Molecular modeling of the three-dimensional architecture of the RNA component of yeast RNase MRP.

J Mol Biol

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, State University of New York Health Science Center at Syracuse, 750 East Adams Street, Syracuse, NY, 13210, USA. schmittm@hscsyr

Published: October 1999

RNase mitochondrial RNA processing (MRP) is a ribonucleoprotein endoribonuclease that is involved in RNA processing events in both the nucleus and the mitochondria. The MRP RNA is both structurally and evolutionarily related to RNase P, the ribonucleoprotein endoribonuclease that processes the 5'-end of tRNAs. Previous analysis of the RNase MRP RNA by phylogenetic analysis and chemical modification has revealed strikingly conserved secondary structural elements in all characterized RNase MRP RNAs. Utilizing successive constraint modeling and energy minimization I derived a three-dimensional model of the yeast RNase MRP RNA. The final model predicts several notable features. First, the enzyme appears to contain two separate structural domains, one that is highly conserved among all MRP and P RNAs and a second that is only conserved in MRP RNAs. Second, nearly all of the highly conserved nucleotides cluster in the first domain around a long-range interaction (LRI-I). This LRI-I is characterized by a ubiquitous uridine base, which points into a cleft between these two structural domains generating a potential active site for RNA cleavage. Third, helices III and IV (the yeast equivalent of the To-binding site) model as a long extended helix. This region is believed to be the binding site of shared proteins between RNase P and RNase MRP and would provide a necessary platform for binding these seven proteins. Indeed, several residues conserved between the yeast MRP and P RNAs cluster in the central region of these helixes. Lastly, characterized mutations in the MRP RNA localize in the model based on their severity. Those mutations with little or no effect on the activity of the enzyme localize to the periphery of the model, while the most severe mutations localize to the central portion of the molecule where they would be predicted to cause large structural defects. Press.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/jmbi.1999.3116DOI Listing

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