile of ribosome association with mRNAs for thousands of genes. For most genes, the majority of mRNA molecules were associated with ribosomes and presumably engaged in translation. This systematic approach enabled us to recognize genes with unusual behavior. For 43 genes, most mRNA molecules were not associated with ribosomes, suggesting that they may be translationally controlled. For 53 genes, including GCN4, CPA1, and ICY2, three genes for which translational control is known to play a key role in regulation, most mRNA molecules were associated with a single ribosome. The number of ribosomes associated with mRNAs increased with increasing length of the putative protein-coding sequence, consistent with longer transit times for ribosomes translating longer coding sequences. The density at which ribosomes were distributed on each mRNA (i.e., the number of ribosomes per unit ORF length) was well below the maximum packing density for nearly all mRNAs, consistent with initiation as the rate-limiting step in translation. Global analysis revealed an unexpected correlation: Ribosome density decreases with increasing ORF length. Models to account for this surprising observation are discussed.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.0635171100
View details for Web of Science ID 000182058400066
View details for PubMedID 12660367
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC153018
-
Extraordinarily slow binding of guanosine to the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme: Implications for RNA preorganization and function
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2003; 100 (5): 2300-2305
Abstract
The Tetrahymena ribozyme derived from the self-splicing group I intron binds a 5'-splice site analog (S) and guanosine (G), catalyzing their conversion to a 5'-exon analog (P) and GA. Herein, we show that binding of guanosine is exceptionally slow, limiting the reaction at near neutral pH. Our results implicate a conformational rearrangement on guanosine binding, likely because the binding site is not prearranged in the absence of ligand. The fast accommodation of guanosine (10(2) to 10(3) x s(-1)) and prior structural data suggest local rather than global rearrangements, raising the possibility that folding of this and perhaps other large RNAs is not fully cooperative. Guanosine binding is accelerated by addition of residues that form helices, referred to as P9.0 and P10, immediately 5' and 3' to the guanosine. These rate enhancements provide evidence for binding intermediates that have the adjacent helices formed before accommodation of guanosine into its binding site. Because the ability to form the P9.0 and P10 helices distinguishes the guanosine at the correct 3'-splice site from other guanosine residues, the faster binding of the correct guanosine can enhance specificity of 3'-splice site selection. Thus, paradoxically, the absence of a preformed binding site and the resulting slow guanosine binding can contribute to splicing specificity by providing an opportunity for the adjacent helices to increase the rate of binding of the guanosine specifying the 3'-splice site.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.252749799
View details for Web of Science ID 000181365000027
View details for PubMedID 12591943
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC151335
-
Challenges in enzyme mechanism and energetics
ANNUAL REVIEW OF BIOCHEMISTRY
2003; 72: 517-571
Abstract
Since the discovery of enzymes as biological catalysts, study of their enormous catalytic power and exquisite specificity has been central to biochemistry. Nevertheless, there is no universally accepted comprehensive description. Rather, numerous proposals have been presented over the past half century. The difficulty in developing a comprehensive description for the catalytic power of enzymes derives from the highly cooperative nature of their energetics, which renders impossible a simple division of mechanistic features and an absolute partitioning of catalytic contributions into independent and energetically additive components. Site-directed mutagenesis has emerged as an enormously powerful approach to probe enzymatic catalysis, illuminating many basic features of enzyme function and behavior. The emphasis of site-directed mutagenesis on the role of individual residues has also, inadvertently, limited experimental and conceptual attention to the fundamentally cooperative nature of enzyme function and energetics. The first part of this review highlights the structural and functional interconnectivity central to enzymatic catalysis. In the second part we ask: What are the features of enzymes that distinguish them from simple chemical catalysts? The answers are presented in conceptual models that, while simplified, help illustrate the vast amount known about how enzymes achieve catalysis. In the last section, we highlight the molecular and energetic questions that remain for future investigation and describe experimental approaches that will be necessary to answer these questions. The promise of advancing and integrating cutting edge conceptual, experimental, and computational tools brings mechanistic enzymology to a new era, one poised for novel fundamental insights into biological catalysis.
View details for DOI 10.1146/annurev.biochem.72.121801.161617
View details for Web of Science ID 000185092500017
View details for PubMedID 12704087
-
Environmental effects on phosphoryl group bonding probed by vibrational spectroscopy: Implications for understanding phosphoryl transfer and enzymatic catalysis
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2002; 124 (38): 11295-11306
Abstract
We have used vibrational spectroscopy to study bonding in monosubstituted dianionic phosphates, both to learn more about basic properties intrinsic to this important class of biological substrates and to assess the ability of vibrational spectroscopy to provide a "sensor" or probe of the local environment experienced by the phosphoryl group. We examined the bonding properties of the phosphoryl group via vibrational spectroscopy for a series of compounds in which the phosphoryl substituent was varied systematically and extensively. A broad linear correlation of the bridging P-O(R) bond length and the pK(a) of the substituent alcohol was observed. The results indicate that the P-O(R) bond changes by only approximately 0.04 A with alcohol substituents that vary in pK(a) by approximately 12 units, suggesting that phosphoryl group bonding responds in a subtle but regular manner to changes in the local environment. We also determined the effect on the phosphoryl bonding from changes in the solvent environment. Addition of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) elongates the bridging bond, presumably as a result of lessened solvation to the nonbridging oxygens and conservation of bond order to phosphorus. Finally, we have addressed the relationship between ground-state bonding properties and reactivity, as changing the leaving group substituent and adding DMSO have large rate effects, and it was previously proposed that lengthening of the bond to be broken is the cause of the increased reactivity. The results herein suggest, however, that the change in the bridging bond energy is small compared to the changes in energy that accompany the observed reactivity differences. Further analysis indicates that electrostatic interactions can provide a common driving force underlying both bond lengthening and the observed rate increases. We suggest that ground-state distortions of substrates bound to enzymes can provide a readout of the electrostatic active site environment, an environment that is otherwise difficult to assess.
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja026481z
View details for Web of Science ID 000178104600035
View details for PubMedID 12236744
-
Probing the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme reaction in both directions
BIOCHEMISTRY
2002; 41 (37): 11171-11183
Abstract
The Tetrahymena L-21 ScaI ribozyme derived from the self-splicing group I intron catalyzes a reversible reaction analogous to the first step of self-splicing: CCCUCUA (S) + [UC]G right harpoon over left harpoon CCCUCU (P) + [UC]GA. To relate our understanding of the ribozyme to the self-splicing reaction and to further the mechanistic dissection of the ribozyme reaction, we have established a quantitative kinetic and thermodynamic framework for the forward and reverse reaction of the L-21 ScaI ribozyme under identical conditions. Examination of the framework shows that binding of products is cooperative with binding enhanced 5-fold, as was observed previously for binding of the substrates. Further, binding of UCGA is 12-fold weaker than binding of the unphosphorylated UCG, analogous to the 20-fold weaker binding of phosphorylated S relative to P; the molecular interactions underlying the stronger binding of UCG were traced to the 3'-hydroxyl group of UCG. The symmetrical effects on binding of substrates and products result in the equilibrium between ribozyme-bound species, K(int), that is essentially unperturbed from the solution equilibrium, K(ext) (K(int) = [E.P.UCGA]/[E.S.UCG] = 4.6 and K(ext) = [P][UCGA]/[S][UCG] = 1.9). Last, we show that the pK(a) values of the nucleophiles in the forward and reverse reactions are >/=10. This observation suggests that metal ion activation of the nucleophile and stabilization of the leaving group can only account for a portion of the rate enhancement of this ribozyme. These and prior results suggest that the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme, analogous to protein enzymes, uses multiple catalytic strategies to achieve its large rate enhancement.
View details for Web of Science ID 000178011700013
View details for PubMedID 12220182
-
Dissection of a metal-ion-mediated conformational change in Tetrahlymena ribozyme catalysis
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2002; 8 (7): 861-872
Abstract
Conformational changes are often required for the biological function of RNA molecules. In the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme reaction, a conformational change has been suggested to occur upon binding of the oligonucleotide substrate (S) or the guanosine nucleophile (G), leading to stronger binding of the second substrate. Recent work showed that the two substrates are bridged by a metal ion that coordinates both the nonbridging reactive phosphoryl oxygen of S and the 2'-OH of G. These results suggest that the energy from the metal ion substrate interactions is used to drive the proposed conformational change. In this work, we provide an experimental test for this model. The results provide strong support for the proposed conformational change and for a central role of the bridging metal ion in this change. The results from this work, combined with previous data, allow construction of a two-state model that quantitatively accounts for all of the observations in this and previous-work. This model provides a conceptual and quantitative framework that will facilitate understanding and further probing of the energetic and structural features of this conformational change and its role in catalysis.
View details for DOI 10.1017/S1355838202020216
View details for Web of Science ID 000176943100002
View details for PubMedID 12166641
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1370303
-
Precision and functional specificity in mRNA decay
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2002; 99 (9): 5860-5865
Abstract
Posttranscriptional processing of mRNA is an integral component of the gene expression program. By using DNA microarrays, we precisely measured the decay of each yeast mRNA, after thermal inactivation of a temperature-sensitive RNA polymerase II. The half-lives varied widely, ranging from approximately 3 min to more than 90 min. We found no simple correlation between mRNA half-lives and ORF size, codon bias, ribosome density, or abundance. However, the decay rates of mRNAs encoding groups of proteins that act together in stoichiometric complexes were generally closely matched, and other evidence pointed to a more general relationship between physiological function and mRNA turnover rates. The results provide strong evidence that precise control of the decay of each mRNA is a fundamental feature of the gene expression program in yeast.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.092538799
View details for Web of Science ID 000175377800023
View details for PubMedID 11972065
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC122867
-
RNA simulations: Probing hairpin unfolding and the dynamics of a GNRA tetraloop
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2002; 317 (4): 493-506
Abstract
Simulations of an RNA hairpin containing a GNRA tetraloop were conducted to allow the characterization of its secondary structure formation and dynamics. Ten 10 ns trajectories of the folded hairpin 5'-GGGC[GCAA]GCCU-3' were generated using stochastic dynamics and the GB/SA implicit solvent model at 300 K. Overall, we find the stem to be a very stable subunit of this molecule, whereas multiple loop conformations and transitions between them were observed. These trajectories strongly suggest that extension of the C6 base away from the loop occurs cooperatively with an N-type-->S-type sugar pucker conversion in that residue and that similar pucker transitions are necessary to stabilize other looped-out bases. In addition, a short-lived conformer with an extended fourth loop residue (A8) lacking this stabilizing 2'-endo pucker mode was observed. Results of thermal perturbation at 400 K support this model of loop dynamics. Unfolding trajectories were produced using this same methodology at temperatures of 500 to 700 K. The observed unfolding events display three-state behavior kinetically (including native, globular, and unfolded populations) and, based on these observations, we propose a folding mechanism that consists of three distinct events: (i) collapse of the random unfolded structure and sampling of the globular state; (ii) passage into the folded region of configurational space as stem base-pairs form and gain helicity; and (iii) attainment of proper loop geometry and organization of loop pairing and stacking interactions. These results are considered in the context of current experimental knowledge of this and similar nucleic acid hairpins.
View details for DOI 10.1006/jmbi.2002.5447
View details for Web of Science ID 000175070100002
View details for PubMedID 11955005
-
Rapid compaction during RNA folding
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2002; 99 (7): 4266-4271
Abstract
We have used small angle x-ray scattering and computer simulations with a coarse-grained model to provide a time-resolved picture of the global folding process of the Tetrahymena group I RNA over a time window of more than five orders of magnitude. A substantial phase of compaction is observed on the low millisecond timescale, and the overall compaction and global shape changes are largely complete within one second, earlier than any known tertiary contacts are formed. This finding indicates that the RNA forms a nonspecifically collapsed intermediate and then searches for its tertiary contacts within a highly restricted subset of conformational space. The collapsed intermediate early in folding of this RNA is grossly akin to molten globule intermediates in protein folding.
View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.072589599
View details for Web of Science ID 000174856000027
View details for PubMedID 11929997
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC123637
-
Alkaline phosphatase revisited: Hydrolysis of alkyl phosphates
BIOCHEMISTRY
2002; 41 (9): 3207-3225
Abstract
Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) is the prototypical two metal ion catalyst with two divalent zinc ions bound approximately 4 A apart in the active site. Studies spanning half a century have elucidated many structural and mechanistic features of this enzyme, rendering it an attractive model for investigating the potent catalytic power of bimetallic centers. Unfortunately, fundamental mechanistic features have been obscured by limitations with the standard assays. These assays generate concentrations of inorganic phosphate (P(i)) in excess of its inhibition constant (K(i) approximately 1 muM). This tight binding by P(i) has affected the majority of published kinetic constants. Furthermore, binding limits k(cat)/K(m) for reaction of p-nitrophenyl phosphate, the most commonly employed substrate. We describe a sensitive (32)P-based assay for hydrolysis of alkyl phosphates that avoids the complication of product inhibition. We have revisited basic mechanistic features of AP with these alkyl phosphate substrates. The results suggest that the chemical step for phosphorylation of the enzyme limits k(cat)/K(m). The pH-rate profile and additional results suggest that the serine nucleophile is active in its anionic form and has a pK(a) of < or = 5.5 in the free enzyme. An inactivating pK(a) of 8.0 is observed for binding of both substrates and inhibitors, and we suggest that this corresponds to ionization of a zinc-coordinated water molecule. Counter to previous suggestions, inorganic phosphate dianion appears to bind to the highly charged AP active site at least as strongly as the trianion. The dependence of k(cat)/K(m) on the pK(a) of the leaving group follows a Brønsted correlation with a slope of beta(lg) = -0.85 +/- 0.1, differing substantially from the previously reported value of -0.2 obtained from data with a less sensitive assay. This steep leaving group dependence is consistent with a largely dissociative transition state for AP-catalyzed hydrolysis of phosphate monoesters. The new (32)P-based assay employed herein will facilitate continued dissection of the AP reaction by providing a means to readily follow the chemical step for phosphorylation of the enzyme.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi012166y
View details for Web of Science ID 000174187500035
View details for PubMedID 11863460
-
Exploring the folding landscape of a structured RNA
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2002; 99 (1): 155-160
Abstract
Structured RNAs achieve their active states by traversing complex, multidimensional energetic landscapes. Here we probe the folding landscape of the Tetrahymena ribozyme by using a powerful approach: the folding of single ribozyme molecules is followed beginning from distinct regions of the folding landscape. The experiments, combined with small-angle x-ray scattering results, show that the landscape contains discrete folding pathways. These pathways are separated by large free-energy barriers that prevent interconversion between them, indicating that the pathways lie in deep channels in the folding landscape. Chemical protection and mutagenesis experiments are then used to elucidate the structural features that determine which folding pathway is followed. Strikingly, a specific long-range tertiary contact can either help folding or hinder folding, depending on when it is formed during the process. Together these results provide an unprecedented view of the topology of an RNA folding landscape and the RNA structural features that underlie this multidimensional landscape.
View details for Web of Science ID 000173233300031
View details for PubMedID 11756689
-
Role of SRP RNA in the GTPase cycles of ffh and FtsY
BIOCHEMISTRY
2001; 40 (50): 15224-15233
Abstract
The bacterial homologues of the signal recognition particle (SRP) and its receptor, the Ffh*4.5S RNA ribonucleoprotein complex and the FtsY protein, respectively, form a unique complex in which both Ffh and FtsY act as GTPase activating proteins for one another, resulting in the mutual stimulation of GTP hydrolysis by both proteins. Previous work showed that 4.5S RNA enhances the GTPase activity in the presence of both Ffh and FtsY, but it was not clear how this was accomplished. In this work, kinetic and thermodynamic analyses of the GTPase reactions of Ffh and FtsY have provided insights into the role of 4.5S RNA in the GTPase cycles of Ffh and FtsY. We found that 4.5S RNA accelerates the association between Ffh and FtsY 400-fold in their GTP-bound form, analogous to its 200-fold catalytic effect on Ffh*FtsY association previously observed with the GppNHp-bound form [Peluso, P., et al. (2000) Science 288, 1640-1643]. Further, Ffh-FtsY association is rate-limiting for the observed GTPase reaction with subsaturating Ffh and FtsY, thereby accounting for the apparent stimulatory effect of 4.5S RNA on the GTPase activity observed previously. An additional step, GTP hydrolysis from the Ffh*FtsY complex, is also moderately facilitated by 4.5S RNA. These results suggest that 4.5S RNA modulates the conformation of the Ffh*FtsY complex and may, in turn, regulate its GTPase activity during the SRP functional cycle.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi011639y
View details for Web of Science ID 000172723800018
View details for PubMedID 11735405
-
Channels in the RNA folding landscape.
