Protein cofactor-dependent acquisition of novel catalytic activity by the RNase P ribonucleoprotein of E. coli.

J Mol Biol

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 06511, USA.

Published: April 2001

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers evolved Escherichia coli RNase P derivatives to enhance DNA cleavage, achieving over a 400-fold increase in reaction rate while experiencing reduced substrate binding affinity.
  • Two specific A-->U mutations in the M1 RNA component were identified as significant contributors to the improved catalytic activity, with one mutation affecting substrate binding and the other near the catalytic core.
  • Despite enhanced DNA cleavage, there was a notable 500-fold decrease in the enzyme's efficiency for pre-tRNA cleavage, illustrating a tradeoff in catalytic activities that does not benefit from the presence of the C5 protein, which usually helps RNase P with substrate versatility.

Article Abstract

Escherichia coli RNase P derivatives were evolved in vitro for DNA cleavage activity. Ribonucleoproteins sampled after ten generations of selection show a >400-fold increase in the first-order rate constant (k(cat)) on a DNA substrate, reflecting a significant improvement in the chemical cleavage step. This increase is offset by a reduction in substrate binding, as measured by K(M). We trace the catalytic enhancement to two ubiquitous A-->U sequence changes at positions 136 and 333 in the M1 RNA component, positions that are phylogenetically conserved in the Eubacteria. Furthermore, although the mutations are located in different folding domains of the catalytic RNA, the first in the substrate binding domain, the second near the catalytic core, their effect on catalytic activity is significantly influenced by the presence of the C5 protein. The activity of the evolved ribonucleoproteins on both pre-4.5 S RNA and on an RNA oligo substrate remain at wild-type levels. In contrast, improved DNA cleavage activity is accompanied by a 500-fold decrease in pre-tRNA cleavage efficiency (k(cat)/K(M)). The presence of the C5 component does not buffer this tradeoff in catalytic activities, despite the in vivo role played by the C5 protein in enhancing the substrate versatility of RNase P. The change at position 136, located in the J11/12 single-stranded region, likely alters the geometry of the pre-tRNA-binding cleft and may provide a functional explanation for the observed tradeoff. These results thus shed light both on structure/function relations in E. coli RNase P and on the crucial role of proteins in enhancing the catalytic repertoire of RNA.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/jmbi.2001.4519DOI Listing

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