rna catalysis. outline rna transesterification naturally occurring catalysts catalytic functions...

37
RNA catalysis

Upload: darcy-sutton

Post on 27-Dec-2015

230 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

RNA catalysis

Page 2: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Outline

• RNA transesterification

• Naturally occurring catalysts

• Catalytic functions

• Catalytic mechanisms

Page 3: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

RNA transesterification• Exchange one phosphate ester for another

• Free energy change is minimal (reversible)

Page 4: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

RNA transesterification• Nucleophile can be either the adjacent 2´ hydroxyl or

another ester

• Referred to as hydrolysis when water serves as the nucleophile

Page 5: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

RNA transesterification• Nucleophilic attack on the phosphorus center leads to a

penta-coordinate intermediate

• Ester opposite from the nucleophile serves as the leaving group (in-line attack)

Page 6: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

General mechanisms• Substrate positioning

• Transition state stabilization

• Acid-base catalysis

• Metal ion catalysis

Page 7: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

RNA Catalysts

Page 8: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Naturally occurring catalysts• RNA cleavage

glmS ribozymehammerhead ribozyme (crystal structure)hairpin ribozyme (crystal structure)Varkud satellite (VS) ribozyme (partial NMR structure)hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozyme (crystal structure)M1 RNA (RNase P) (partial crystal structure)

• RNA splicing

group I introns (crystal structure)group II introns*** U2-U6 snRNA (spliceosome) (partial NMR structure) ***

• Peptide bond formation

ribosome (crystal structure)

Page 9: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Small self-cleaving ribozymes• Hammerhead, hairpin, VS, HDV ribozymes

• Derivative of viral, viroid, or satellite RNAs

• Involved in RNA processing during rolling circle replication

• RNA transesterification via 2´ hydroxyl

• Reversible: cleavage and ligation (excepting HDV)

Page 10: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Hammerhead ribozyme• Three-stem junction with conserved loop regions

• Coaxial stacking of stems II and III through extended stem II structure containing canonical Watson-Crick and non-canonical base pairs

• Metal-ion catalysis

Page 11: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Hammerhead ribozyme

• In nature is self-cleaving (not a true enzyme)

• Can be manipulated to function as a true catalyst

• Biotechnological and potential therapeutic applications for target RNA cleavage

Page 12: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Hammerhead ribozyme• Separation of catalytic and substrate strands

• Strand with hairpin is the enzyme

• Single strand is substrate

• KM = 40nM; kcat = ~1 min-1;kcat/KM = ~107 M -1 min -1 (catalytic efficiency)

• Compare to protein enzymes?

Page 13: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

RNA Catalysts • basics of catalytic reactions (cleavage)

RNase AProtein enzyme

Hammerheadribozyme

Page 14: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Hairpin ribozyme• In nature is part of a four-stem junction

• Ribozyme consists of two stems with internal loops

• Stems align side-by-side with 180 degree bend in the junction (hence ‘hairpin’)

• Internal loops interact to form active site

Page 15: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Hairpin ribozyme

• Crystal structure reveals interactions between stems

• Nucleobases position and activate sessile phosphodiester linkage

• Combination of transition state stabilization and acid-base catalysis?

Page 16: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

HDV ribozyme

• Genomic and antigenomic ribozymes

• Nested pseudoknot structure

• Very stable

• Cleaves off 5´ leader sequence

Page 17: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

HDV ribozyme

Page 18: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

HDV ribozyme• Active site positions an

important cytidine near the sessile phophodiester bond

Page 19: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

RNase P• True enzyme

• Cleaves tRNA precursor to generate the mature 5´ end

• Composed of M1 RNA and C5 protein (14 kD)

• RNA is large and structurally complex

• Protein improves turnover

• Hydrolysis

Page 20: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Group I introns• Large family of self-splicing introns usually

residing in rRNA and tRNA

• Two step reaction mechanism

Page 21: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Group I intron structure

• Crystal structure of ‘trapped’ ribozyme before second transesterification reaction

• Metal ion catalysis

Page 22: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Group I intron structure

Ribose zipper

P1

J8/7

Page 23: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Group II introns

Page 24: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Group II introns

• Usually found in organelles (e.g. plant chloroplasts, mitochondria)

• mechanism proceeds through a branched lariat intermediate structure which is produced by the attack of a 2’-OH of an internal A on the phosphodiester of the 5’-splice site

• proteins thought to stabilize structure but not necessary for catalysis

• no ATP or exogenous G needed

Page 25: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Summary of splicing reactions

Page 26: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

The ribosome is a ribozyme• Ribosome is 2/3 RNA and 1/3 protein by mass

• Crystal structures prove that RNA is responsible for decoding and for peptide bond formation

Page 27: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Peptidyl transferase

• Crystal structure of 50S subunit shows no protein within 20 Å of peptidyl transferase center

• Closest component to aa-tRNA is adenosine 2451 in 23S rRNA

• Proposed acid-base mechanism for peptide bond formation

• Recent evidence showssubstrate positioningaccounts for catalysis

Page 28: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Found 36 times in rRNA as type II/I couples

Numerous isolated type I interactions

Prevalence of A-minor motifs

Page 29: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

RNA/DNA Catalysts RNA/DNA catalysis & evolution• in vitro selection

Page 30: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

RNA/DNA Catalysts RNA/DNA catalysis & evolution• increasing numbers of examples of reactions catalyzed by nucleic acids

Table 1. Catalytic RNA and DNA molecules isolated from in vitro selection1

Catalytic Nucleic Acid Reaction Catalyzed or Activity

RNA Aminoacyl esteraseRNA DNA CleavageRNA RNA CleavageRNA RNA LigationRNA Isomerization of a bridged biphenylRNA Self-phosphorylationRNA Amide bond cleavageRNA AminoacylationRNA AlkylationRNA 5'-5' RNA ligationRNA Acyl transferase (ester and amide bond formation)RNA Porphyrin metalation with Cu2+ (heme biosynthesis)RNA Sulfur alkylationRNA 5'-self-cappingRNA Carbon-carbon bond formation (Diels-Alder cycloaddition)RNA Amide bond formationRNA Peptide bond formationRNA Ester transferase

DNA RNA cleavageDNA DNA ligationDNA Porphyrin metalation with Cu2+ (heme biosynthesis)DNA Cleave phosphoramidate bondsDNA DNA cleavageDNA Self-phosphorylationDNA 5'-self-capping

1Ref. 44. This list is only an overview and does not include all nucleic acid catalystsdiscovered to date.

Page 31: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

DNA Catalysts

Page 32: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

DNA CatalystsGuanine Quartet Structures

Page 33: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

HDV ribozyme structure

Page 34: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

Proposed mechanism of catalysis

Page 35: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

pH (pD) profiles

Page 36: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

pH profiles (cation type)

Page 37: RNA catalysis. Outline RNA transesterification Naturally occurring catalysts Catalytic functions Catalytic mechanisms

pH profiles (cation concentration)