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 2001: U136–U136
View details for Web of Science ID 000170690000644
-
Identifying ligands within the Tetrahymena ribozyme that bind and position the catalytic metal ions.
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 2001: U145–U145
View details for Web of Science ID 000170690000697
-
Channels in the RNA folding landscape.
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 2001: 8635–35
View details for Web of Science ID 000170057200152
-
Identifying ligands within the Tetrahymena ribozyme that bind and position the catalytic metal ions.
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 2001: 8647–48
View details for Web of Science ID 000170057200205
-
Probing the folding landscape of the Tetrahymena ribozyme: Commitment to form the native conformation is late in the folding pathway
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2001; 308 (5): 839-851
Abstract
Large, structured RNAs traverse folding landscapes in which intermediates and long-lived misfolded states are common. To obtain a comprehensive description of the folding landscape for a structured RNA, it is necessary to understand the connections between productive folding pathways and pathways to these misfolded states. The Tetrahymena group I ribozyme partitions between folding to the native state and to a long-lived misfolded conformation. Here, we show that the observed rate constant for commitment to fold to the native or misfolded states is 1.9 min(-1) (37 degrees C, 10 mM Mg(2+)), the same within error as the rate constant for overall folding to the native state. Thus, the commitment to alternative folding pathways is made late in the folding process, concomitant with or after the rate-limiting step for overall folding. The ribozyme forms much of its tertiary structure significantly faster than it reaches this commitment point and the tertiary structure is expected to be stable, suggesting that the commitment to fold along pathways to the native or misfolded states is made from a partially structured intermediate. These results allow the misfolded conformation to be incorporated into a folding framework that reconciles previous data and gives quantitative information about the energetic topology of the folding landscape for this RNA.
View details for Web of Science ID 000169014500002
View details for PubMedID 11352576
-
Functional interrelationships in the alkaline phosphatase superfamily: phosphodiesterase activity of Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase
BIOCHEMISTRY
2001; 40 (19): 5691-5699
Abstract
Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) is a proficient phosphomonoesterase with two Zn(2+) ions in its active site. Sequence homology suggests a distant evolutionary relationship between AP and alkaline phosphodiesterase/nucleotide pyrophosphatase, with conservation of the catalytic metal ions. Furthermore, many other phosphodiesterases, although not evolutionarily related, have a similar active site configuration of divalent metal ions in their active sites. These observations led us to test whether AP could also catalyze the hydrolysis of phosphate diesters. The results described herein demonstrate that AP does have phosphodiesterase activity: the phosphatase and phosphodiesterase activities copurify over several steps; inorganic phosphate, a strong competitive inhibitor of AP, inhibits the phosphodiesterase and phosphatase activities with the same inhibition constant; a point mutation that weakens phosphate binding to AP correspondingly weakens phosphate inhibition of the phosphodiesterase activity; and mutation of active site residues substantially reduces both the mono- and diesterase activities. AP accelerates the rate of phosphate diester hydrolysis by 10(11)-fold relative to the rate of the uncatalyzed reaction [(k(cat)/K(m))/k(w)]. Although this rate enhancement is substantial, it is at least 10(6)-fold less than the rate enhancement for AP-catalyzed phosphate monoester hydrolysis. Mutational analysis suggests that common active site features contribute to hydrolysis of both phosphate monoesters and phosphate diesters. However, mutation of the active site arginine to serine, R166S, decreases the monoesterase activity but not the diesterase activity, suggesting that the interaction of this arginine with the nonbridging oxygen(s) of the phosphate monoester substrate provides a substantial amount of the preferential hydrolysis of phosphate monoesters. The observation of phosphodiesterase activity extends the previous observation that AP has a low level of sulfatase activity, further establishing the functional interrelationships among the sulfatases, phosphatases, and phosphodiesterases within the evolutionarily related AP superfamily. The catalytic promiscuity of AP could have facilitated divergent evolution via gene duplication by providing a selective advantage upon which natural selection could have acted.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi0028892
View details for Web of Science ID 000168635900013
View details for PubMedID 11341834
-
Defining the catalytic metal ion interactions in the Tetrahymena ribozyme reaction
BIOCHEMISTRY
2001; 40 (17): 5161-5171
Abstract
Divalent metal ions play a crucial role in catalysis by many RNA and protein enzymes that carry out phosphoryl transfer reactions, and defining their interactions with substrates is critical for understanding the mechanism of biological phosphoryl transfer. Although a vast amount of structural work has identified metal ions bound at the active site of many phosphoryl transfer enzymes, the number of functional metal ions and the full complement of their catalytic interactions remain to be defined for any RNA or protein enzyme. Previously, thiophilic metal ion rescue and quantitative functional analyses identified the interactions of three active site metal ions with the 3'- and 2'-substrate atoms of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme. We have now extended these approaches to probe the metal ion interactions with the nonbridging pro-S(P) oxygen of the reactive phosphoryl group. The results of this study combined with previous mechanistic work provide evidence for a novel assembly of catalytic interactions involving three active site metal ions. One metal ion coordinates the 3'-departing oxygen of the oligonucleotide substrate and the pro-S(P) oxygen of the reactive phosphoryl group; another metal ion coordinates the attacking 3'-oxygen of the guanosine nucleophile; a third metal ion bridges the 2'-hydroxyl of guanosine and the pro-S(P) oxygen of the reactive phosphoryl group. These results for the first time define a complete set of catalytic metal ion/substrate interactions for an RNA or protein enzyme catalyzing phosphoryl transfer.
View details for Web of Science ID 000168435100007
View details for PubMedID 11318638
-
Comparison of the hammerhead cleavage reactions stimulated by monovalent and divalent cations
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2001; 7 (4): 537-545
Abstract
Although the hammerhead reaction proceeds most efficiently in divalent cations, cleavage in 4 M LiCl is only approximately 10-fold slower than under standard conditions of 10 mM MgCl2 (Murray et al., Chem Biol, 1998, 5:587-595; Curtis & Bartel, RNA, 2001, this issue, pp. 546-552). To determine if the catalytic mechanism with high concentrations of monovalent cations is similar to that with divalent cations, we compared the activities of a series of modified hammerhead ribozymes in the two ionic conditions. Nearly all of the modifications have similar deleterious effects under both reaction conditions, suggesting that the hammerhead adopts the same general catalytic structure with both monovalent and divalent cations. However, modification of three ligands previously implicated in the binding of a functional divalent metal ion have substantially smaller effects on the cleavage rate in Li+ than in Mg2+. This result suggests that an interaction analogous to the interaction made by this divalent metal ion is absent in the monovalent reaction. Although the contribution of this divalent metal ion to the overall reaction rate is relatively modest, its presence is needed to achieve the full catalytic rate. The role of this ion appears to be in facilitating formation of the active structure, and any direct chemical role of metal ions in hammerhead catalysis is small.
View details for Web of Science ID 000168500400004
View details for PubMedID 11345432
-
Chemical rescue of phosphoryl transfer in a cavity mutant: a cautionary tale for site-directed mutagenesis
BIOCHEMISTRY
2001; 40 (2): 403-413
Abstract
We have explored the ability of a nucleoside diphosphate kinase (NDPK) mutant in which the nucleophilic histidine has been replaced by glycine (H122G) to transfer phosphate from ATP to alcohols of varying pK(a), size, shape, and polarity. This cavity mutant does indeed act as a primitive alcohol kinase. The rate of its phosphoryl transfer to alcohols varies considerably, with values spanning a DeltaDeltaG(double dagger) range of 4 kcal/mol, whereas the alcohols have very similar intrinsic reactivities. Analysis of these results suggests that the ability to carry out phosphoryl transfer within the cavity is not a simple function of being small enough to enter the cavity, but rather is a complex function of steric, solvation, entropic, van der Waals packing, and electrostatic properties of the alcohol. In addition, large differences are observed between the reactivities of alcohols within the nucleophile cavity of H122G and the reactivities of the same alcohols within the nucleophile cavity of H122A, a mutant NDPK that differs from H122G by a single methyl group within the cavity. The crystal structures of the two cavity mutants are very similar to one another and to wild-type NDPK, providing no evidence for a structurally perturbed active site. The differences in reactivity between the two mutant proteins illustrate a fundamental limitation of energetic analysis from site-directed mutagenesis: although removal of a side chain is generally considered to be a conservative change, the energetic effects of any given mutation are inextricably linked to the molecular properties of the created cavity and the surrounding protein environment.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bi002472w
View details for Web of Science ID 000166496900013
View details for PubMedID 11148034
-
A single molecule study of the folding dynamics of a large RNA enzyme
CELL PRESS. 2001: 201A–201A
View details for Web of Science ID 000166692200920
-
Exploring the RNA folding landscape, one molecule at a time.
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 2000: U82–U82
View details for Web of Science ID 000166091300476
-
A single-molecule study of RNA catalysis and folding
SCIENCE
2000; 288 (5473): 2048-?
Abstract
Using fluorescence microscopy, we studied the catalysis by and folding of individual Tetrahymena thermophila ribozyme molecules. The dye-labeled and surface-immobilized ribozymes used were shown to be functionally indistinguishable from the unmodified free ribozyme in solution. A reversible local folding step in which a duplex docks and undocks from the ribozyme core was observed directly in single-molecule time trajectories, allowing the determination of the rate constants and characterization of the transition state. A rarely populated docked state, not measurable by ensemble methods, was observed. In the overall folding process, intermediate folding states and multiple folding pathways were observed. In addition to observing previously established folding pathways, a pathway with an observed folding rate constant of 1 per second was discovered. These results establish single-molecule fluorescence as a powerful tool for examining RNA folding.
View details for Web of Science ID 000087687000052
View details for PubMedID 10856219
-
Role of 4.5S RNA in assembly of the bacterial signal recognition particle with its receptor
SCIENCE
2000; 288 (5471): 1640-1643
Abstract
The mechanism by which a signal recognition particle (SRP) and its receptor mediate protein targeting to the endoplasmic reticulum or to the bacterial plasma membrane is evolutionarily conserved. In Escherichia coli, this reaction is mediated by the Ffh/4.5S RNA ribonucleoprotein complex (Ffh/4.5S RNP; the SRP) and the FtsY protein (the SRP receptor). We have quantified the effects of 4.5S RNA on Ffh-FtsY complex formation by monitoring changes in tryptophan fluorescence. Surprisingly, 4.5S RNA facilitates both assembly and disassembly of the Ffh-FtsY complex to a similar extent. These results provide an example of an RNA molecule facilitating protein-protein interactions in a catalytic fashion.
View details for Web of Science ID 000087382300040
View details for PubMedID 10834842
-
An unconventional origin of metal-ion rescue and inhibition in the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme reaction
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
2000; 6 (6): 795-813
Abstract
The presence of catalytic metal ions in RNA active sites has often been inferred from metal-ion rescue of modified substrates and sometimes from inhibitory effects of alternative metal ions. Herein we report that, in the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme reaction, the deleterious effect of a thio substitution at the pro-Sp position of the reactive phosphoryl group is rescued by Mn2+. However, analysis of the reaction of this thio substrate and of substrates with other modifications strongly suggest that this rescue does not stem from a direct Mn2+ interaction with the Sp sulfur. Instead, the apparent rescue arises from a Mn2+ ion interacting with the residue immediately 3' of the cleavage site, A(+1), that stabilizes the tertiary interactions between the oligonucleotide substrate (S) and the active site. This metal site is referred to as site D herein. We also present evidence that a previously observed Ca2+ ion that inhibits the chemical step binds to metal site D. These and other observations suggest that, whereas the interactions of Mn2+ at site D are favorable for the chemical reaction, the Ca2+ at site D exerts its inhibitory effect by disrupting the alignment of the substrates within the active site. These results emphasize the vigilance necessary in the design and interpretation of metal-ion rescue and inhibition experiments. Conversely, in-depth mechanistic analysis of the effects of site-specific substrate modifications can allow the effects of specific metal ion-RNA interactions to be revealed and the properties of individual metal-ion sites to be probed, even within the sea of metal ions bound to RNA.
View details for Web of Science ID 000087503100002
View details for PubMedID 10864040
-
Use of duplex rigidity for stability and specificity in RNA tertiary structure
BIOCHEMISTRY
2000; 39 (20): 6183-6189
Abstract
The Tetrahymena group I ribozyme's oligonucleotide substrate, CCCUCUA(5), forms six base pairs with the ribozyme's internal guide sequence (IGS, 5'GGAGGG) to give the P1 duplex, and this duplex then docks into the active site via tertiary interactions. Shortening the substrate by three residues to give UCUA(5) reduces the equilibrium constant for P1 docking by approximately 200-fold even though UCUA(5) retains all the functional groups known to be involved in tertiary interactions [Narlikar, G. J., Bartley, L. E., Khosla, M., and Herschlag, D. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 14192-14204]. Here we show that the P1 duplex formed with UCUA(5) engages in all of the major tertiary interactions made by the standard P1 duplex. This suggests that the destabilization is not due to disruption of specific tertiary interactions. It therefore appears that the weaker docking of UCUA(5) arises from the increased conformational freedom of the undocked P1 duplex, which has three unpaired IGS residues and thus a larger entropic cost for docking. Further, a 2'-methoxy substitution at an IGS residue that is base-paired in the standard P1 duplex with CCCUCUA(5) but unpaired in the P1 duplex with UCUA(5) destabilizes docking of the standard P1 duplex approximately 300-fold more than it destabilizes docking of the P1 duplex formed with UCUA(5). These results suggest that fixation of groups in the context of a rigid duplex may be a general strategy used by RNA to substantially increase interaction specificity, both by aiding binding of the desired functional groups and by increasing the energetic cost of forming alternative interactions.
View details for Web of Science ID 000087399700031
View details for PubMedID 10821693
-
Enzymatic activity and folding of single RNA molecules
FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL. 2000: A1587–A1587
View details for Web of Science ID 000087005401599
-
Small angle X-ray scattering reveals a compact intermediate in RNA folding
NATURE STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY
2000; 7 (5): 367-370
Abstract
We have used small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) to monitor changes in the overall size and shape of the Tetrahymena ribozyme as it folds. The native ribozyme, formed in the presence of Mg2+, is much more compact and globular than the ensemble of unfolded conformations. Time-resolved measurements show that most of the compaction occurs at least 20-fold faster than the overall folding to the native state, suggesting that a compact intermediate or family of intermediates is formed early and then rearranges in the slow steps that limit the overall folding rate. These results lead to a kinetic folding model in which an initial 'electrostatic collapse' of the RNA is followed by slower rearrangements of elements that are initially mispositioned.
View details for Web of Science ID 000086908800009
View details for PubMedID 10802731
-
The substrate-assisted general base catalysis model for phosphate monoester hydrolysis: Evaluation using reactivity comparisons
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
2000; 122 (10): 2145-2148
View details for Web of Science ID 000086050900001
-
The P5abc peripheral element facilitates preorganization of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme for catalysis
BIOCHEMISTRY
2000; 39 (10): 2639-2651
Abstract
Phylogenetic comparisons and site-directed mutagenesis indicate that group I introns are composed of a catalytic core that is universally conserved and peripheral elements that are conserved only within intron subclasses. Despite this low overall conservation, peripheral elements are essential for efficient splicing of their parent introns. We have undertaken an in-depth structure-function analysis to investigate the role of one of these elements, P5abc, using the well-characterized ribozyme derived from the Tetrahymena group I intron. Structural comparisons using solution-based free radical cleavage revealed that a ribozyme lacking P5abc (E(DeltaP5abc)) and E(DeltaP5abc) with P5abc added in trans (E(DeltaP5abc).P5abc) adopt a similar global tertiary structure at Mg(2+) concentrations greater than 20 mM [Doherty, E. A., et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 2982-90]. However, free E(DeltaP5abc) is greatly compromised in overall oligonucleotide cleavage activity, even at Mg(2+) concentrations as high as 100 mM. Further characterization of E(DeltaP5abc) via DMS modification revealed local structural differences at several positions in the conserved core that cluster around the substrate binding sites. Kinetic and thermodynamic dissection of individual reaction steps identified defects in binding of both substrates to E(DeltaP5abc), with > or =25-fold weaker binding of a guanosine nucleophile and > or =350-fold weaker docking of the oligonucleotide substrate into its tertiary interactions with the ribozyme core. These defects in binding of the substrates account for essentially all of the 10(4)-fold decrease in overall activity of the deletion mutant. Together, the structural and functional observations suggest that the P5abc peripheral element not only provides stability but also positions active site residues through indirect interactions, thereby preferentially stabilizing the active ribozyme structure relative to alternative less active states. This is consistent with the view that peripheral elements engage in a network of mutually reinforcing interactions that together ensure cooperative folding of the ribozyme to its active structure.
