Literature DB >> 33880546

NMR solution structures of Runella slithyformis RNA 2'-phosphotransferase Tpt1 provide insights into NAD+ binding and specificity.

Sébastien Alphonse1, Ankan Banerjee2, Swathi Dantuluri2, Stewart Shuman2, Ranajeet Ghose1,3,4,5.   

Abstract

Tpt1, an essential component of the fungal and plant tRNA splicing machinery, catalyzes transfer of an internal RNA 2'-PO4 to NAD+ yielding RNA 2'-OH and ADP-ribose-1',2'-cyclic phosphate products. Here, we report NMR structures of the Tpt1 ortholog from the bacterium Runella slithyformis (RslTpt1), as apoenzyme and bound to NAD+. RslTpt1 consists of N- and C-terminal lobes with substantial inter-lobe dynamics in the free and NAD+-bound states. ITC measurements of RslTpt1 binding to NAD+ (KD ∼31 μM), ADP-ribose (∼96 μM) and ADP (∼123 μM) indicate that substrate affinity is determined primarily by the ADP moiety; no binding of NMN or nicotinamide is observed by ITC. NAD+-induced chemical shift perturbations (CSPs) localize exclusively to the RslTpt1 C-lobe. NADP+, which contains an adenylate 2'-PO4 (mimicking the substrate RNA 2'-PO4), binds with lower affinity (KD ∼1 mM) and elicits only N-lobe CSPs. The RslTpt1·NAD+ binary complex reveals C-lobe contacts to adenosine ribose hydroxyls (His99, Thr101), the adenine nucleobase (Asn105, Asp112, Gly113, Met117) and the nicotinamide riboside (Ser125, Gln126, Asn163, Val165), several of which are essential for RslTpt1 activity in vivo. Proximity of the NAD+ β-phosphate to ribose-C1″ suggests that it may stabilize an oxocarbenium transition-state during the first step of the Tpt1-catalyzed reaction.
© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 33880546      PMCID: PMC8464070          DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab241

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res        ISSN: 0305-1048            Impact factor:   16.971


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