Quantum Mechanical/Molecular Mechanical Simulation Study of the Mechanism of Hairpin Ribozyme Catalysis
- 18 March 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Vol. 130 (14) , 4680-4691
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ja0759141
Abstract
The molecular mechanism of hairpin ribozyme catalysis is studied with molecular dynamics simulations using a combined quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical (QM/MM) potential with a recently developed semiempirical AM1/d-PhoT model for phosphoryl transfer reactions. Simulations are used to derive one- and two-dimensional potentials of mean force to examine specific reaction paths and assess the feasibility of proposed general acid and base mechanisms. Density-functional calculations of truncated active site models provide complementary insight to the simulation results. Key factors utilized by the hairpin ribozyme to enhance the rate of transphosphorylation are presented, and the roles of A38 and G8 as general acid and base catalysts are discussed. The computational results are consistent with available experimental data, provide support for a general acid/base mechanism played by functional groups on the nucleobases, and offer important insight into the ability of RNA to act as a catalyst without explicit participation by divalent metal ions.Keywords
This publication has 76 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dissecting the multistep reaction pathway of an RNA enzyme by single-molecule kinetic “fingerprinting”Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- A comparison of vanadate to a 2′–5′ linkage at the active site of a small ribozyme suggests a role for water in transition-state stabilizationRNA, 2007
- Insight into the Role of Mg2+ in Hammerhead Ribozyme Catalysis from X-ray Crystallography and Molecular Dynamics SimulationJournal of Chemical Theory and Computation, 2007
- Calculation of pKas in RNA: On the Structural Origins and Functional Roles of Protonated NucleotidesJournal of Molecular Biology, 2006
- Trapped water molecules are essential to structural dynamics and function of a ribozymeProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Nucleobase catalysis in the hairpin ribozymeRNA, 2006
- Role of an Active Site Guanine in Hairpin Ribozyme Catalysis Probed by Exogenous Nucleobase RescueJournal of Molecular Biology, 2004
- Capturing the Structure of a Catalytic RNA Intermediate: The Hammerhead RibozymeScience, 1996
- Comparison of simple potential functions for simulating liquid waterThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1983
- CHARMM: A program for macromolecular energy, minimization, and dynamics calculationsJournal of Computational Chemistry, 1983