View details for Web of Science ID 000085905300023
View details for PubMedID 10704214
-
The role of the cleavage site 2 '-hydroxyl in the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme reaction
CHEMISTRY & BIOLOGY
2000; 7 (2): 85-96
Abstract
The 2'-hydroxyl of U preceding the cleavage site, U(-1), in the Tetrahymena ribozyme reaction contributes 10(3)-fold to catalysis relative to a 2'-hydrogen atom. Previously proposed models for the catalytic role of this 2'-OH involve coordination of a catalytic metal ion and hydrogen-bond donation to the 3'-bridging oxygen. An additional model, hydrogen-bond donation by the 2'-OH to a nonbridging reactive phosphoryl oxygen, is also consistent with previous results. We have tested these models using atomic-level substrate modifications and kinetic and thermodynamic analyses.Replacing the 2'-OH with -NH(3)(+) increases the reaction rate approximately 60-fold, despite the absence of lone-pair electrons on the 2'-NH(3)(+) group to coordinate a metal ion. Binding and reaction of a modified oligonucleotide substrate with 2'-NH(2) at U(-1) are unaffected by soft-metal ions. These results suggest that the 2'-OH of U(-1) does not interact with a metal ion. The contribution of the 2'-moiety of U(-1) is unperturbed by thio substitution at either of the nonbridging oxygens of the reactive phosphoryl group, providing no indication of a hydrogen bond between the 2'-OH and the nonbridging phosphoryl oxygens. In contrast, the 10(3)-fold catalytic advantage of 2'-OH relative to 2'-H is eliminated when the 3'-bridging oxygen is replaced by sulfur. As sulfur is a weaker hydrogen-bond acceptor than oxygen, this effect suggests a hydrogen-bonding interaction between the 2'-OH and the 3'-bridging oxygen.These results provide the first experimental support for the model in which the 2'-OH of U(-1) donates a hydrogen bond to the neighboring 3'-bridging oxygen, thereby stabilizing the developing negative charge on the 3'-oxygen in the transition state.
View details for Web of Science ID 000085171600004
View details for PubMedID 10662698
-
Does the active site arginine change the nature of the transition state for alkaline phosphatase-catalyzed phosphoryl transfer?
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
1999; 121 (47): 11022-11023
View details for Web of Science ID 000084154800030
-
Kinetic dissection of fundamental processes of eukaryotic translation initiation in vitro
EMBO JOURNAL
1999; 18 (23): 6705-6717
Abstract
Approaches have been developed for the kinetic dissection of eukaryotic translation initiation in vitro using rabbit reticulocyte ribosomes and a crude preparation of initiation factors. These new approaches have allowed the kinetics of formation of the 43S and 80S ribosomal complexes to be followed and have substantially improved the ability to follow formation of the first peptide bond. The results suggest the existence of a new step on the initiation pathway that appears to require at least one additional factor and the hydrolysis of GTP and may prepare the 80S complex for the formation of the first peptide bond. The initial kinetic framework and methods developed herein will allow the properties of individual species along the initiation pathway to be probed further and will facilitate dissection of the mechanistic roles of individual translation factors and their interplay with RNA structural elements.
View details for Web of Science ID 000084177700012
View details for PubMedID 10581244
-
Stereospecificity of reactions catalyzed by HIV-1 integrase
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
1999; 274 (47): 33480-33487
Abstract
The retroviral integrase catalyzes two successive chemical reactions essential for integration of the retroviral genome into a host chromosome: 3' end processing, in which a dinucleotide is cleaved from each 3' end of the viral DNA; and the integration reaction itself, in which the resulting recessed 3' ends of the viral DNA are joined to the host DNA. We have examined the stereospecificity of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase for phosphorothioate substrates in these reactions and in a third reaction, disintegration, which is macroscopically the reverse of integration. Integrase preferentially catalyzed end processing and integration of a substrate with the (R(p))-phosphorothioate stereoisomer at the reaction center and disintegration of a substrate with an (S(p))-phosphorothiate at the reaction center. These results suggest a model for the architecture of the active site of integrase, and its interactions with key features of the viral and target DNA.
View details for Web of Science ID 000083745200048
View details for PubMedID 10559232
-
Characterization of a local folding event of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme: Effects of oligonucleotide substrate length pH, and temperature on the two substrate binding steps
BIOCHEMISTRY
1999; 38 (43): 14192-14204
Abstract
Binding of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme's oligonucleotide substrate occurs in two steps: P1 duplex formation with the ribozyme's internal guide sequence which forms an "open complex" is followed by docking of the P1 duplex into tertiary interactions within the catalytic core which forms a "closed complex". By systematically varying substrate length, pH, and temperature, we have identified conditions under which P1 duplex formation, P1 docking, or the chemical cleavage step limits the rate of the ribozyme reaction. This has enabled characterization of the individual steps as a function of substrate length, pH, and temperature, leading to several conclusions. (1) The rate constant for formation of the open complex is largely independent of substrate length, pH, and temperature, analogous to that of duplex formation in solution. This extends previous results suggesting that open complex formation entails mainly secondary structure formation and strengthens the view that the second binding step, P1 docking, represents a simple transition from secondary to tertiary structure in the context of an otherwise folded RNA. (2) The temperature dependence of the rate constant for P1 docking yields a negative activation entropy, in contrast to the positive entropy change previously observed for the docking equilibrium. This suggests a model in which tertiary interactions are not substantially formed in the transition state for P1 docking. (3) Shortening the substrate by three residues decreases the equilibrium constant for P1 docking by 200-fold, suggesting that the rigidity imposed by full-length duplex formation facilitates formation of tertiary interactions. (4) Once docked, shortened substrates are cleaved at rates within 3-fold of that for the full-length substrate. Thus, all the active site interactions required to accelerate the chemical cleavage event are maintained with shorter substrates. (5) The rate constant of approximately 10(3) min(-1) obtained for P1 docking is significantly faster than the other steps previously identified in the tertiary folding of this RNA. Nevertheless, P1 docking presumably follows other tertiary folding steps because the P1 duplex docks into a core that is formed only upon folding of the rest of the ribozyme.
View details for Web of Science ID 000083417800010
View details for PubMedID 10571993
-
Identification of the hammerhead ribozyme metal ion binding site responsible for rescue of the deleterious effect of a cleavage site phosphorothioate
BIOCHEMISTRY
1999; 38 (43): 14363-14378
Abstract
The hammerhead ribozyme crystal structure identified a specific metal ion binding site referred to as the P9/G10.1 site. Although this metal ion binding site is approximately 20 A away from the cleavage site, its disruption is highly deleterious for catalysis. Additional published results have suggested that the pro-R(P) oxygen at the cleavage site is coordinated by a metal ion in the reaction's transition state. Herein, we report a study on Cd(2+) rescue of the deleterious phosphorothioate substitution at the cleavage site. Under all conditions, the Cd(2+) concentration dependence can be accounted for by binding of a single rescuing metal ion. The affinity of the rescuing Cd(2+) is sensitive to perturbations at the P9/G10.1 site but not at the cleavage site or other sites in the conserved core. These observations led to a model in which a metal ion bound at the P9/G10.1 site in the ground state acquires an additional interaction with the cleavage site prior to and in the transition state. A titration experiment ruled out the possibility that a second tight-binding metal ion (< 10 microM) is involved in the rescue, further supporting the single metal ion model. Additionally, weakening Cd(2+) binding at the P9/G10.1 site did not result in the biphasic binding curve predicted from other models involving two metal ions. The large stereospecific thio-effects at the P9/G10.1 and the cleavage site suggest that there are interactions with these oxygen atoms in the normal reaction that are compromised by replacement of oxygen with sulfur. The simplest interpretation of the substantial rescue by Cd(2+) is that these atoms interact with a common metal ion in the normal reaction. Furthermore, base deletions and functional group modifications have similar energetic effects on the transition state in the Cd(2+)-rescued phosphorothioate reaction and the wild-type reaction, further supporting the model that a metal ion bridges the P9/G10.1 and the cleavage site in the normal reaction (i.e., with phosphate linkages rather than phosphorothioate linkages). These results suggest that the hammerhead undergoes a substantial conformational rearrangement to attain its catalytic conformation. Such rearrangements appear to be general features of small functional RNAs, presumably reflecting their structural limitations.
View details for Web of Science ID 000083417800028
View details for PubMedID 10572011
-
Three metal ions at the active site of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1999; 96 (22): 12299-12304
Abstract
Metal ions are critical for catalysis by many RNA and protein enzymes. To understand how these enzymes use metal ions for catalysis, it is crucial to determine how many metal ions are positioned at the active site. We report here an approach, combining atomic mutagenesis with quantitative determination of metal ion affinities, that allows individual metal ions to be distinguished. Using this approach, we show that at the active site of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme the previously identified metal ion interactions with three substrate atoms, the 3'-oxygen of the oligonucleotide substrate and the 3'- and 2'-moieties of the guanosine nucleophile, are mediated by three distinct metal ions. This approach provides a general tool for distinguishing active site metal ions and allows the properties and roles of individual metal ions to be probed, even within the sea of metal ions bound to RNA.
View details for Web of Science ID 000083373000021
View details for PubMedID 10535916
-
Impaired transition state complementarity in the hydrolysis of O-arylphosphorothioates by protein-tyrosine phosphatases
BIOCHEMISTRY
1999; 38 (37): 12111-12123
Abstract
The hydrolysis of O-arylphosphorothioates by protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPases) was studied with the aim of providing a mechanistic framework for the reactions of this important class of substrate analogues. O-arylphosphorothioates are hydrolyzed 2 to 3 orders of magnitude slower than O-aryl phosphates by PTPases. This is in contrast to the solution reaction where phosphorothioates display 10-60-fold higher reactivity than the corresponding oxygen analogues. Kinetic analyses suggest that PTPases utilize the same active site and similar kinetic and chemical mechanisms for the hydrolysis of O-arylphosphorothioates and O-aryl phosphates. Thio substitution has no effect on the affinity of substrate or product for the PTPases. Bronsted analyses suggest that like the PTPase-catalyzed phosphoryl transfer reaction the transition state for the PTPase-catalyzed thiophosphoryl transfer is highly dissociative, similar to that of the corresponding solution reaction. The side chain of the active-site Arg residue forms a bidentate hydrogen bond with two of the terminal phosphate oxygens in the ground state and two of the equatorial oxygens in a transition state analog complex with vanadate [Denu et al. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93, 2493-2498; Zhang, M. et al. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 15-23; Pannifer et al. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 10454-10462]. Replacement of the active-site Arg409 in the Yersinia PTPase by a Lys reduces the thio effect by 54-fold, consistent with direct interaction and demonstrating strong energetic coupling between Arg409 and the phosphoryl oxygens in the transition state. These results suggest that the large thio effect observed in the PTPase reaction is the result of inability to achieve precise transition state complementarity in the enzyme active site with the larger sulfur substitution.
View details for Web of Science ID 000082834800029
View details for PubMedID 10508416
-
New pathways in folding of the Tetrahymena group I RNA enzyme
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
1999; 291 (5): 1155-1167
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that the earliest detectable step in folding of the Tetrahymena ribozyme is tertiary structure formation of the peripheral element P5abc. This, along with other results, has suggested that P5abc may serve as a scaffold upon which additional tertiary structure is built. Herein we use the onset of oligonucleotide cleavage activity as a readout for native state formation and investigate the effect of P5abc on the rate of folding to the native structure. Despite the early folding of P5abc, its removal to give the E delta P5abc variant decreases the rate of attainment of an active structure less than fivefold (20-100 mM Mg2+, 15-50 degrees C). Furthermore, P5abc added in trans is able to bind the folded E delta P5abc ribozyme and promote oligonucleotide cleavage at least tenfold more rapidly than folding of the wild-type ribozyme, indicating that E delta P5abc does not have to first unfold before productively binding P5abc to form the true native state. This suggests that a state with the overall tertiary structure formed but with P5abc unfolded represents a viable on-pathway intermediate for the wild-type ribozyme. These results provide strong evidence for the existence of two pathways to the native state: in one pathway P5abc forms tertiary structure first, and in another it forms late. The pathway in which P5abc forms first is favored because P5abc can fold quickly and because its tertiary structure is stable in the absence of additional structured elements, not because P5abc formation is required for subsequent folding steps. In the course of these experiments, we also found that most of the ribozyme population does not reach the native state directly under standard conditions in vitro, but instead forms an inactive structure that is stable for hours. Finally, the fraction that does fold to the native state folds with a single rate constant of 1 min-1, suggesting that there are no significantly populated "fast-track" pathways that reach the native state directly by avoiding slow folding steps.
View details for Web of Science ID 000082445900013
View details for PubMedID 10518951
-
Effects of oligonucleotide length and atomic composition on stimulation of the ATPase activity of translation initiation factor eIF4A
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
1999; 5 (9): 1210-1221
Abstract
Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4A (elF4A) has been proposed to use the energy of ATP hydrolysis to remove RNA structure in the 5' untranslated region (UTR) of mRNAs, helping the 43S ribosomal complex bind to an mRNA and scan to find the 5'-most AUG initiator codon. We have examined the effect of changing the atomic composition and length of single-stranded oligonucleotides on binding to elF4A and on stimulation of its ATPase activity once bound. Substitution of 2'-OH groups with 2'-H or 2'-OCH3 groups reduces ATPase stimulation at least 100-fold, to background levels, without significantly affecting oligonucleotide affinity. These effects suggest that 2'-OH groups participate in an elF4A conformational change that occurs subsequent to oligonucleotide binding and is required for ATPase stimulation. Replacing nonbridging oxygen atoms in phosphodiester linkages with sulfur atoms to make phosphorothioate linkages has no significant effect on stimulation, while substantially increasing affinity. Extending the length of an RNA oligonucleotide from 4 to approximately 15 nt gradually increases oligonucleotide affinity and ATPase stimulation. Consistent with this observation, the increase in affinity and stimulation provided by phosphorothioate linkages and 2'-OH groups is proportional to the number of these groups present within larger oligonucleotides. Further, changing the position of blocks of phosphorothioate linkages or 2'-OH groups within a larger oligonucleotide does not affect affinity and has only a small effect on stimulation. These observations suggest that numerous interactions between the oligonucleotide and elF4A contribute individually to binding and ATPase stimulation. Nevertheless, significant stimulation is observed with as few as four RNA residues. These properties may allow elF4A to operate within regions of 5' UTRs containing only short stretches of exposed single-stranded RNA. As stimulation increases when longer stretches of single-stranded RNA are available, it is possible that the accessibility of single-stranded RNA in a 5' UTR influences translation efficiency.
View details for Web of Science ID 000082421700010
View details for PubMedID 10496222
-
Protonated 2 '-aminoguanosine as a probe of the electrostatic environment of the active site of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme
BIOCHEMISTRY
1999; 38 (34): 10976-10988
Abstract
We have probed the electrostatic environment of the active site of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme (E) using protonated 2'-aminoguanosine (), in which the 2'-OH of the guanosine nucleophile (G) is replaced by an group. At low concentrations of divalent metal ion (2 mM Mg(2+)), binds at least 200-fold stronger than G or G(NH)()2, with a dissociation constant of =1 microM from the ribozyme. oligonucleotide substrate. complex (). This strong binding suggests that the group interacts with negatively charged phosphoryl groups within the active site. Increasing the concentration of divalent metal ion weakens the binding of to E. S more than 10(2)-fold. The Mn(2+) concentration dependence suggests that M(C), the metal ion that interacts with the 2'-moiety of G in the normal reaction, is responsible for this effect. M(C) and compete for binding to the active site; this competition could arise from electrostatic repulsion between the positively charged and M(C) and, possibly, from their competition for interaction with active site phosphoryl groups. The reactive phosphoryl group of S increases the competition between M(C) and, consistent with a network of interactions involving M(C) that help position the reactive phosphoryl group and the guanosine nucleophile with respect to one another. The chemical step with bound is at least 10(4)-fold slower than with G or G(NH)()2. These results provide additional support for an integral role of M(C) in catalysis by the Tetrahymena ribozyme, and demonstrate the utility of the moiety as an electrostatic probe within a structured RNA.
