Literature DB >> 20452364

Control of catalytic cycle by a pair of analogous tRNA modification enzymes.

Thomas Christian1, Georges Lahoud, Cuiping Liu, Ya-Ming Hou.   

Abstract

Enzymes that use distinct active site structures to perform identical reactions are known as analogous enzymes. The isolation of analogous enzymes suggests the existence of multiple enzyme structural pathways that can catalyze the same chemical reaction. A fundamental question concerning analogous enzymes is whether their distinct active-site structures would confer the same or different kinetic constraints to the chemical reaction, particularly with respect to the control of enzyme turnover. Here, we address this question with the analogous enzymes of bacterial TrmD and its eukaryotic and archaeal counterpart Trm5. TrmD and Trm5 catalyze methyl transfer to synthesize the m1G37 base at the 3' position adjacent to the tRNA anticodon, using S-adenosyl methionine (AdoMet) as the methyl donor. TrmD features a trefoil-knot active-site structure whereas Trm5 features the Rossmann fold. Pre-steady-state analysis revealed that product synthesis by TrmD proceeds linearly with time, whereas that by Trm5 exhibits a rapid burst followed by a slower and linear increase with time. The burst kinetics of Trm5 suggests that product release is the rate-limiting step of the catalytic cycle, consistent with the observation of higher enzyme affinity to the products of tRNA and AdoMet. In contrast, the lack of burst kinetics of TrmD suggests that its turnover is controlled by a step required for product synthesis. Although TrmD exists as a homodimer, it showed half-of-the-sites reactivity for tRNA binding and product synthesis. The kinetic differences between TrmD and Trm5 are parallel with those between the two classes of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, which use distinct active site structures to catalyze tRNA aminoacylation. This parallel suggests that the findings have a fundamental importance for enzymes that catalyze both methyl and aminoacyl transfer to tRNA in the decoding process. Copyright (c) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20452364      PMCID: PMC2892103          DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2010.05.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Biol        ISSN: 0022-2836            Impact factor:   5.469


  51 in total

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  28 in total

1.  The temperature sensitivity of a mutation in the essential tRNA modification enzyme tRNA methyltransferase D (TrmD).

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2.  Structural basis for methyl-donor-dependent and sequence-specific binding to tRNA substrates by knotted methyltransferase TrmD.

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3.  Differentiating analogous tRNA methyltransferases by fragments of the methyl donor.

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5.  Methyl transfer by substrate signaling from a knotted protein fold.

Authors:  Thomas Christian; Reiko Sakaguchi; Agata P Perlinska; Georges Lahoud; Takuhiro Ito; Erika A Taylor; Shigeyuki Yokoyama; Joanna I Sulkowska; Ya-Ming Hou
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6.  A Family Divided: Distinct Structural and Mechanistic Features of the SpoU-TrmD (SPOUT) Methyltransferase Superfamily.

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7.  A novel HSD17B10 mutation impairing the activities of the mitochondrial RNase P complex causes X-linked intractable epilepsy and neurodevelopmental regression.

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8.  Recognition of guanosine by dissimilar tRNA methyltransferases.

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9.  Kinetic Analysis of tRNA Methyltransferases.

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Journal:  Methods Enzymol       Date:  2015-06-02       Impact factor: 1.600

10.  The catalytic domain of topological knot tRNA methyltransferase (TrmH) discriminates between substrate tRNA and nonsubstrate tRNA via an induced-fit process.

Authors:  Anna Ochi; Koki Makabe; Ryota Yamagami; Akira Hirata; Reiko Sakaguchi; Ya-Ming Hou; Kazunori Watanabe; Osamu Nureki; Kunihiro Kuwajima; Hiroyuki Hori
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2013-07-18       Impact factor: 5.157

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