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1.
Mol Microbiol ; 50(1): 129-43, 2003 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14507369

ABSTRACT

The bacterial tRNALys-specific anticodon nuclease is known as a phage T4 exclusion system. In the uninfected host cell anticodon nuclease is kept latent due to the association of its core protein PrrC with the DNA restriction-modification endonuclease EcoprrI. Stp, the T4-encoded peptide inhibitor of EcoprrI activates the latent enzyme. Previous in vitro work indicated that the activation by Stp is sensitive to DNase and requires added nucleotides. Biochemical and mutational data reported here suggest that Stp activates the latent holoenzyme when its EcoprrI component is tethered to a cognate DNA substrate. Moreover, the activation is driven by GTP hydrolysis, possibly mediated by the NTPase domain of PrrC. The data also reveal that Stp can be replaced as the activator of latent anticodon nuclease by certain pyrimidine nucleotides, the most potent of which is dTTP. The activation by dTTP likewise requires an EcoprrI DNA substrate and GTP hydrolysis but involves a different form of the latent holoenzyme/DNA complex. Moreover, whereas Stp relays its activating effect through EcoprrI, dTTP targets PrrC. The activation of the latent enzyme by a normal cell constituent hints that anticodon nuclease plays additional roles, other than warding off phage T4 infection.


Subject(s)
Bacteriophage T4/metabolism , Enzyme Activators/metabolism , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Pyrimidine Nucleotides/metabolism , Ribonucleases/metabolism , Viral Nonstructural Proteins/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/physiology , DNA Restriction Enzymes/genetics , DNA Restriction Enzymes/metabolism , DNA, Bacterial/metabolism , Enzyme Activation , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Gene Deletion , Genes, Bacterial , Genetic Complementation Test , Guanosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , RNA, Transfer, Amino Acyl/metabolism , Ribonucleases/chemistry , Ribonucleases/genetics , Site-Specific DNA-Methyltransferase (Adenine-Specific)/genetics , Site-Specific DNA-Methyltransferase (Adenine-Specific)/metabolism , Thymine Nucleotides/metabolism , Viral Proteins/metabolism
2.
J Biol Chem ; 277(6): 3836-41, 2002 Feb 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11723135

ABSTRACT

The bacterial tRNA(Lys)-specific PrrC-anticodon nuclease efficiently cleaved an anticodon stem-loop (ASL) oligoribonucleotide containing the natural modified bases, suggesting this region harbors the specificity determinants. Assays of ASL analogs indicated that the 6-threonylcarbamoyl adenosine modification (t(6)A37) enhances the reactivity. The side chain of the modified wobble base 5-methylaminomethyl-2-thiouridine (mnm(5)s(2)U34) has a weaker positive effect depending on the context of other modifications. The s(2)U34 modification apparently has none and the pseudouridine (psi39) was inhibitory in most modification contexts. GC-rich but not IC-rich stems abolished the activity. Correlating the reported structural effects of the base modifications with their effects on anticodon nuclease activity suggests preference for substrates where the anticodon nucleotides assume a stacked A-RNA conformation and base pairing interactions in the stem are destabilized. Moreover, the proposal that PrrC residue Asp(287) contacts mnm(5)s(2)U34 was reinforced by the observations that the mammalian tRNA(Lys-3) wobble base 5-methoxycarbonyl methyl-2-thiouridine (mcm(5)s(2)U) is inhibitory and that the D287H mutant favors tRNA(Lys-3) over Escherichia coli tRNA(Lys). The detection of this mutation and ability of PrrC to cleave the isolated ASL suggest that anticodon nuclease may be used to cleave tRNA(Lys-3) primer molecules annealed to the genomic RNA template of the human immunodeficiency virus.


Subject(s)
Nucleic Acid Conformation , RNA, Transfer, Lys/chemistry , Ribonucleases/metabolism , Kinetics , Mutation , RNA, Transfer, Lys/genetics , RNA, Transfer, Lys/metabolism , Substrate Specificity
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