View details for Web of Science ID 000082342600008
View details for PubMedID 10460152
-
Probing the role of metal ions in RNA catalysis: Kinetic and thermodynamic characterization of a metal ion interaction with the 2 '-moiety of the guanosine nucleophile in the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme
BIOCHEMISTRY
1999; 38 (34): 10958-10975
Abstract
Deciphering the role of individual metal ions in RNA catalysis is a tremendous challenge, as numerous metal ions coat the charged backbone of a folded RNA. Metal ion specificity switch experiments combined with quantitative analysis may provide a powerful tool for probing specific metal ion-RNA interactions and for delineating the role of individual metal ions among the sea of metal ions bound to RNA. We show herein that Mn(2+) rescues the deleterious effect of replacing the 2'-OH of the guanosine nucleophile (G) by -NH(2) (G(NH)()2) in the reaction catalyzed by the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme (E), and the Mn(2+) concentration dependence suggests that a single metal ion is responsible for rescue. This provides strong evidence for a metal ion interaction with the 2'-moiety of G in this ribozyme (referred to as M(C)), confirming and extending previous results in a bacteriophage group I intron [Sjögren, A.-S., Pettersson, E., Sjöberg, B.-M., and Strömberg, R. (1997) Nucleic Acids Res. 25, 648-654]. Toward understanding the >10(6)-fold catalytic contribution of the 2'-OH of G, we have determined the individual reaction steps affected by M(C) and quantitated these effects. has only a small effect on binding of G(NH)()2 to the free ribozyme or ribozyme.oligonucleotide complexes that lack the reactive phosphoryl group. In contrast, increases the binding of G(NH)()2 to the ribozyme.oligonucleotide substrate (E.S) complex 20-fold and increases the binding of S to the E.G(NH)()2 complex by the same amount. These and other observations suggest that M(C) plays an integral role in the coupled binding of the oligonucleotide substrate and the guanosine nucleophile. This metal ion may be used to align the nucleophile within the active site, thereby facilitating the reaction. Alternatively or in addition, M(C) may act in concert with an additional metal ion to coordinate and activate the 3'-OH of G. Finally, these experiments have also allowed us to probe the properties of this metal ion site and isolate the energetic effects of the interaction of this specific metal ion with the 2'-moiety of G.
View details for Web of Science ID 000082342600007
View details for PubMedID 10460151
-
Catalysis of phosphoryl transfer from ATP by amine nucleophiles
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
1999; 121 (25): 5837-5845
View details for Web of Science ID 000081216800001
-
Phosphoryl transfer: Transition states, catalysis and evolution of enzyme diversity
FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL. 1999: A1424–A1424
View details for Web of Science ID 000082033400592
-
Nucleophilic activation by positioning in phosphoryl transfer catalyzed by nucleoside diphosphate kinase
BIOCHEMISTRY
1999; 38 (15): 4701-4711
Abstract
The nonenzymatic reaction of ATP with a nucleophile to generate ADP and a phosphorylated product proceeds via a dissociative transition state with little bond formation to the nucleophile. Consideration of the dissociative nature of the nonenzymatic transition state leads to the following question: To what extent can the nucleophile be activated in enzymatic phosphoryl transfer? We have addressed this question for the NDP kinase reaction. A mutant form of the enzyme lacking the nucleophilic histidine (H122G) can be chemically rescued for ATP attack by imidazole or other exogenous small nucleophiles. The ATP reaction is 50-fold faster with the wild-type enzyme, which has an imidazole nucleophile positioned for reaction by a covalent bond, than with H122G, which employs a noncovalently bound imidazole nucleophile [(kcat/KM)ATP]. Further, a 4-fold advantage for imidazole positioned in the nucleophile binding pocket created by the mutation is suggested from comparison of the reaction of H122G and ATP with an imidazole versus a water nucleophile, after correction for the intrinsic reactivities of imidazole and water toward ATP in solution. X-ray structural analysis shows no detectable rearrangement of the residues surrounding His 122 upon mutation to Gly 122. The overall rate effect of approximately 10(2)-fold for the covalent imidazole nucleophile relative to water is therefore attributed to positioning of the nucleophile with respect to the reactive phosphoryl group. This is underscored by the more deleterious effect of replacing ATP with AlphaTauPgammaS in the wild-type reaction than in the imidazole-rescued mutant reaction, as follows. For the wild-type, AlphaTauPgammaS presumably disrupts positioning between nucleophile and substrate, resulting in a large thio effect of 300-fold, whereas precise alignment is already disrupted in the mutant because there is no covalent bond to the nucleophile, resulting in a smaller thio effect of 10-fold. In summary, the results suggest a catalytic role for activation of the nucleophile by positioning in phosphoryl transfer catalyzed by NDP kinase.
View details for Web of Science ID 000079918200006
View details for PubMedID 10200157
-
Catalytic promiscuity and the evolution of new enzymatic activities
CHEMISTRY & BIOLOGY
1999; 6 (4): R91-R105
Abstract
Several contemporary enzymes catalyze alternative reactions distinct from their normal biological reactions. In some cases the alternative reaction is similar to a reaction that is efficiently catalyzed by an evolutionary related enzyme. Alternative activities could have played an important role in the diversification of enzymes by providing a duplicated gene a head start towards being captured by adaptive evolution.
View details for Web of Science ID 000082565000001
View details for PubMedID 10099128
-
Assembly of an exceptionally stable RNA tertiary interface in a group I ribozyme
BIOCHEMISTRY
1999; 38 (10): 2982-2990
Abstract
Group I intron RNAs contain a core of highly conserved helices flanked by peripheral domains that stabilize the core structure. In the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme, the P4, P5, and P6 helices of the core pack tightly against a three-helix subdomain called P5abc. Chemical footprinting and the crystal structure of the Tetrahymena intron P4-P6 domain revealed that tertiary interactions between these two parts of the domain create an extensive solvent-inaccessible interface. We have examined the formation and stability of this tertiary interface by providing the P5abc segment in trans to a Tetrahymena ribozyme construct that lacks P5abc (EDeltaP5abc). Equilibrium gel shift experiments show that the affinity of the P5abc and EDeltaP5abc RNAs is exceptionally strong, with a Kd of approximately 100 pM at 10 mM MgCl2 (at 37 degrees C). Chemical and enzymatic footprinting shows that the RNAs are substantially folded prior to assembly of the complex. Solvent accessibility mapping reveals that, in the absence of P5abc, the intron RNA maintains a nativelike fold but its active-site helices are not tightly packed. Upon binding of P5abc, the catalytic core becomes more tightly packed through indirect effects of the tertiary interface formation. This two-component system facilitates quantitative examination of individual tertiary contacts that stabilize the folded intron.
View details for Web of Science ID 000079089300014
View details for PubMedID 10074350
-
Specificity from steric restrictions in the guanosine binding pocket of a group I ribozyme
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
1999; 5 (2): 158-166
Abstract
The 3' splice site of group I introns is defined, in part, by base pairs between the intron core and residues just upstream of the splice site, referred to as P9.0. We have studied the specificity imparted by P9.0 using the well-characterized L-21 Scal ribozyme from Tetrahymena by adding residues to the 5' end of the guanosine (G) that functions as a nucleophile in the oligonucleotide cleavage reaction: CCCUCUA5 (S) + NNG <--> CCCUCU + NNGA5. UCG, predicted to form two base pairs in P9.0, reacts with a (kcat/KM) value approximately 10-fold greater than G, consistent with previous results. Altering the bases that form P9.0 in both the trinucleotide G analog and the ribozyme affects the specificity in the manner predicted for base-pairing. Strikingly, oligonucleotides incapable of forming P9.0 react approximately 10-fold more slowly than G, for which the mispaired residues are simply absent. The observed specificity is consistent with a model in which the P9.0 site is sterically restricted such that an energetic penalty, not present for G, must be overcome by G analogs with 5' extensions. Shortening S to include only one residue 3' of the cleavage site (CCCUCUA) eliminates this penalty and uniformly enhances the reactions of matched and mismatched oligonucleotides relative to guanosine. These results suggest that the 3' portion of S occupies the P9.0 site, sterically interfering with binding of G analogs with 5' extensions. Similar steric effects may more generally allow structured RNAs to avoid formation of incorrect contacts, thereby helping to avoid kinetic traps during folding and enhancing cooperative formation of the correct structure.
View details for Web of Science ID 000078505300002
View details for PubMedID 10024168
-
A new heat shock protein that binds nucleic acids
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
1999; 274 (1): 249-256
Abstract
We describe the isolation of Hsp15, a new, very abundant heat shock protein that binds to DNA and RNA. Hsp15 is well conserved and related to a number of RNA-binding proteins, including ribosomal protein S4, RNA pseudouridine synthase, and tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase. The region shared between these proteins appears to represent a common, but previously unrecognized, RNA binding motif. Filter binding studies showed that Hsp15 binds to a 17-mer single-stranded RNA with a dissociation constant of 9 microM in 22.5 mM Hepes, pH 7. 0, 5 mM MgCl2. A role of Hsp15 in binding nucleic acids puts this protein into a different functional category from that of many other heat shock proteins that act as molecular chaperones or proteases on protein substrates.
View details for Web of Science ID 000077900200037
View details for PubMedID 9867837
-
Hydrogen bonding in enzymatic catalysis: Analysis of energetic contributions
ENZYME KINETICS AND MECHANISM, PT E
1999; 308: 246-276
Abstract
Enzymes can provide catalysis by increasing the strengthening of hydrogen bonds to groups undergoing charge rearrangement in the course of reaction relative to the strengthening of the hydrogen bonds in the corresponding solution reactions. This can be accomplished by using hydrogen bond donors and acceptors that are stronger than water and by lowering the effective dielectric relative to that in aqueous solution. We suggest that these electrostatic effects are of general significance in enzymatic catalysis. The effective dielectric is lowered by the overall "rigidity" of the folded enzyme, which facilitates the formation of active site interactions, and by the fixation of active site functional groups within the enzyme x substrate complex. This underscores the fundamental interconnection of catalytic mechanisms in enzymatic catalysis.
View details for Web of Science ID 000084721200011
View details for PubMedID 10507008
-
Sulfatase activity of E-coli alkaline phosphatase demonstrates a functional link to arylsulfatases, an evolutionarily related enzyme family
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
1998; 120 (47): 12369-12370
View details for Web of Science ID 000077367000031
-
Structure-function relationships in the hammerhead ribozyme probed by base rescue
RNA-A PUBLICATION OF THE RNA SOCIETY
1998; 4 (11): 1332-1346
Abstract
We previously showed that the deleterious effects from introducing abasic nucleotides in the hammerhead ribozyme core can, in some instances, be relieved by exogenous addition of the ablated base and that the relative ability of different bases to rescue catalysis can be used to probe functional aspects of the ribozyme structure [Peracchi et al., Proc NatAcad Sci USA 93:11522]. Here we examine rescue at four additional positions, 3, 9, 12 and 13, to probe transition state interactions and to demonstrate the strengths and weaknesses of base rescue as a tool for structure-function studies. The results confirm functional roles for groups previously probed by mutagenesis, provide evidence that specific interactions observed in the ground-state X-ray structure are maintained in the transition state, and suggest formation in the transition state of other interactions that are absent in the ground state. In addition, the results suggest transition state roles for some groups that did not emerge as important in previous mutagenesis studies, presumably because base rescue has the ability to reveal interactions that are obscured by local structural redundancy in traditional mutagenesis. The base rescue results are complemented by comparing the effects of the abasic and phenyl nucleotide substitutions. The results together suggest that stacking of the bases at positions 9, 13 and 14 observed in the ground state is important for orienting other groups in the transition state. These findings add to our understanding of structure-function relationships in the hammerhead ribozyme and help delineate positions that may undergo rearrangements in the active hammerhead structure relative to the ground-state structure. Finally, the particularly efficient rescue by 2-methyladenine at position 13 relative to adenine and other bases suggests that natural base modifications may, in some instance, provide additional stability by taking advantage of hydrophobic interactions in folded RNAs.
View details for Web of Science ID 000076768000002
View details for PubMedID 9814755
-
A core folding model for catalysis by the hammerhead ribozyme accounts for its extraordinary sensitivity to abasic mutations
BIOCHEMISTRY
1998; 37 (42): 14765-14775
Abstract
Introducing abasic nucleotides at each of 13 positions in the conserved core of the hammerhead ribozyme causes a large decrease in the extent of catalysis [Peracchi, A., et al. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 93, 11522]. This extreme sensitivity to structural defects is in contrast to the behavior of protein enzymes and larger ribozymes. Several additional differences in the behavior of the hammerhead relative to that of protein enzymes and larger ribozymes are described herein. The deleterious effects of the abasic mutations are not relieved by lowering the temperature, by increasing the concentration of monovalent or divalent metal ions, or by adding polyamines, in contrast to effects observed with protein enzymes and large RNA enzymes. In addition, the abasic mutations do not significantly weaken substrate binding. These results and previous observations are all accounted for by a "core folding" model in which the stable ground state structure of the hammerhead ribozyme complexed with the substrate is a partially folded state that must undergo an additional folding event to achieve its catalytic conformation. We propose that the peculiar behavior of the hammerhead arises because the limited structural interconnections in a small RNA enzyme do not allow the ground state to stably adopt the catalytic conformation; within the globally folded catalytic conformation, limited structural interconnections may further impair catalysis by hampering the precise alignment of active site functional groups. This behavior represents a basic manifestation of the well-recognized interconnection between folding and catalysis.
View details for Web of Science ID 000076727900013
View details for PubMedID 9778351
-
RNA structure - Ribozyme crevices and catalysis
NATURE
1998; 395 (6702): 548-549
View details for Web of Science ID 000076362900025
-
Direct demonstration of the catalytic role of binding interactions in an enzymatic reaction
BIOCHEMISTRY
1998; 37 (28): 9902-9911
Abstract
It has been suggested that the fundamental feature that distinguishes enzymes from simple chemical catalysts is the ability of enzymes to use binding interactions for catalysis. Results with the Tetrahymena group I RNA enzyme described herein directly demonstrate the catalytic contributions of binding interactions. With wild-type ribozyme, specific functional groups at a distance from the site of chemical transformation facilitate substrate binding without accelerating reaction of bound substrate; with modified ribozymes, these functional groups provide the same overall energetic effect but instead accelerate reaction of bound substrate without increasing binding. These observations are quantitatively described by a structural framework that was established by previous results. The P1 duplex between the substrate and the ribozyme's recognition sequence exists in two states, the open complex, in which the substrate is localized to the ribozyme solely by base-pairing interactions, or the closed complex, in which the duplex is docked into tertiary interactions and positioned with respect to the catalytic groups in the active site. In the absence of sufficient binding energy to ensure stable docking in the ground state, added P1 functional groups accelerate reaction of the bound substrate by helping to overcome the energetic barrier for docking into the reactive, closed complex. When the functional groups present on the P1 duplex are sufficient to ensure stable docking in the closed complex, added functional groups give stronger binding without accelerating reaction of the bound substrate. This behavior is a manifestation of the inextricable link between binding interactions and catalysis. The conclusions also have implications for interpreting the effects of site-directed mutagenesis and for the evolution of active site interactions.
View details for Web of Science ID 000074893800006
View details for PubMedID 9665695
-
The DEAD box protein eIF4A. 2. A cycle of nucleotide and RNA-dependent conformational changes
BIOCHEMISTRY
1998; 37 (8): 2194-2206
Abstract
Limited proteolysis experiments have been carried out with the DEAD box protein eIF4A. The results suggest that there is a substantial conformational change in eIF4A upon binding single-stranded RNA. Binding of ADP induces conformational changes in the free enzyme and the enzyme.RNA complex, and binding of the ATP analogue AMP-PNP induces a conformational change in the enzyme.RNA complex. The presence or absence of the gamma-phosphate on the bound nucleotide acts as a switch, presumably via the Walker motifs, that mediates changes in protein conformation and, as described in the preceding paper in this issue, also mediates changes in RNA affinity. Thus, these results suggest that there is a series of changes in conformation and substrate affinity throughout the ATP hydrolysis reaction cycle. A model is proposed in which eIF4A and the eIF4A-like domains of the DEAD box proteins act as ATP-driven conformational switches or motors that produce movements or structural rearrangements of attached protein domains or associated proteins. These movements could then be used to rearrange RNA structures or RNA.protein complexes.
