期刊论文详细信息
A second catalytic metal ion in a group I ribozyme
Article
关键词: TETRAHYMENA RIBOZYME;    ENDORIBONUCLEASE ACTIVITY;    GUANOSINE BINDING;    RNA;    SUBSTRATE;    SITE;    MECHANISM;    COMPLEXES;    CLEAVAGE;    STEP;   
DOI  :  10.1038/42076
来源: SCIE
【 摘 要 】

Although only a subset of protein enzymes depend on the presence of a metal ion for their catalytic function, all naturally occurring RNA enzymes require metal ions to stabilize their structure and for catalytic competence(1). In the self-splicing group I intron from Tetrahymena thermophila(2), several divalent metals can serve structural roles, but only Mg2+ and Mn2+ promote splice-site cleavage and exon ligation(3,4). A study of a ribozyme reaction analogous to 5'-splice-site cleavage by guanosine uncovered the first metal ion with a definitive role in catalysis. Substitution of the 3'-oxygen of the leaving group with sulphur resulted in a metal-specificity switch, indicating an interaction between the leaving group and the metal ion(5). Here we use 3'-(thioinosylyl)-(3' --> 5')-uridine(6), IspU, as a substrate in a reaction that emulates exon ligation. Activity requires the addition of a thiophilic metal ion (Cd2+ or Mn2+), providing evidence for stabilization of the leaving group by a metal ion in that step of splicing. Based on the principle of microscopic reversibility, this metal ion activates the nucleophilic 3'-hydroxyl of guanosine in the first step of splicing, supporting the model of a two-metal-ion active site(7).

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