Genetic and biochemical analysis of the functional domains of yeast tRNA ligase Journal Article


Authors: Sawaya, R.; Schwer, B.; Shuman, S.
Article Title: Genetic and biochemical analysis of the functional domains of yeast tRNA ligase
Abstract: Yeast tRNA ligase (Trl1) converts cleaved tRNA half-molecules into spliced tRNAs containing a 2′-PO4, 3′-5′ phosphodiester at the splice junction. Trl1 performs three reactions: (i) the 2′,3′ -cyclic phosphate of the proximal fragment is hydrolyzed to a 3′-OH, 2′-PO4 by a cyclic phosphodiesterase (CPD); (ii) the 5′-OH of the distal fragment is phosphorylated by an NTP-dependent polynucleotide kinase; and (iii) the 3′-OH, 2′-PO4, and 5′-PO4 ends are sealed by an ATP-dependent RNA ligase. Trll consists of an N-terminal adenylyltransferase domain that resembles T4 RNA ligase 1, a central domain that resembles T4 polynucleotide kinase, and a C-terminal CPD domain that resembles the 2H phosphotransferase enzyme superfamily. Here we show that all three domains are essential in vivo, although they need not be linked in the same polypeptide. We identify five amino acids in the adenylyltransferase domain (Lys114, Glu 266, Gly267, Lys284, and Lys286) that are essential for Trl1 activity and are located within motifs I( 114KANG117), IV (266EGFVI270), and V(282FFKIK286) that comprise the active sites of DNA ligases, RNA capping enzymes, and T4 RNA ligases 1 and 2. Mutations K404A and T405A in the P-loop (401GXGKT405) of the central kinase-like domain had no effect on Trl1 function in vivo. The K404A and T405A mutations eliminated ATP-dependent kinase activity but preserved GTP-dependent kinase activity. A double alanine mutant in the P-loop was lethal in vivo and abolished GTP-dependent kinase activity. These results suggest that GTP is the physiological substrate and that the Trl1 kinase has a single NTP binding site of which the P-loop is a component. Two other mutations in the central domain were lethal in vivo and either abolished (D425A) or severely reduced (R511A) GTP-dependent RNA kinase activity in vitro. Mutations of the signature histidines of the CPD domain were either lethal (H777A) or conferred a ts growth phenotype (H673A).
Keywords: controlled study; unclassified drug; gene deletion; nonhuman; chemical analysis; genetic analysis; protein domain; protein function; protein motif; phenotype; cell survival; cell growth; carboxy terminal sequence; in vivo study; enzyme activation; enzyme activity; enzyme substrate; transfection; structure-activity relationship; mutational analysis; rna; dna; enzyme phosphorylation; amino acid sequence; molecular sequence data; amino terminal sequence; saccharomyces cerevisiae; recombinant proteins; binding site; binding sites; yeast; alanine; adenosine triphosphate; transfer rna; point mutation; structure analysis; polydeoxyribonucleotide synthase; enzyme structure; biochemistry; glutamic acid; guanosine triphosphate; phosphotransferase; hydrolysis; mutagenesis; enzymes; lysine; polynucleotide 5' hydroxyl kinase; polynucleotide 5'-hydroxyl-kinase; glycine; substrates; lethal mutant; histidine; enzyme mechanism; rna splicing; enzyme active site; enzyme; adenylyltransferase; nucleotidyltransferase; polypeptides; polypeptide; capped rna; rna capping; prokaryota; rna ligase; splice junctions; phosphodiesterase; phosphoric diester hydrolases; polynucleotide ligases; temperature sensitive mutant; essential amino acid; priority journal; article
Journal Title: Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume: 278
Issue: 45
ISSN: 0021-9258
Publisher: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology  
Date Published: 2003-11-07
Start Page: 43928
End Page: 43938
Language: English
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M307839200
PUBMED: 12933796
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 12 September 2014 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Stewart H Shuman
    546 Shuman