View details for Web of Science ID 000072299900013
View details for PubMedID 9485365
-
The DEAD box protein eIF4A. 1. A minimal kinetic and thermodynamic framework reveals coupled binding of RNA and nucleotide
BIOCHEMISTRY
1998; 37 (8): 2180-2193
Abstract
eIF4A is the archetypal member of the DEAD box family of proteins and has been proposed to use the energy from ATP hydrolysis to unwind structures in the 5'-untranslated regions of eukaryotic mRNAs during translation initiation. As a step toward understanding the mechanism of action of this class of enzymes, a minimal kinetic and thermodynamic framework for the RNA-activated ATPase function has been established for eIF4A. The enzyme's affinity for ssRNA is modulated by the binding of ATP.Mg2+ and ADP.Mg2+: the affinity of the E.ATP complex for ssRNA is approximately 40-fold higher than that of the E.ADP complex. The enzyme binds its substrates in a random manner; contrary to previous suggestions, neither ATP binding nor hydrolysis is required for binding of single-stranded RNA. The presence or absence of the gamma-phosphate on the bound nucleotide acts as a switch that modulates the enzyme's structure and ssRNA affinity. The data presented in this and the following paper in this issue suggest that ATP binding and hydrolysis produce a cycle of conformational and RNA affinity changes in eIF4A. Such cycles may be used by DEAD box proteins to transduce the energy from ATP hydrolysis into physical work, thereby allowing each member of this family to rearrange its RNA or RNA.protein target.
View details for Web of Science ID 000072299900012
View details for PubMedID 9485364
-
Involvement of a specific metal ion in the transition of the hammerhead ribozyme to its catalytic conformation
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
1997; 272 (43): 26822-26826
Abstract
Previous crystallographic and biochemical studies of the hammerhead ribozyme suggest that a metal ion is ligated by the pro-Rp oxygen of phosphate 9 and by N7 of G10.1 and has a functional role in the cleavage reaction. We have tested this model by examining the cleavage properties of a hammerhead containing a unique phosphorothioate at position 9. The Rp-, but not Sp-, phosphorothioate reduces the cleavage rate by 10(3)-fold, and the rate can be fully restored by addition of low concentrations of Cd2+, a thiophilic metal ion. These results strongly suggest that this bound metal ion is critical for catalysis, despite its location approximately 20 A from the cleavage site in the crystal structure. Analysis of the concentration dependence suggests that Cd2+ binds with a Kd of 25 microM in the ground state and a Kd of 2.5 nM in the transition state. The much stronger transition state binding suggests that the P9 metal ion adopts at least one additional ligand in the transition state and that this metal ion may participate in a large scale conformational change that precedes hammerhead cleavage.
View details for Web of Science ID A1997YC65900008
View details for PubMedID 9341112
-
Use of intrinsic binding energy for catalysis by an RNA enzyme
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1997; 94 (16): 8497-8502
Abstract
The contribution of several individual ribozyme.substrate base pairs to binding and catalysis has been investigated using hammerhead ribozyme substrates that were truncated at their 3' or 5' ends. The base pairs at positions 1.1-2.1 and 15.2-16.2, which flank the conserved core, each contribute 10(4)-fold in the chemical step, without affecting substrate binding. In contrast, base pairs distal to the core contribute to substrate binding but have no effect on the chemical step. These results suggest a "fraying model" in which each ribozyme.substrate helix can exist in either an unpaired ("open") state or a helical ("closed") state, with the closed state required for catalysis. The base pairs directly adjacent to the conserved core contribute to catalysis by allowing the closed state to form. Once the number of base pairs is sufficient to ensure that the closed helical state predominates, additional residues provide stabilization of the helix, and therefore increase binding, but have no further effect on the chemical step. Remarkably, the >5 kcal/mol free energy contribution to catalysis from each of the internal base pairs is considerably greater than the free energy expected for formation of a base pair. It is suggested that this unusually large energetic contribution arises because free energy that is typically lost in constraining residues within a base pair is expressed in the transition state, where it is used for positioning. This extends the concept of "intrinsic binding energy" from protein to RNA enzymes, suggesting that intrinsic binding energy is a fundamental feature of biological catalysis.
View details for Web of Science ID A1997XQ12400038
View details for PubMedID 9238005
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC22973
-
Biological catalysis: Lessons from the comparison of RNA and protein enzymes
FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL. 1997: A852–A852
View details for Web of Science ID 000073305600463
-
Phosphoryl transfer to nitrogen nucleophiles: Enzymatic and model studies.
FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL. 1997: A1317–A1317
View details for Web of Science ID 000073305603172
-
Catalytic proficiency of E-coli alkaline phosphatase.
FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL. 1997: A1318–A1318
View details for Web of Science ID 000073305603180
-
Effects of divalent metal ions on individual steps of the Tetrahymena ribozyme reaction
BIOCHEMISTRY
1997; 36 (27): 8293-8303
Abstract
The Tetrahymena thermophila L-21 ScaI ribozyme utilizes Mg2+ to catalyze a site-specific endonuclease reaction analogous to the first step of self-splicing. To better understand the contribution of Mg2+ to ribozyme activity, the Mg2+ concentration dependence of individual rate constants was examined at concentrations greater than those required for ribozyme folding (>2 mM; at 50 degrees C and pH 6.7). Analysis of metal ion inhibition of the chemical step of the reaction indicated that two Ca2+ ions compete with two Mg2+ ions involved in active site chemistry. These Mg2+ ions are bound tightly to the E.S complex (Kd < 2 mM). The rate constant for association of the oligoribonucleotide substrate (S) increased 12-fold from 2 to 100 mM Mg2+ and exhibited saturation behavior, consistent with a single Mg2+ ion involved in S association that binds to the free ribozyme with a Kd for Mg2+ of 15 mM. The preference for the divalent metal ion (Mg2+ congruent with Ca2+ > Ba2+ > Sr2+) suggested that enhancing the rate constant of S association is not simply a function of ionic strength, but is due to a distinct metal ion binding site. Even though Ca2+ does not support reaction, the RNA substrate S was able to bind in the presence of Ca2+. Upon addition of Mg2+, S was cleaved without first dissociating. A model is proposed in which the inactive Ca2+ form of E.S is structurally equivalent to the open complex along the reaction pathway, which has the RNA substrate bound but not docked into the active site. Weaker binding of S in Ca2+ was shown to result from an increase in the rate constant of S dissociation, leading to the proposal that a tight Mg2+ binding site or sites in the E.S complex contribute to the strong binding of S. In summary, the data provide evidence for four functions for bound Mg2+ ions in the catalytic cycle: one increases the rate of RNA substrate binding, one or more decrease the rate of dissociation of S, and two are involved in the chemical step.
View details for Web of Science ID A1997XK09400013
View details for PubMedID 9204875
-
Quantitating tertiary binding energies of 2' OH groups on the P1 duplex of the Tetrahymena ribozyme: Intrinsic binding energy in an RNA enzyme
BIOCHEMISTRY
1997; 36 (9): 2465-2477
Abstract
Binding of the Tetrahymena ribozyme's oligonucleotide substrate (S) involves P1 duplex formation with the ribozyme's internal guide sequence (IGS) to give an open complex, followed by docking of the P1 duplex into the catalytic core via tertiary interactions to give a closed complex. The overall binding energies provided by 2' OH groups on S and IGS have been measured previously. To obtain the energetic contribution of each of these 2' OH groups in the docking step, we have separately measured their contribution to the stability of a model P1 duplex using "substrate inhibition". This new approach allows measurement of duplex stabilities under conditions identical to those used for ribozyme binding measurements. The tertiary binding energies from the individual 2' OH groups include a small destabilizing contribution of 0.7 kcal/mol and stabilizing contributions of up to -2.9 kcal/mol. The energetic contributions of specific 2' OH groups are discussed in the context of considerable previous work that has characterized the tertiary interactions of the P1 duplex. A "threshold" model for the open and closed complexes is presented that provides a framework to interpret the energetic effects of functional group substitutions on the P1 duplex. The sum of the tertiary stabilization provided by the conserved G x U wobble at the cleavage site and the individual 2' OH groups on the P1 duplex is significantly greater than the observed tertiary stabilization of S (11.0 vs 2.2 kcal/mol). It is suggested that there is an energetic cost for docking the P1 duplex into the active site that is paid for by the "intrinsic binding energy" of groups on the P1 duplex. Substrates that lack sufficient tertiary binding energy to overcome this energetic barrier exhibit reduced reactivities. Thus, the ribozyme appears to use the intrinsic binding energy of groups on the P1 duplex for catalysis. This intrinsic binding energy may be used to position reactants within the active site and to induce electrostatic destabilization of the substrate, relative to its interactions in solution.
View details for Web of Science ID A1997WL64300014
View details for PubMedID 9054551
-
Mechanistic aspects of enzymatic catalysis: Lessons from comparison of RNA and protein enzymes
ANNUAL REVIEW OF BIOCHEMISTRY
1997; 66: 19-59
Abstract
A classic approach in biology, both organismal and cellular, is to compare morphologies in order to glean structural and functional commonalities. The comparative approach has also proven valuable on a molecular level. For example, phylogenetic comparisons of RNA sequences have led to determination of conserved secondary and even tertiary structures, and comparisons of protein structures have led to classifications of families of protein folds. Here we take this approach in a mechanistic direction, comparing protein and RNA enzymes. The aim of comparing RNA and protein enzymes is to learn about fundamental physical and chemical principles of biological catalysis. The more recently discovered RNA enzymes, or ribozymes, provide a distinct perspective on long-standing questions of biological catalysis. The differences described in this review have taught us about the aspects of RNA and proteins that are distinct, whereas the common features have helped us to understand the aspects that are fundamental to biological catalysis. This has allowed the framework that was put forth by Jencks for protein catalysts over 20 years ago (1) to be extended to RNA enzymes, generalized, and strengthened.
View details for Web of Science ID A1997XH20100003
View details for PubMedID 9242901
-
The change in hydrogen bond strength accompanying charge rearrangement: Implications for enzymatic catalysis
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1996; 93 (25): 14474-14479
Abstract
The equilibrium for formation of the intramolecular hydrogen bond (KHB) in a series of substituted salicylate monoanions was investigated as a function of delta pKa, the difference between the pKa values of the hydrogen bond donor and acceptor, in both water and dimethyl sulfoxide. The dependence of log KHB upon delta pKa is linear in both solvents, but is steeper in dimethyl sulfoxide (slope = 0.73) than in water (slope = 0.05). Thus, hydrogen bond strength can undergo substantially larger increases in nonaqueous media than aqueous solutions as the charge density on the donor or acceptor atom increases. These results support a general mechanism for enzymatic catalysis, in which hydrogen bonding to a substrate is strengthened as charge rearranges in going from the ground state to the transition state; the strengthening of the hydrogen bond would be greater in a nonaqueous enzymatic active site than in water, thus providing a rate enhancement for an enzymatic reaction relative to the solution reaction. We suggest that binding energy of an enzyme is used to fix the substrate in the low-dielectric active site, where the strengthening of the hydrogen bond in the course of a reaction is increased.
View details for Web of Science ID A1996VY44800053
View details for PubMedID 8962076
-
Rescue of abasic hammerhead ribozymes by exogenous addition of specific bases
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1996; 93 (21): 11522-11527
Abstract
We have synthesized 13 hammerhead ribozyme variants, each containing an abasic residue at a specific position of the catalytic core. The activity of each of the variants is significantly reduced. In four cases, however, activity can be rescued by exogenous addition of the missing base. For one variant, the rescue is 300-fold; for another, the rescue is to the wild-type level. This latter abasic variant (G10.1X) has been characterized in detail. Activation is specific for guanine, the base initially removed. In addition, the specificity for guanine versus adenine is substantially altered by replacing C with U in the opposite strand of the ribozyme. These results show that a binding site for a small, noncharged ligand can be created in a preexisting ribozyme structure. This has implications for structure-function analysis of RNA, and leads to speculations about evolution in an "RNA world" and about the potential therapeutic use of ribozymes.
View details for Web of Science ID A1996VM68100042
View details for PubMedID 8876168
-
Biological catalysis: From ribozymes to ras.
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 1996: 3-BIOL
View details for Web of Science ID A1996VA91500378
-
Ras-catalyzed hydrolysis of GTP: A new perspective from model studies
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1996; 93 (16): 8160-8166
Abstract
Despite the biological and medical importance of signal transduction via Ras proteins and despite considerable kinetic and structural studies of wild-type and mutant Ras proteins, the mechanism of Ras-catalyzed GTP hydrolysis remains controversial. We take a different approach to this problem: the uncatalyzed hydrolysis of GTP is analyzed, and the understanding derived is applied to the Ras-catalyzed reaction. Evaluation of previous mechanistic proposals from this chemical perspective suggests that proton abstraction from the attacking water by a general base and stabilization of charge development on the gamma-phosphoryl oxygen atoms would not be catalytic. Rather, this analysis focuses attention on the GDP leaving group, including the beta-gamma bridge oxygen of GTP, the atom that undergoes the largest change in charge in going from the ground state to the transition state. This leads to a new catalytic proposal in which a hydrogen bond from the backbone amide of Gly-13 to this bridge oxygen is strengthened in the transition state relative to the ground state, within an active site that provides a template complementary to the transition state. Strengthened transition state interactions of the active site lysine, Lys-16, with the beta-nonbridging phosphoryl oxygens and a network of interactions that positions the nucleophilic water molecule and gamma-phosphoryl group with respect to one another may also contribute to catalysis. It is speculated that a significant fraction of the GAP-activated GTPase activity of Ras arises from an additional interaction of the beta-gamma bridge oxygen with an Arg side chain that is provided in trans by GAP. The conclusions for Ras and related G proteins are expected to apply more widely to other enzymes that catalyze phosphoryl (-PO(3)2-) transfer, including kinases and phosphatases.
View details for Web of Science ID A1996VB32500003
View details for PubMedID 8710841
-
Isolation of a local tertiary folding transition in the context of a globally folded RNA
NATURE STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY
1996; 3 (8): 701-710
Abstract
Binding of the Tetrahymena ribozyme's oligonucleotide substrate represents a local folding event in the context of a globally folded RNA. Substrate binding involves P1 duplex formation with the ribozyme's internal guide sequence to give an "open complex', followed by docking of the P1 duplex into tertiary interactions to give a "closed complex'. We have isolated the open complex as a thermodynamically stable species using a site-specific modification and high Na+ concentrations. This has allowed characterization of P1 docking, which represents a folding transition between local secondary and local tertiary structure. P1 docking is entropically driven, possibly accompanied by a release of bound water molecules. Strategies analogous to those described here can be used more generally to study local folding events in large structured RNAs and to explore the structural and energetic landscape for RNA folding.
View details for Web of Science ID A1996VA15000015
View details for PubMedID 8756329
-
Biological catalysis: From ribozymes to RAS.
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 1996: 3–3
View details for Web of Science ID A1996UX73800037
-
Specificity of hammerhead ribozyme cleavage
EMBO JOURNAL
1996; 15 (14): 3751-3757
Abstract
To be effective in gene inactivation, the hammerhead ribozyme must cleave a complementary RNA target without deleterious effects from cleaving non-target RNAs that contain mismatches and shorter stretches of complementarity. The specificity of hammerhead cleavage was evaluated using HH16, a well-characterized ribozyme designed to cleave a target of 17 residues. Under standard reaction conditions, HH16 is unable to discriminate between its full-length substrate and 3'-truncated substrates, even when six fewer base pairs are formed between HH16 and the substrate. This striking lack of specificity arises because all the substrates bind to the ribozyme with sufficient affinity so that cleavage occurs before their affinity differences are manifested. In contrast, HH16 does exhibit high specificity towards certain 3'-truncated versions of altered substrates that either also contain a single base mismatch or are shortened at the 5' end. In addition, the specificity of HH16 is improved in the presence of p7 nucleocapsid protein from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1, which accelerates the association and dissociation of RNA helices. These results support the view that the hammerhead has an intrinsic ability to discriminate against incorrect bases, but emphasizes that the high specificity is only observed in a certain range of helix lengths.
View details for Web of Science ID A1996UY92200029
View details for PubMedID 8670879
-
Energetic effects of multiple hydrogen bonds. Implications for enzymatic catalysis
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
1996; 118 (24): 5515-5518
View details for Web of Science ID A1996UR83900001
-
Mechanistic investigations of a ribozyme derived from the Tetrahymena group I intron: Insights into catalysis and the second step of self-splicing
BIOCHEMISTRY
1996; 35 (18): 5796-5809
Abstract
Self-splicing of Tetrahymena pre-rRNA proceeds in two consecutive phosphoryl transesterification steps. One major difference between these steps is that in the first an exogenous guanosine (G) binds to the active site, while in the second the 3'-terminal G414 residue of the intron binds. The first step has been extensively characterized in studies of the L-21ScaI ribozyme, which uses exogenous G as a nucleophile. In this study, mechanistic features involved in the second step are investigated by using the L-21G414 ribozyme. The L-21G414 reaction has been studied in both directions, with G414 acting as a leaving group in the second step and a nucleophile in its reverse. The rate constant of chemical step is the same with exogenous G bound to the L-21ScaI ribozyme and with the intramolecular guanosine residue of the L-21G414 ribozyme. The result supports the previously proposed single G-binding site model and further suggests that the orientation of the bound G and the overall active site structure is the same in both steps of the splicing reaction. An evolutionary rationale for the use of exogenous G in the first step is also presented. The results suggest that the L-21G414 ribozyme exists predominantly with the 3'-terminal G414 docked into the G-binding site. This docking is destabilized by approximately 100-fold when G414 is attached to an electron-withdrawing pA group. The internal equilibrium with K(int) = 0.7 for the ribozyme reaction indicates that bound substrate and product are thermodynamically matched and is consistent with a degree of symmetry within the active site. These observations are consistent with the presence of a second Mg ion in the active site. Finally, the slow dissociation of a 5' exon analog relative to a ligated exon analog from the L-21G414 ribozyme suggests a kinetic mechanism for ensuring efficient ligation of exons and raises new questions about the overall self-splicing reaction.
