Commonality and diversity in tRNA substrate recognition in t6A biogenesis by eukaryotic KEOPSs.

Nucleic Acids Res

State Key Laboratory of Molecular Biology, CAS Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science, Shanghai Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, 320 Yue Yang Road, Shanghai 200031, China.

Published: February 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • N 6-Threonylcarbamoyladenosine (t6A) is an important modification found in tRNAs, and its biosynthesis involves the KEOPS complex, mutations of which are linked to Galloway-Mowat syndrome.
  • The research shows that human cytoplasmic tRNAs with an ANN sequence always contain the t6A modification, suggesting a co-evolution of tRNA and modification enzymes.
  • t6A plays a crucial role in the aminoacylation of tRNAIle and influences decoding efficiency, revealing both similarities and differences in how KEOPS complexes recognize substrates across different eukaryotes.

Article Abstract

N 6-Threonylcarbamoyladenosine (t6A) is a universal and pivotal tRNA modification. KEOPS in eukaryotes participates in its biogenesis, whose mutations are connected with Galloway-Mowat syndrome. However, the tRNA substrate selection mechanism by KEOPS and t6A modification function in mammalian cells remain unclear. Here, we confirmed that all ANN-decoding human cytoplasmic tRNAs harbor a t6A moiety. Using t6A modification systems from various eukaryotes, we proposed the possible coevolution of position 33 of initiator tRNAMet and modification enzymes. The role of the universal CCA end in t6A biogenesis varied among species. However, all KEOPSs critically depended on C32 and two base pairs in the D-stem. Knockdown of the catalytic subunit OSGEP in HEK293T cells had no effect on the steady-state abundance of cytoplasmic tRNAs but selectively inhibited tRNAIle aminoacylation. Combined with in vitro aminoacylation assays, we revealed that t6A functions as a tRNAIle isoacceptor-specific positive determinant for human cytoplasmic isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase (IARS1). t6A deficiency had divergent effects on decoding efficiency at ANN codons and promoted +1 frameshifting. Altogether, our results shed light on the tRNA recognition mechanism, revealing both commonality and diversity in substrate recognition by eukaryotic KEOPSs, and elucidated the critical role of t6A in tRNAIle aminoacylation and codon decoding in human cells.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8887486PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkac056DOI Listing

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