An important base triple anchors the substrate helix recognition surface within the Tetrahymena ribozyme active site
Open Access
- 28 September 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 96 (20) , 11183-11188
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.96.20.11183
Abstract
Key to understanding the structural biology of catalytic RNA is determining the underlying networks of interactions that stabilize RNA folding, substrate binding, and catalysis. Here we demonstrate the existence and functional importance of a Hoogsteen base triple (U300⋅A97-U277), which anchors the substrate helix recognition surface within the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme active site. Nucleotide analog interference suppression analysis of the interacting functional groups shows that the U300⋅A97-U277 triple forms part of a network of hydrogen bonds that connect the P3 helix, the J8/7 strand, and the P1 substrate helix. Product binding and substrate cleavage kinetics experiments performed on mutant ribozymes that lack this base triple (C A-U, U G-C) or replace it with the isomorphous C+⋅G-C triple show that the A97 Hoogsteen triple contributes to the stabilization of both substrate helix docking and the conformation of the ribozyme’s active site. The U300⋅A97-U277 base triple is not formed in the recently reported crystallographic model of a portion of the group I intron, despite the presence of J8/7 and P3 in the RNA construct [Golden, B. L., Gooding, A. R., Podell, E. R. & Cech, T. R. (1998) Science 282, 259–264]. This, along with other biochemical evidence, suggests that the active site in the crystallized form of the ribozyme is not fully preorganized and that substantial rearrangement may be required for substrate helix docking and catalysis.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- A minor groove RNA triple helix within the catalytic core of a group I intronNature Structural & Molecular Biology, 1998
- A Preorganized Active Site in the Crystal Structure of the Tetrahymena RibozymeScience, 1998
- Joining the Two Domains of a Group I Ribozyme to Form the Catalytic CoreScience, 1997
- Thermodynamic and activation parameters for binding of a pyrene-labeled substrate by the Tetrahymena ribozyme: docking is not diffusion-controlled and is driven by a favorable entropy changeBiochemistry, 1995
- The importance of being ribose at the cleavage site in the Tetrahymena ribozyme reactionBiochemistry, 1993
- RNA substrate binding site in the catalytic core of the Tetrahymena ribozymeNature, 1992
- Ribozyme-catalyzed and nonenzymic reactions of phosphate diesters: rate effects upon substitution of sulfur for a nonbridging phosphoryl oxygen atomBiochemistry, 1991
- Modelling of the three-dimensional architecture of group I catalytic introns based on comparative sequence analysisJournal of Molecular Biology, 1990
- The guanosine binding site of the Tetrahymena ribozymeNature, 1989
- Sequence-Specific Cleavage of Double Helical DNA by Triple Helix FormationScience, 1987