View details for Web of Science ID A1996UK01500023
View details for PubMedID 8639540
-
The energetics of hydrogen bonds in model systems: Implications for enzymatic catalysis
SCIENCE
1996; 272 (5258): 97-101
Abstract
Low-barrier or short, strong hydrogen bonds have been proposed to contribute 10 to 20 kilocalories per mole to transition-state stabilization in enzymatic catalysis. The proposal invokes a large increase in hydrogen bond energy when the pKa values of the donor and acceptor (where Ka is the acid constant) become matched in the transition state (delta pKa=0). This hypothesis was tested by investigating the energetics of hydrogen bonds as a function of delta pKa for homologous series of compounds under nonaqueous conditions that are conducive to the formation of low-barrier hydrogen bonds. In all cases, there was a linear correlation between the increase in hydrogen-bond energy and the decrease in delta pKa, as expected from simple electrostatic effects. However, no additional energetic contribution to the hydrogen bond was observed at delta pKa=0. These results and those of other model studies suggest alternative mechanisms by which hydrogen bonds can contribute to enzymatic catalysis, in accord with conventional electrostatic considerations.
View details for Web of Science ID A1996UD59700046
View details for PubMedID 8600542
-
pH dependencies of the Tetrahymena ribozyme reveal an unconventional origin of an apparent pK(a)
BIOCHEMISTRY
1996; 35 (5): 1560-1570
Abstract
The L-21 ScaI ribozyme derived from the Tetrahymena thermophila pre-rRNA group I intron catalyzes a site-specific endonucleolytic cleavage of RNA, DNA, and chimeric RNA/DNA oligonucleotides: CCCUCUA5 + G-->CCCUCU + GA5. The pH-rate dependence was determined for the reaction of the E.G complex with the oligonucleotide substrate d(CCCUC)r(U)d(A5) [(kcat/Km)S conditions]. Although it was shown that the pH dependence is not affected by specific buffers, there is inhibition by specific monovalent cations. The intrinsic pH-rate dependence is log-linear with slope 1 below pH 7, displays an apparent pKa of 7.6, remains nearly level until pH 8.5, and then begins to fall. Two models to explain the apparent pKa were ruled out: (1) the pKa represents loss of a proton from the nucleophilic 3' OH of G, and (2) the pKa arises from a change in rate-limiting step from a pH-dependent to a pH-independent step. In addition, these models, or others involving a single titration, cannot account for the decrease in activity at high pH. A third, unconventional, model is consistent with all of the data. It involves inactivation of the ribozyme by any of several independent titrations of groups with pKa values considerably higher than the apparent pKa of 7.6. The data are consistent with loss of catalytic function upon release of a proton from any one of 19 independent sites with pKa = 9.4 (the unperturbed pKa of N1 of G and N3 of U in solution). Independent experiments investigating the effect of pH on different reaction steps supported this model and suggested the identity of some of the required protons. This mechanism of inactivation is expected to generally affect the behavior of RNAs at pH values removed from the pKa of the titrating bases.
View details for Web of Science ID A1996TU58600027
View details for PubMedID 8634287
-
MAPPING THE TRANSITION-STATE FOR ATP HYDROLYSIS - IMPLICATIONS FOR ENZYMATIC CATALYSIS
CHEMISTRY & BIOLOGY
1995; 2 (11): 729-739
Abstract
Phosphoryl transfer, typically involving high energy phosphate donors such as ATP, is the most common class of biological reactions. Despite this, the transition state for phosphoryl transfer from ATP in solution has not been systematically investigated. Characterization of the transition state for the uncatalyzed hydrolysis of ATP would provide a starting point for dissection of enzyme-catalyzed reactions.We examined phosphoryl transfer from ATP, GTP and pyrophosphate to a series of alcohols; these reactions are analogous to the phosphorylation of sugars and other biological alcohols and to the hydrolysis of ATP. The Brønsted beta(nucleophile) value of 0.07 is small, indicating that there is little bond formation between the incoming nucleophile and the electrophilic phosphoryl group in the transition state. Coordination of Mg2+ has no measurable effect on this value. The Brønsted beta(leaving group) value of -1.1 for phosphoryl transfer to water from a series of phosphoanhydrides is large and negative, suggesting that the bond between phosphorous and the leaving group oxygen is largely broken in the transition state.Uncatalyzed hydrolysis of ATP in solution occurs via a dissociative, metaphosphate-like transition state, with little bond formation between nucleophile and ATP and substantial cleavage of the bond between the gamma-phosphoryl moiety and the ADP leaving group. Bound Mg2+ does not perturb the dissociative nature of the transition state, contrary to proposals that enzyme-bound metal ions alter this structure. The simplest expectation for phosphoryl transfer at the active site of enzymes thus entails a dissociative transition state. These results provide a basis for analyzing catalytic mechanisms for phosphoryl transfer.
View details for Web of Science ID A1995TG85900005
View details for PubMedID 9383480
-
THE NATURE OF THE TRANSITION-STATE FOR ENZYME-CATALYZED PHOSPHORYL TRANSFER - HYDROLYSIS OF O-ARYL PHOSPHOROTHIOATES BY ALKALINE-PHOSPHATASE
BIOCHEMISTRY
1995; 34 (38): 12255-12264
Abstract
There has been much speculation that enzymes change the nature of the transition state for phosphoryl transfer from the dissociative transition state observed in solution reactions to an associative transition state at the enzyme's active site. This proposal can be tested by comparing linear free energy relationships (LFERs) for nonenzymatic and enzymatic reactions, provided that the specificity of the enzyme's binding site does not perturb the dependence of rate on the intrinsic reactivity of a series of substrates. The shallow binding groove of Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) and its wide specificity suggest that this enzyme may be suited for such an approach. A second requirement of this approach is that the actual chemical step is rate-limiting. Comparisons of the reactions of aryl phosphorothioates and aryl phosphates support the previous conclusion that a nonchemical step limits kcat/KM for reactions of aryl phosphates, but suggest that the chemical cleavage step is rate-limiting for the aryl phosphorothioates. We therefore determined the dependence of the rate of AP-catalyzed cleavage of a series of aryl phosphorothioates on the intrinsic reactivity of the substrates. The large negative values of beta leaving group = -0.8 for the enzymatic reaction (kcat/KM) and -1.1 for the nonenzymatic hydrolysis reaction suggest that there is considerable dissociative character in both the enzymatic and nonenzymatic transition states. Despite the wide specificity of AP, certain substrates deviate from the LFER, underscoring that extreme care is required in applying LFERs to enzymatic reactions. The large negative value of beta leaving group suggests that AP can achieve substantial catalysis via a transition state with dissociative character.
View details for Web of Science ID A1995RX23500021
View details for PubMedID 7547968
-
RNA CHAPERONES AND THE RNA FOLDING PROBLEM
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
1995; 270 (36): 20871-20874
View details for Web of Science ID A1995RU05400001
View details for PubMedID 7545662
-
USE OF BINDING-ENERGY BY AN RNA ENZYME FOR CATALYSIS BY POSITIONING AND SUBSTRATE DESTABILIZATION
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1995; 92 (9): 3668-3672
Abstract
A fundamental catalytic principle for protein enzymes in the use of binding interactions away from the site of chemical transformation for catalysis. We have compared the binding and reactivity of a series of oligonucleotide substrates and products of the Tetrahymena ribozyme, which catalyzes a site-specific phosphodiester cleavage reaction: CCCUCUpA+G<-->CCCUCU-OH+GpA. The results suggest that this RNA enzyme, like protein enzymes, can utilize binding interactions to achieve substantial catalysis via entropic fixation and substrate destabilization. The stronger binding of the all-ribose oligonucleotide product compared to an analog with a terminal 3' deoxyribose residue gives an effective concentration of 2200 M for the 3' hydroxyl group, a value approaching those obtained with protein enzymes and suggesting the presence of a structurally well defined active site capable of precise positioning. The stabilization from tertiary binding interactions is 40-fold less for the oligonucleotide substrate than the oligonucleotide product, despite the presence of the reactive phosphoryl group in the substrate. This destabilization is accounted for by a model in which tertiary interactions away from the site of bond cleavage position the electron-deficient 3' bridging phosphoryl oxygen of the oligonucleotide substrate next to an electropositive Mg ion. As the phosphodiester bond breaks and this 3' oxygen atom develops a negative charge in the transition state, the weak interaction of the substrate with Mg2+ becomes strong. These strategies of "substrate destabilization" and "transition state stabilization" provide estimated rate enhancements of approximately 280- and approximately 60-fold, respectively. Analogous substrate destabilization by a metal ion or hydrogen bond donor may be used more generally by RNA and protein enzymes catalyzing reactions of phosphate esters.
View details for Web of Science ID A1995QV93000007
View details for PubMedID 7731962
-
DISSECTION OF THE ROLE OF THE CONSERVED G-CENTER-DOT-U PAIR IN GROUP-I RNA SELF-SPLICING
BIOCHEMISTRY
1994; 33 (46): 13864-13879
Abstract
Phylogenetic conservation among > 100 group I introns and previous in vitro studies have implicated a G.U pair as defining the 5'-splice site for exon ligation. The U residue defines the 3' end of the 5' exon, and the complementary G residue is part of the internal guide sequence (IGS) that base pairs to the 5' exon. We now quantitate the effect of this pair on individual reaction steps using the L-21ScaI ribozyme, which is derived from the group I intron of Tetrahymena thermophila pre-rRNA. The following results indicate that interactions with this G.U pair contribute to the binding of the 5'-exon, the positioning of the 5'-splice site with respect to the catalytic site, and the chemical step. The oligonucleotide, CCCUCU, binds to the ribozyme approximately 20-fold stronger than CCCUCC despite the fact that the U-containing oligonucleotide forms an approximately 5-fold less stable duplex with an oligonucleotide analog of the IGS, GGAGGG. This and two independent experimental observations indicate that the G.U pair contributes approximately 100-fold (3 kcal/mol, 50 degrees C) to tertiary interactions that allow the P1 duplex, which is formed between the 5'-exon and the IGS, to dock into the ribozyme's core. The approximately 50-80-fold increase in miscleavage of 5'-exon analogs upon replacement of the 3'-terminal U of CCCUCU with C or upon removal of the 3'-terminal U suggests that the tertiary interactions with the G.U pair not only contribute to docking but also ensure correct positioning of the 5'-splice site with respect to the catalytic site, thereby minimizing the selection of incorrect splice sites. Comparison of the rates of the chemical cleavage step with G.U vs G.C suggests that the G.U pair contributes approximately 10-fold to the chemical step. It was previously suggested that the 2'-hydroxyl of this U residue helps stabilize the 3'-oxyanion leaving group in the chemical transition state via an intramolecular hydrogen bond. Relative reactivities of oligonucleotide substrates with ribose and deoxyribose U and C are consistent with a model based on a recent X-ray crystallographic structure in which the exocyclic amino group of G helps orient the 2'-hydroxyl of U via a bridging water molecule, thereby strengthening the hydrogen bond donated from the 2'-hydroxyl group to the neighboring incipient 3'-oxyanion. Finally, kinetic and thermodynamic evidence for the formation of a G.C+ wobble pair is presented.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
View details for Web of Science ID A1994PT48500041
View details for PubMedID 7947795
-
ESCHERICHIA-COLI PROTEINS, INCLUDING RIBOSOMAL-PROTEIN S12, FACILITATE IN-VITRO SPLICING OF PHAGE-T4 INTRONS BY ACTING AS RNA CHAPERONES
GENES & DEVELOPMENT
1994; 8 (13): 1575-1588
Abstract
To address the effect of host proteins on the self-splicing properties of the group I introns of bacteriophage T4, we have purified an activity from Escherichia coli extracts that facilitates both trans- and cis-splicing of the T4 introns in vitro. The activity is attributable to a number of proteins, several of which are ribosomal proteins. Although these proteins have variable abilities to stimulate splicing, ribosomal protein S12 is the most effective. The activity mitigates the negative effects on splicing of the large internal open reading frames (ORFs) common to the T4 introns. In contrast to proteins shown previously to facilitate group I splicing, S12 does not bind strongly or specifically to the intron. Rather, S12 binds RNA with broad specificity and can also facilitate the action of a hammerhead ribozyme. Addition of S12 to unreactive trans-splicing precursors promoted splicing, suggesting that S12 can resolve misfolded RNAs. Furthermore, incubation with S12 followed by its proteolytic removal prior to the initiation of the splicing reaction still resulted in splicing enhancement. These results suggest that this protein facilitates splicing by acting as an RNA chaperone, promoting the assembly of the catalytically active tertiary structure of ribozymes.
View details for Web of Science ID A1994NX54500008
View details for PubMedID 7958841
-
AN RNA CHAPERONE ACTIVITY OF NONSPECIFIC RNA-BINDING PROTEINS IN HAMMERHEAD RIBOZYME CATALYSIS
EMBO JOURNAL
1994; 13 (12): 2913-2924
Abstract
We have previously shown that a protein derived from the p7 nucleocapsid (NC) protein of HIV type-1 increases kcat/Km and kcat for cleavage of a cognate substrate by a hammerhead ribozyme. Here we show directly that the increase in kcat/Km arises from catalysis of the annealing of the RNA substrate to the ribozyme and the increase in kcat arises from catalysis of dissociation of the RNA products from the ribozyme. A peptide polymer derived from the consensus sequence of the C-terminal domain of the hnRNP A1 protein (A1 CTD) provides similar enhancements. Although these effects apparently arise from non-specific interactions, not all non-specific binding interactions led to these enhancements. NC and A1 CTD exert their effects by accelerating attainment of the thermodynamically most stable species throughout the ribozyme catalytic cycle. In addition, NC protein is shown to resolve a misfolded ribozyme-RNA complex that is otherwise long lived. These in vitro results suggest that non-specific RNA binding proteins such as NC and hnRNP proteins may have a biological role as RNA chaperones that prevent misfolding of RNAs and resolve RNAs that have misfolded, thereby ensuring that RNA is accessible for its biological functions.
