Unusual metal specificity and structure of the group I ribozyme from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii 23S rRNA
Group I intron ribozymes require cations for folding and catalysis, and the current literature indicates that a number of cations can promote folding, but only Mg2+ and Mn2+ support both processes. However, some group I introns are active only with Mg2+, e.g. three of the five group I introns in Chl...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The FEBS journal 2006-06, Vol.273 (12), p.2631-2644 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Group I intron ribozymes require cations for folding and catalysis, and the current literature indicates that a number of cations can promote folding, but only Mg2+ and Mn2+ support both processes. However, some group I introns are active only with Mg2+, e.g. three of the five group I introns in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. We have investigated one of these ribozymes, an intron from the 23S LSU rRNA gene of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Cr.LSU), by determining if the inhibition by Mn2+ involves catalysis, folding, or both. Kinetic analysis of guanosine‐dependent cleavage by a Cr.LSU ribozyme, 23S.5ΔGb, that lacks the 3′ exon and intron‐terminal G shows that Mn2+ does not affect guanosine binding or catalysis, but instead promotes misfolding of the ribozyme. Surprisingly, ribozyme misfolding induced by Mn2+ is highly cooperative, with a Hill coefficient larger than that of native folding induced by Mg2+. At lower Mn2+ concentrations, metal inhibition is largely alleviated by the guanosine cosubstrate (GMP). The concentration dependence of guanosine cosubstrate‐induced folding suggests that it functions by interacting with the G binding site, perhaps by displacing an inhibitory Mn2+. Because of these and other properties of Cr.LSU, the tertiary structure of the intron from 23S.5ΔGb was examined using Fe2+‐EDTA cleavage. The ground‐state structure shows evidence of an unusually open ribozyme core: the catalytic P3–P7 domain and the nucleotides that connect it to the P4–P5–P6 domain are exposed to solvent. The implications of this structure for the in vitro and in vivo properties of this intron ribozyme are discussed. |
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ISSN: | 1742-464X 1742-4658 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2006.05280.x |