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Design principles and functional basis of enantioselectivity of alanyl-tRNA synthetase and a chiral proofreader during protein biosynthesis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the cellular translation system maintains homochirality (preference for L-amino acids) in proteins, emphasizing the role of enzymes like alanyl-tRNA synthetase (AlaRS).
  • It challenges previous models by demonstrating that AlaRS does not activate D-alanine and that its editing domain mainly corrects errors for other amino acids, not D-alanine.
  • The research provides biochemical evidence for chiral specificity, reinforcing that the recognition mechanisms ensure accurate protein synthesis and uphold the L-chiral bias in amino acids.

Article Abstract

Homochirality of the cellular proteome is attributed to the L-chiral bias of the translation apparatus. The chiral specificity of enzymes was elegantly explained using the 'four-location' model by Koshland two decades ago. In accordance with the model, it was envisaged and noted that some aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRS) that charge larger amino acids are porous to D-amino acids. However, a recent study showed that alanyl-tRNA synthetase (AlaRS) can mischarge D-alanine and that its editing domain, but not the universally present D-aminoacyl-tRNA deacylase (DTD), is responsible for correcting the chirality-based error. Here, using in vitro and in vivo data coupled with structural analysis, we show that AlaRS catalytic site is a strict D-chiral rejection system and therefore does not activate D-alanine. It obviates the need for AlaRS editing domain to be active against D-Ala-tRNAAla and we show that it is indeed the case as it only corrects L-serine and glycine mischarging. We further provide direct biochemical evidence showing activity of DTD on smaller D-aa-tRNAs that corroborates with the L-chiral rejection mode of action proposed earlier. Overall, while removing anomalies in the fundamental recognition mechanisms, the current study further substantiates how chiral fidelity is perpetuated during protein biosynthesis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10123102PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkad205DOI Listing

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