View details for Web of Science ID A1994NT76100020
View details for PubMedID 8026476
-
COMPARISON OF PH DEPENDENCIES OF THE TETRAHYMENA RIBOZYME REACTIONS WITH RNA 2'-SUBSTITUTED AND PHOSPHOROTHIOATE SUBSTRATES REVEALS A RATE-LIMITING CONFORMATIONAL STEP
BIOCHEMISTRY
1994; 33 (17): 5291-5297
Abstract
The L-21 ScaI ribozyme (E) derived from the self-splicing group I intron of Tetrahymena pre-rRNA catalyzes an RNA endonuclease reaction analogous to the first step in self-splicing: CCCUCUAAAAA (S) + G-->CCCUCU+GAAAAA. We show herein that the pH dependence for the single-turnover reaction E.S+G-->products follows a pH dependence with pKapp = 6.9 (10 mM MgCl2, 50 degrees C). This result was surprising because the titratable groups of RNA have pKa values of < approximately 4 or > approximately 9. Thus, two models were considered: (i) the ribozyme structure perturbs a pKa such that the pKapp of 6.9 corresponds to an actual titration or (ii) the pKapp is a kinetic pKa, reflecting a change in the rate-limiting step rather than an actual titration. Oligonucleotide substrates with -H (deoxyribose), -F (2'-fluoro-2'-deoxyribose), and -OH (ribose) substitutions at the 2' position of the U residue at the cleavage site [U(-1)] vary considerably in their intrinsic reactivities. In the ribozyme reaction these substrates reacted at very different rates at low pH, but approached the same limiting reaction rate at high pH. Similarly, substitution of the pro-RP nonbridging oxygen atom of the reactive phosphoryl group by sulfur lowers the intrinsic reactivity of the oligonucleotide substrate. In the ribozyme reaction, this "thio effect" was 2.3 below pH 6.9, whereas the thio substitution had no effect on the rate above pH 6.9.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
View details for Web of Science ID A1994NJ85900036
View details for PubMedID 8172903
-
A KINETIC AND THERMODYNAMIC FRAMEWORK FOR THE HAMMERHEAD RIBOZYME REACTION
BIOCHEMISTRY
1994; 33 (11): 3374-3385
Abstract
A hammerhead ribozyme (HH16) with eight potential base pairs in each of the substrate recognition helices stabilized product binding sufficiently to enable investigation of the ligation of oligonucleotides bound to the ribozyme. All individual rate constants for product association and dissociation were determined. The following conclusions were obtained for HH16 from the analysis performed at 50 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl2, and 25 degrees C. (1) HH16 cleaves bound substrate with a rate constant of k2 = 1 min-1, similar to rate constants obtained with other hammerhead ribozymes. (2) k-2, the rate of ligation of the 5' product and 3' product to form substrate, equaled 0.008 min-1, indicating an approximately 100-fold preference for the formation of products on the ribozyme. This internal equilibrium, compared with that for the overall solution reaction, gives an effective concentration (EC) of 10(-2) M for the two products bound to the ribozyme. This low EC suggests that upon cleavage of S the hammerhead complex acquires a "floppiness" which provides an entropic advantage for the formation of products on the ribozyme. (3) Product and substrate association rate constants were in the range of 10(7)-10(8) M-1 min-1, comparable to values determined for short helices. (4) The stabilities of ribozyme/product complexes were similar to affinities predicted from helix-coil transitions of simple RNA duplexes, providing no indication of additional tertiary interactions. The products, P1 and P2, stabilize one another 4-fold on the ribozyme. (5) The dissociation constant for the binding of the substrate to the ribozyme was estimated to be about 10(-17) M. These results allowed the construction of a free energy profile for the reaction of HH16, and provide a basis for future mechanistic studies.
View details for Web of Science ID A1994NC04100031
View details for PubMedID 8136375
-
PROTEIN ENHANCEMENT OF HAMMERHEAD RIBOZYME CATALYSIS
SCIENCE
1993; 262 (5130): 99-102
Abstract
When the recognition sequence of a ribozyme is extended beyond a certain length, turnover is slowed and specificity is decreased. Here, it is shown that a protein can help a ribozyme overcome these general limitations on ribozyme activity. Cleavage of an RNA oligonucleotide by a hammerhead ribozyme is enhanced 10- to 20-fold upon addition of a protein derived from the p7 nucleocapsid (NC) protein of human immunodeficiency virus-type 1. The NC protein also enhances the ability of the ribozyme to discriminate between cleavage of RNA oligonucleotides with differing sequences. These catalytic improvements can be attributed to the strand exchange activity of this RNA binding protein. It is conceivable that endogenous or added proteins may provide analogous increases in ribozyme activity and specificity in vivo.
View details for Web of Science ID A1993LZ63500031
View details for PubMedID 7692597
-
GUANOSINE BINDING TO THE TETRAHYMENA RIBOZYME - THERMODYNAMIC COUPLING WITH OLIGONUCLEOTIDE BINDING
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1993; 90 (18): 8362-8366
Abstract
The L-21 Sca I ribozyme derived from the group I intron of Tetrahymena thermophila pre-rRNA catalyzes an endonuclease reaction analogous to the first step of self-splicing. Guanosine (G) is bound by the ribozyme, and its 3'-hydroxyl group acts as the nucleophile. Here, we provide evidence that Km for G in several single-turnover reactions is equal to the equilibrium dissociation constant for G. This evidence includes the observation that removal of the 2'-hydroxyl group at the cleavage site of the oligoribonucleotide substrate [from CCCUCUA to CCCUC(dU)A] decreases the rate of cleavage approximately 1000-fold but has no effect on either the Km for G (0.17 mM) or for guanosine 5'-monophosphate (pG) (0.09 mM). In the course of this study, it was observed that Km for G or pG was lower by a factor of 5 for reactions with the ribozyme-CCCUC(dU)A complex compared with the free ribozyme, indicating a modest amount of thermodynamic coupled binding of the two substrates. The decrease in the rate of oligonucleotide dissociation upon addition of saturating pG provides independent support for this coupling. Coupling is lost with a substrate that cannot make the normal tertiary interactions with the ribozyme, providing evidence that coupled binding requires docking of the substrate into the catalytic core. Surprisingly, the binding of product CCCUCU and G is slightly anticooperative, indicating that the cleaved pA is important for coupling with substrate. Coupled binding suggests a splicing model in which the intron binds G tightly to promote the first step of reaction, after which its binding is an order of magnitude weaker, thereby facilitating the second step.
View details for Web of Science ID A1993LX75000014
View details for PubMedID 8378306
-
CATALYSIS OF THE HYDROLYSIS OF PHOSPHORYLATED PYRIDINES BY ALKALINE-PHOSPHATASE HAS LITTLE OR NO DEPENDENCE ON THE PK(A) OF THE LEAVING GROUP
BIOCHEMISTRY
1993; 32 (34): 8737-8741
Abstract
Bacterial alkaline phosphatase is an active catalyst for the hydrolysis of N-phosphorylated pyridines, with values of the second-order rate constant kcat/Km in the range 0.4-1.2 x 10(6) M-1 s-1 at pH 8.0, 25 degrees C. There is little or no dependence of the rate on the pKa of the leaving group; the value of beta 1g is 0 +/- 0.05, which may be compared with beta 1g = -1.0 for the nonenzymic reaction. Phosphorylated pyridines do not have a free electron pair available for protonation or coordination of the leaving group. Therefore, this result means that the similar, small dependence on leaving group structure for the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of phosphate esters [Hall, A. D., & Williams, A. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4784-4790) does not provide evidence for general acid catalysis or electrophilic assistance of leaving group expulsion. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that productive binding of the substrate, which may involve a conformational change, is largely rate limiting for turnover of the enzyme at low substrate concentrations.
View details for Web of Science ID A1993LV97100003
View details for PubMedID 8395879
-
CONTRIBUTIONS OF 2'-HYDROXYL GROUPS OF THE RNA SUBSTRATE TO BINDING AND CATALYSIS BY THE TETRAHYMENA RIBOZYME - AN ENERGETIC PICTURE OF AN ACTIVE-SITE COMPOSED OF RNA
BIOCHEMISTRY
1993; 32 (32): 8299-8311
Abstract
The ribozyme derived from the intervening sequence of Tetrahymena thermophila pre-rRNA catalyzes a site-specific endonuclease reaction with both RNA and DNA oligonucleotides: CCCUCUAAAAA + G<-->CCCUCU + GAAAAA. However, the RNA substrate (rS) binds approximately 10(4)-fold stronger than the DNA substrate (dS) and once bound reacts approximately 10(4)-fold faster. Here we have investigated the role of individual 2'-hydroxyl groups by comparing the binding and reactivity of "chimeric" oligonucleotide substrates, in which the 2'-substituents of the individual sugar residues have been varied. Chimeric substrates containing a single ribonucleotide at positions -6 to +3 (numbered from the cleavage site) were cleaved faster than dS by factors of 3.5, 3.5, 2.3, 65, 18, 1700, 7.8, 1.7, and 1.4 [(kcat/Km)chimeric S/(kcat/Km)dS]. The sum of the energetic contributions from the individual 2'-hydroxyl groups of 13.3 kcal/mol accounts for the 12.2 kcal/mol greater stabilization for RNA than for DNA in binding and cleavage (i.e., overall transition-state stabilization). This observation and the significant energetic effects from single ribose substitutions at opositions-3 to +1 strongly suggest that local interactions, rather than overall helical differences, largely account for the different binding and reactivity of the DNA and RNA substrates. Each 2'-hydroxyl group was evaluated for its effect on each of three reaction steps leading to the chemical transition state: two binding steps (duplex formation and docking into tertiary interactions) and the chemical cleavage step. The 2'-hydroxyl groups at positions -3 and -2 stabilize docking, and this stabilization is maintained in the chemical step. This "uniform binding" indicates that these interactions contribute to catalysis by positioning the oligonucleotide substrate for reaction. The 2'-hydroxyl at position +1 has a small effect on the binding step and an additional small but significant effect on the chemical step. Thus, the ribozyme, like protein enzymes, can take advantage of interactions away from the site of chemistry to provide stabilization specifically in the transition state. The 2'-hydroxyl at position -1 exerts its large effect nearly exclusively on the chemical step [Herschlag, D., Eckstein, F., & Cech, T.R. (1993) Biochemistry (following paper in this issue)]. The energetic effects of other modifications of the 2'-substituents provide a crude picture of the active site. The 2'-OCH3 substituent at position -3 inhibits the reaction approximately 10-fold relative to 2'-H, suggesting than an unfavorable interaction cannot be avoided by an isoenergetic structural rearrangement.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
View details for Web of Science ID A1993LV96900034
View details for PubMedID 7688572
-
THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING RIBOSE AT THE CLEAVAGE SITE IN THE TETRAHYMENA RIBOZYME REACTION
BIOCHEMISTRY
1993; 32 (32): 8312-8321
Abstract
The ribozyme derived from the intron of Tetrahymena thermophila pre-rRNA catalyzes a site-specific endonuclease reaction with both RNA and DNA oligonucleotides. The total transition-state stabilization by the ribozyme, encompassing the binding and chemical steps, is 4.8 kcal/mol greater with a single ribose at the cleavage site relative to the all-deoxyribose substrate. Here we show that this effect is specific to the chemical transition state, with a contribution of only approximately 0.7 kcal/mol toward binding. Substrates with a series of 2'-substituents, -OH(ribo), -F2 (2',2'-difluoro-2'-deoxyribo), F(2'-fluoro-2'-deoxyribo), and -H(deoxyribo), follow a linear free energy relationship between the rate of the chemical step of the ribozyme-catalyzed reaction and the pK(a) of the leaving group, with slope beta leaving group approximately -0.8. Because proton donation to the 3'-oxygen atom from a general acid of the ribozyme would be expected to render the rate insensitive to the pK(a) of the leaving group, it is suggested that this ribozyme does not employ general acid catalysis. The 2'-OCH3 (2'-methoxy-2'-deoxyribo) substituent does not follow this correlation, apparently due to steric hindrance within the active site. The rate of cleavage of the 2'-substituted substrates by the ribozyme follows the order 2'-F2 > -F > -H, suggestive of an inductive effect, i.e., acceleration of the reaction by electron-withdrawing groups. The 2'-OH group provides the largest transition-state stabilization. Because of uncertainty in the relative effect of the 2'-OH and 2'-H substituents on the pK(a) of the neighboring 3'-oxygen leaving group, we do not discount the possibility of interactions between the 2'-hydroxyl group and the ribozyme that further enhance reactivity. Nevertheless, the 2'-OH effect can be explained at least partially by an intramolecular hydrogen bond to an incipient oxyanion at the neighboring 3'-position. This oxyanion is forming as the phosphodiester bond is breaking, explaining why the stabilization is specific to the transition state. Analogous differential hydrogen bonding might be widely used by enzymes to achieve selective transition-state stabilization.
View details for Web of Science ID A1993LV96900035
View details for PubMedID 7688573
-
SYNERGISM IN TRANSCRIPTIONAL ACTIVATION - A KINETIC VIEW
GENES & DEVELOPMENT
1993; 7 (2): 173-179
View details for Web of Science ID A1993KM85900001
View details for PubMedID 8436289
-
MUTATIONS AT THE GUANOSINE-BINDING SITE OF THE TETRAHYMENA RIBOZYME ALSO AFFECT SITE-SPECIFIC HYDROLYSIS
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
1992; 20 (24): 6613-6619
Abstract
Self-splicing group I introns use guanosine as a nucleophile to cleave the 5' splice site. The guanosine-binding site has been localized to the G264-C311 base pair of the Tetrahymena intron on the basis of analysis of mutations that change the specificity of the nucleophile from G (guanosine) to 2AP (2-aminopurine ribonucleoside) (F. Michel et al. (1989) Nature 342, 391-395). We studied the effect of these mutations (G-U, A-C and A-U replacing G264-C311) in the L-21 ScaI version of the Tetrahymena ribozyme. In this enzymatic system (kcat/Km)G monitors the cleavage step. This kinetic parameter decreased by at least 5 x 10(3) when the G264-C311 base pair was mutated to an A-U pair, while (kcat/Km)2AP increased at least 40-fold. This amounted to an overall switch in specificity of at least 2 x 10(5). The nucleophile specificity (G > 2AP for the G-C and G-U pairs, 2AP > G for the A-U and A-C pairs) was consistent with the proposed hydrogen bond between the nucleotide at position 264 and N1 of the nucleophile. Unexpectedly, the A-U and A-C mutants showed a decrease of an order of magnitude in the rate of ribozyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of RNA, in which H2O or OH- replaces G as the nucleophile, whereas the G-U mutant showed a decrease of only 2-fold. The low hydrolysis rates were not restored by raising the Mg2+ concentration or lowering the temperature. In addition, the mutant ribozymes exhibited a pattern of cleavage by Fe(II)-EDTA indistinguishable from that of the wild type, and the [Mg2+]1/2 for folding of the A-U mutant ribozyme was the same as that of the wild type. Therefore the guanosine-binding site mutations do not appear to have a major effect on RNA folding or stability. Because changing G264 affects the hydrolysis reaction without perturbing the global folding of the RNA, we conclude that the catalytic role of this conserved nucleotide is not limited to guanosine binding.
View details for Web of Science ID A1992KG70500024
View details for PubMedID 1480482
-
RNA CATALYSIS BY A GROUP-I RIBOZYME - DEVELOPING A MODEL FOR TRANSITION-STATE STABILIZATION
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
1992; 267 (25): 17479-17482
View details for Web of Science ID A1992JM22300001
View details for PubMedID 1381347
-
EVIDENCE FOR PROCESSIVITY AND 2-STEP BINDING OF THE RNA SUBSTRATE FROM STUDIES OF J1/2 MUTANTS OF THE TETRAHYMENA RIBOZYME
BIOCHEMISTRY
1992; 31 (5): 1386-1399
Abstract
J1/2 of the Tetrahymena ribozyme, a sequence of three A residues, connects the RNA-binding site to the catalytic core. Addition or deletion of bases from J1/2 improves turnover and substrate specificity in the site-specific endonuclease reaction catalyzed by this ribozyme: G2CCCUCUA5 (S) + G in-equilibrium G2CCCUCU (P) + GA5. These paradoxical enhancements are caused by decreased affinity of the ribozyme for S and P [Young, B., Herschlag, D., & Cech, T.R. (1991) Cell 67, 1007]. An additional property of these mutant ribozymes, decreased fidelity of RNA cleavage, is now analyzed. (Fidelity is the ability to cleave at the correct phosphodiester bond within a particular RNA substrate.) Introduction of deoxy residues to give "chimeric" ribo/deoxyribooligonucleotides changes the positions of incorrect cleavage. Previous work indicated that S is bound to the ribozyme by both base pairing and teritary interactions involving 2'-hydroxyl groups of S. The data herein strongly suggest that the P1 duplex, which consists of S base-paired with the 5' exon binding site of the ribozyme, can dock into tertiary interactions in different registers; different 2'-hydroxyl groups of S plug into tertiary contacts with the ribozyme in the different registers. It is concluded that the mutations decrease fidelity by increasing the probability of docking out of register relative to docking in the normal register, thereby giving cleavage at different positions along S. These data also show that the contribution of J1/2 to the teritiary interactions is indirect, not direct. Thus, a structural role of the nonconserved J1/2 is indicated: this sequence positions S to optimize tertiary binding interactions and to ensure cleavage at the phosphodiester bond corresponding to the 5' splice site. Substitution of sulfur for the nonbridging pro-RP oxygen atom at the normal cleavage site has no effect on (kcat/Km)S but decreases the fraction of cleavage at the normal site in reactions catalyzed by the -3A mutant ribozyme, which has all three A residues of J1/2 removed. Thus, the ribozyme chooses where to cleave S after rate-limiting binding of S, indicating that docking can change after binding and suggesting that the ribozyme could act processively. Indeed, it is shown that the +2A ribozyme cleaves at one position along an RNA substrate and then, before releasing that RNA product, cleaves it again.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
View details for Web of Science ID A1992HD15700015
View details for PubMedID 1736996
-
MUTATIONS IN A NONCONSERVED SEQUENCE OF THE TETRAHYMENA RIBOZYME INCREASE ACTIVITY AND SPECIFICITY
CELL
1991; 67 (5): 1007-1019
Abstract
The RNA substrate-binding site of the Tetrahymena ribozyme is connected to the catalytic core by the joining region J1/2. Although J1/2 is not conserved among group I introns, small insertions or deletions in this sequence have dramatic effects, enhancing the turnover number and sequence specificity of ribozyme-catalyzed RNA cleavage. Measurements of rate constants for individual steps in the reaction have revealed the basis of these improvements. Ironically, the higher turnover and specificity both result from decreased affinity for RNA, rather than better cleavage. These results provide evidence that the nonconserved J1/2 sequence positions the RNA substrate to optimize tertiary interactions and ensure cleavage at the position corresponding to the 5' splice site. The wild-type RNA is well adapted to its biological function, and its limitations in multiple turnover can be corrected by mutation.
