A truncated aminoacyl–tRNA synthetase modifies RNA

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

National Academy of Sciences

RESUMO

Aminoacyl–tRNA synthetases are modular enzymes composed of a central active site domain to which additional functional domains were appended in the course of evolution. Analysis of bacterial genome sequences revealed the presence of many shorter aminoacyl–tRNA synthetase paralogs. Here we report the characterization of a well conserved glutamyl–tRNA synthetase (GluRS) paralog (YadB in Escherichia coli) that is present in the genomes of >40 species of proteobacteria, cyanobacteria, and actinobacteria. The E. coli yadB gene encodes a truncated GluRS that lacks the C-terminal third of the protein and, consequently, the anticodon binding domain. Generation of a yadB disruption showed the gene to be dispensable for E. coli growth in rich and minimal media. Unlike GluRS, the YadB protein was able to activate glutamate in presence of ATP in a tRNA-independent fashion and to transfer glutamate onto tRNAAsp. Neither tRNAGlu nor tRNAGln were substrates. In contrast to canonical aminoacyl–tRNA, glutamate was not esterified to the 3′-terminal adenosine of tRNAAsp. Instead, it was attached to the 2-amino-5-(4,5-dihydroxy-2-cyclopenten-1-yl) moiety of queuosine, the modified nucleoside occupying the first anticodon position of tRNAAsp. Glutamyl–queuosine, like canonical Glu–tRNA, was hydrolyzed by mild alkaline treatment. Analysis of tRNA isolated under acidic conditions showed that this novel modification is present in normal E. coli tRNA; presumably it previously escaped detection as the standard conditions of tRNA isolation include an alkaline deacylation step that also causes hydrolysis of glutamyl–queuosine. Thus, this aminoacyl–tRNA synthetase fragment contributes to standard nucleotide modification of tRNA.

Documentos Relacionados