View details for Web of Science ID A1991GT75500019
View details for PubMedID 1959129
-
IMPLICATIONS OF RIBOZYME KINETICS FOR TARGETING THE CLEAVAGE OF SPECIFIC RNA MOLECULES INVIVO - MORE ISNT ALWAYS BETTER
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1991; 88 (16): 6921-6925
Abstract
Kinetic and thermodynamic factors that determine specificity of RNA cleavage by ribozymes are illustrated with examples from recent work with a ribozyme derived from the group I intron of Tetrahymena thermophila pre-rRNA. The conclusions also apply to other ribozymes, to antisense oligonucleotide experiments, and to RNA and DNA cleavage agents that can recognize a single-stranded or double-stranded region of variable length. At first, adding bases to a ribozyme's recognition sequence is expected to increase cleavage of the target RNA relative to cleavage of other RNAs. However, adding more bases ultimately reduces this discrimination, as cleavage occurs essentially every time the target RNA or a mismatched RNA binds the ribozyme. This occurs despite the weaker binding of the mismatched RNA because dissociation becomes too slow (binding is too strong) to allow the ribozyme to "choose" between cleavage of the target RNA and a mismatched RNA. In summary, more (base pairing) isn't always better, because maximal discrimination requires equilibrium binding prior to cleavage. The maximum discrimination that can be obtained is expected to be greater with an A + U-rich recognition sequence than with a G + C-rich recognition sequence. This is because the weaker A.U base pairs (relative to G-C base pairs) allow recognition to be spread over a larger number of bases while preventing binding that is too strong. Finally, creating an A-rich ribozyme rather than a U-rich ribozyme avoids the loss in discrimination expected with U-rich ribozymes from the formation of U.G wobble pairs in addition to the "targeted" Watson-Crick U.A pair.
View details for Web of Science ID A1991GB70100005
View details for PubMedID 1871108
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC52205
-
RIBOZYME-CATALYZED AND NONENZYMATIC REACTIONS OF PHOSPHATE DIESTERS - RATE EFFECTS UPON SUBSTITUTION OF SULFUR FOR A NONBRIDGING PHOSPHORYL OXYGEN ATOM
BIOCHEMISTRY
1991; 30 (20): 4844-4854
Abstract
The L-21 ScaI ribozyme derived from the intervening sequence of Tetrahymena thermophila pre-rRNA catalyzes a guanosine-dependent endonuclease reaction that is analogous to the first step in self-splicing of this intervening sequence. We now describe pre-steady-state kinetic experiments, with sulfur substituting for the pro-RP (nonbridging) phosphoryl oxygen atom at the site of cleavage, that test aspects of a kinetic model proposed for the ribozyme reaction (Herschlag, D., & Cech, T. R. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 10159-10171). Thio substitution does not affect the reaction with subsaturating oligonucleotide substrate and saturating guanosine ((kcat/Km)S), consistent with the previous finding that binding of the oligonucleotide substrate limits this rate constant. In contrast, there is a significant decrease in the rate of single-turnover reactions of ribozyme-bound (i.e., saturating) oligonucleotide substrate upon thio substitution, with decreases of 2.3-fold for the reaction with guanosine ((kcat/Km)G) and 7-fold for hydrolysis [i.e., with solvent replacing guanosine; kc(-G)]. These "thio effects" are consistent with rate-limiting chemistry, as shown by comparison with model reactions. Nonenzymatic nucleophilic substitution reactions of the phosphate diester, methyl 2,4-dinitrophenyl phosphate monoanion, are slowed 4-11-fold by thio substitution for reactions with hydroxide ion, formate ion, fluoride ion, pyridine, and nicotinamide. In addition, we have confirmed that thio substitution has no effect on the nonenzymatic alkaline cleavage of RNA (Burgers, P. M. J., & Eckstein, F. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 592-596). Considering the strong preference of Mg2+ for binding to oxygen rather than sulfur, the modest thio effect on the chemical step of the ribozyme-catalyzed reaction and the absence of a thio effect on the equilibrium constant for binding of the oligonucleotide substrate suggest that the pro-RP oxygen atom is not coordinated to Mg2+ in the E.S complex or in the transition state. General implications of thio effects in enzymatic reactions of phosphate diesters are discussed.
View details for Web of Science ID A1991FM71200003
View details for PubMedID 2036355
-
CATALYSIS OF RNA CLEAVAGE BY THE TETRAHYMENA-THERMOPHILA RIBOZYME .1. KINETIC DESCRIPTION OF THE REACTION OF AN RNA SUBSTRATE COMPLEMENTARY TO THE ACTIVE-SITE
BIOCHEMISTRY
1990; 29 (44): 10159-10171
Abstract
A ribozyme derived from the intervening sequence (IVS) of the Tetrahymena preribosomal RNA catalyzes a site-specific endonuclease reaction: G2CCCUCUA5 + G in equilibrium with G2CCCUCU + GA5 (G = guanosine). This reaction is analogous to the first step in self-splicing of the pre-rRNA, with the product G2CCCUCU analogous to the 5'-exon. The following mechanistic conclusions have been derived from pre-steady-state and steady-state kinetic measurements at 50 degrees C and neutral pH in the presence of 10 mM Mg2+. The value of kcat/Km = 9 x 10(7) M-1 min-1 for the oligonucleotide substrate with saturating G represents rate-limiting binding. This rate constant for binding is of the order expected for formation of a RNA.RNA duplex between oligonucleotides. (Phylogenetic and mutational analyses have shown that this substrate is recognized by base pairing to a complementary sequence within the IVS). The value of kcat = 0.1 min-1 represents rate-limiting dissociation of the 5'-exon analogue, G2CCCUCU. The product GA5 dissociates first from the ribozyme because of this slow off-rate for G2CCCUCU. The similar binding of the product, G2CCCUCU, and the substrate, G2CCCUCUA5, to the 5'-exon binding site of the ribozyme, with Kd = 1-2 nM, shows that the pA5 portion of the substrate makes no net contribution to binding. Both the substrate and product bind approximately 10(4)-fold (6 kcal/mol) stronger than expected from base pairing with the 5'-exon binding site. Thus, tertiary interactions are involved in binding. Binding of G2CCCUCU and binding of G are independent. These and other data suggest that binding of the oligonucleotide substrate, G2CCCUCUA5, and binding of G are essentially random and independent. The rate constant for reaction of the ternary complex is calculated to be kc approximately equal to 350 min-1, a rate constant that is not reflected in the steady-state rate parameters with saturating G. The simplest interpretation is adopted, in which kc represents the rate of the chemical step. A site-specific endonuclease reaction catalyzed by the Tetrahymena ribozyme in the absence of G was observed; the rate of the chemical step with solvent replacing guanosine, kc(-G) = 0.7 min-1, is approximately 500-fold slower than that with saturating guanosine. The value of kcat/Km = 6 x 10(7) M-1 min-1 for this hydrolysis reaction is only slightly smaller than that with saturating guanosine, because the binding of the oligonucleotide substrate is predominantly rate-limiting in both cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
View details for Web of Science ID A1990EG22200003
View details for PubMedID 2271645
-
CATALYSIS OF RNA CLEAVAGE BY THE TETRAHYMENA-THERMOPHILA RIBOZYME .2. KINETIC DESCRIPTION OF THE REACTION OF AN RNA SUBSTRATE THAT FORMS A MISMATCH AT THE ACTIVE-SITE
BIOCHEMISTRY
1990; 29 (44): 10172-10180
Abstract
The site-specific endonuclease reaction catalyzed by the ribozyme from the Tetrahymena pre-rRNA intervening sequence has been characterized with a substrate that forms a "matched" duplex with the 5' exon binding site of the ribozyme [G2CCCUCUA5 + G in equilibrium with G2CCCUCU + GA5 (G = guanosine); Herschlag, D., & Cech, T.R. (1990) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)]. The rate-limiting step with saturating substrate is dissociation of the product G2CCCUCU. Here we show that the reaction of the substrate G2CCCGCUA5, which forms a "mismatched" duplex with the 5' exon binding site at position -3 from the cleavage site, has a value of kcat that is approximately 10(2)-fold greater than kcat for the matched substrate (50 degrees C, 10 mM MgCl2, pH 7). This is explained by the faster dissociation of the mismatched product, G2CCCGCU, than the matched product. With subsaturating oligonucleotide substrate and saturating G, the binding of the oligonucleotide substrate and the chemical step are each partially rate-limiting. The rate constant for the chemical step of the endonuclease reaction and the rate constant for the site-specific hydrolysis reaction, in which solvent replaces G, are each within approximately 2-fold with the matched and mismatched substrates, despite the approximately 10(3)-fold weaker binding of the mismatched substrate. This can be described as "uniform binding" of the base at position -3 in the ground state and transition state [Albery, W.J., & Knowles, J. R. (1976) Biochemistry 15, 5631-5640]. Thus, the matched substrate does not use its extra binding energy to preferentially stabilize the transition state.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
View details for Web of Science ID A1990EG22200004
View details for PubMedID 2271646
-
CATALYSIS OF THE HYDROLYSIS OF PHOSPHORYLATED PYRIDINES BY MG(OH)+ - A POSSIBLE MODEL FOR ENZYMATIC PHOSPHORYL TRANSFER
BIOCHEMISTRY
1990; 29 (21): 5172-5179
Abstract
The second-order rate constants for reaction of the Mg2+ complexes of phosphorylated pyridine monoanions with Mg(OH)+ are 10(4)-10(6)-fold larger than the second-order rate constants for their reaction with water (25 degrees C, ionic strength 1.5). Of the 10(6)-fold rate enhancement with the phosphorylated 4-morpholinopyridine/Mg2 complex, approximately 10(4)-fold is attributed to the greater nucleophilicity of Mg(OH)+ compared with water. The remaining catalysis of approximately 10(2)-fold is attributed to induced intramolecularity from positioning of the hydroxide ion and phosphoryl group by the Mg2+ ions. This reaction may provide a model for the role of a metal ion in increasing the concentration of the anions of enolpyruvate and serine and holding the nucleophile in the correct position for phosphoryl transfer in the reactions catalyzed by pyruvate kinase and alkaline phosphatase, for example. Some mechanisms that can provide catalysis of phosphoryl transfer through a metaphosphate-like transition state are reviewed briefly.
View details for Web of Science ID A1990DF84300025
View details for PubMedID 2378873
-
DNA CLEAVAGE CATALYZED BY THE RIBOZYME FROM TETRAHYMENA
NATURE
1990; 344 (6265): 405-409
Abstract
An RNA enzyme derived from the self-splicing intervening sequence of Tetrahymena thermophila catalyses sequence-specific cleavage of an oligodeoxyribonucleotide substrate. Compared with RNA, the DNA substrate is bound very weakly and is cleaved very slowly, revealing the importance of the RNA 2'-hydroxyl group in both the binding and chemical steps. The finding that catalysis by RNA can extend to DNA substrates indicates new possibilities for the transposition of intervening sequences and for the design of DNA cleavage agents with novel sequence specificities.
View details for Web of Science ID A1990CW47800054
View details for PubMedID 1690858
-
NUCLEOPHILES OF HIGH REACTIVITY IN PHOSPHORYL TRANSFER-REACTIONS - ALPHA-EFFECT COMPOUNDS AND FLUORIDE-ION
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
1990; 112 (5): 1951-1956
View details for Web of Science ID A1990CQ97100047
-
THE EFFECTS OF MG-2+, HYDROGEN-BONDING, AND STERIC FACTORS ON RATE AND EQUILIBRIUM-CONSTANTS FOR PHOSPHORYL TRANSFER BETWEEN CARBOXYLATE IONS AND PYRIDINES
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
1990; 112 (5): 1942-1950
View details for Web of Science ID A1990CQ97100046
- Nucleophiles of High Reactivity in Phosphoryl Transfer Reactions: α-Effect Compounds and Fluoride Ion. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1990; 112: 1951-1956
- The Effect of Mg2+, Hydrogen Bonding and Steric Factors on Rate and Equilibrium Constants for Phosphoryl Transfer between Carboxylate Ions and Pyridines. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1990; 112: 1942-1950
-
PHOSPHORYL TRANSFER TO ANIONIC OXYGEN NUCLEOPHILES - NATURE OF THE TRANSITION-STATE AND ELECTROSTATIC REPULSION
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
1989; 111 (19): 7587-7596
View details for Web of Science ID A1989AQ94900048
-
EVIDENCE THAT META-PHOSPHATE MONOANION IS NOT AN INTERMEDIATE IN SOLVOLYSIS REACTIONS IN AQUEOUS-SOLUTION
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
1989; 111 (19): 7579-7586
View details for Web of Science ID A1989AQ94900047
- Phosphoryl Transfer to Oxyanions: The Nature of the Transition State and Electrostatic Repulsion. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1989; 111: 7587-7596
- Evidence That Metaphosphate is Not an Intermediate in Solvolysis Reactions in Aqueous Solution J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1989; 111: 7579-7586
- The Role of Induced Fit and Conformational Changes of Enzymes in Specificity and Catalysis. Bioorganic Chemistry 1988; 16: 62-96
-
THE EFFECT OF DIVALENT METAL-IONS ON THE RATE AND TRANSITION-STATE STRUCTURE OF PHOSPHORYL-TRANSFER REACTIONS
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
1987; 109 (15): 4665-4674
View details for Web of Science ID A1987J360000033
- The Effect of Divalent Metal Ions on the Rate and Transition State Structure of Phosphoryl Transfer Reactions. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1987; 109: 4665-4674
-
PYROPHOSPHATE FORMATION FROM ACETYL PHOSPHATE AND ORTHO-PHOSPHATE ANIONS IN CONCENTRATED AQUEOUS SALT-SOLUTIONS DOES NOT PROVIDE EVIDENCE FOR A META-PHOSPHATE INTERMEDIATE
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
1986; 108 (25): 7938-7946
View details for Web of Science ID A1986F146500010
-
Additions and Corrections: Decreasing Reactivity with Increasing Nucleophile Basicity. The Effect of Solvation on (nuc) for Phosphoryl Transfer to Amines.
Journal of the American Chemical Society
1986; 108 (19): 6100-?
View details for DOI 10.1021/ja00279a603
View details for PubMedID 22175415
-
DECREASING REACTIVITY WITH INCREASING NUCLEOPHILE BASICITY - THE EFFECT OF SOLVATION ON BETA-NUC FOR PHOSPHORYL TRANSFER TO AMINES
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
1986; 108 (3): 479-483
View details for Web of Science ID A1986AYZ6900019
View details for PubMedID 22175464
- Pyrophosphate Formation from Acetyl Phosphate and Orthophosphate Anions in Concentrated Aqueous Salt Solutions Does Not Provide Evidence for a Metaphosphate Intermediate J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1986; 108: 7938
- Decreasing Reactivity with Increasing Nucleophile Basicity. The Effect of Solvation on βnuc for Phosphoryl Transfer to Amines J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1986; 108: 479
-
GALACTOFURANOSYL-CONTAINING GLYCOPEPTIDE OF PENICILLIUM-CHARLESII - VACUUM ULTRAVIOLET CIRCULAR-DICHROISM
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PEPTIDE AND PROTEIN RESEARCH
1983; 22 (1): 16-20
Abstract
The far and vacuum u.v. circular dichroism (CD) of peptidophosphogalactomannan from P. charlesii is reported to 182.5 nm in aqueous and aqueous/organic solvents, and to 150nm in films. CD of films of the peptide-free derivative is reported to 150 nm. On the basis of these data we conclude that the peptide chain is unordered, and may best be described as a hydrated coil showing some stiffness. The small observed saccharide CD may result from cancellation of contributions from the various saccharide structures present or from a lack of repeating secondary structure.
View details for Web of Science ID A1983QX64600003
View details for PubMedID 6224750