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1.
Peptide bond formation is a fundamental reaction in biology, catalyzed by the ribosomal peptidyl-transferase ribozyme. Although all active-site 23S ribosomal RNA nucleotides are universally conserved, atomic mutagenesis suggests that these nucleobases do not carry functional groups directly involved in peptide bond formation. Instead, a single ribose 2'-hydroxyl group at A2451 was identified to be of pivotal importance. Here, we altered the chemical characteristics by replacing its 2'-hydroxyl with selected functional groups and demonstrate that hydrogen donor capability is essential for transpeptidation. We propose that the A2451-2'-hydroxyl directly hydrogen bonds to the P-site tRNA-A76 ribose. This promotes an effective A76 ribose C2'-endo conformation to support amide synthesis via a proton shuttle mechanism. Simultaneously, the direct interaction of A2451 with A76 renders the intramolecular transesterification of the peptide from the 3'- to 2'-oxygen unfeasible, thus promoting effective peptide bond synthesis.  相似文献   

2.
Herein we report the results of a HF/6-31+G** and B3LYP/6-31+G** computational investigation of the title reaction for the peptide bond synthesis catalyzed by a single adenine. This system constitutes a reference reaction to study the basic chemical events that have been proposed to occur at the peptidyl transferase active site of ribosomes on the basis of structural determinations (Science 2000, 239, 920--931). Thus, the analysis of the geometry, charge distribution, and energetics of the critical structures involved in this title reaction yields insight into the catalytic mode of action of RNA molecules. Our computational results give further support to the hypotheses that the activated nucleotide A2451 in the ribosome acts as a base catalyst and that this role is similar to that of the His residue in the catalytic triad of serine proteases.  相似文献   

3.
The ribosomal peptidyl transferase center is expected to be regiospecific with regard to its tRNA substrates, yet the ester linkages between the tRNA and the amino acid or peptide are susceptible to isomerization between the O2' and O3' hydroxyls of the terminal A76 ribose sugar. To establish which isomer of the P site tRNA ester is utilized by the ribosome, we prepared two nonisomerizable transition state inhibitors with either an A76 O2' or O3' linkage. Strong preferential binding to the O3' regioisomer indicates that the peptidyl transferase proceeds through a transition state with an O3'-linked peptide in the P-site.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: The group I intron is an RNA enzyme capable of efficiently catalyzing phosphoryl-transfer reactions. Functional groups that stabilize the chemical transition state of the cleavage reaction have been identified, but they are all located within either the 5'-exon (P1) helix or the guanosine cofactor, which are the substrates of the reaction. Functional groups within the ribozyme active site are also expected to assist in transition-state stabilization, and their role must be explored to understand the chemical basis of group I intron catalysis. RESULTS: Using nucleotide analog interference mapping and site-specific functional group substitution experiments, we demonstrate that the 2'-OH at A207, a highly conserved nucleotide in the ribozyme active site, specifically stabilizes the chemical transition state by approximately 2 kcal mol-1. The A207 2'-OH only makes its contribution when the U(-1) 2'-OH immediately adjacent to the scissile phosphate is present, suggesting that the 2'-OHs of A207 and U(-1) interact during the chemical step. CONCLUSIONS: These data support a model in which the 3'-oxyanion leaving group of the transesterification reaction is stabilized by a hydrogen-bonding triad consisting of the 2'-OH groups of U(-1) and A207 and the exocyclic amine of G22. Because all three nucleotides occur within highly conserved non-canonical base pairings, this stabilization mechanism is likely to occur throughout group I introns. Although this mechanism utilizes functional groups distinctive of RNA enzymes, it is analogous to the transition states of some protein enzymes that perform similar phosphoryl-transfer reactions.  相似文献   

5.
Ribosomes transform the genetic information encoded within genes into proteins. In recent years, there has been much progress in the study of this complex molecular machine, but the mechanism of peptide bond formation and the origin of the catalytic power of this ancient enzymatic system are still an unsolved puzzle. A quantum-mechanical study of different possible mechanisms of peptide synthesis in the ribosome has been carried out using the M06-2X density functional. The uncatalyzed processes in solution have been treated with the SMD solvation model. Concerted and two-step mechanisms have been explored. Three main points suggested in this work deserve to be deeply analyzed. First, no zwitterionic intermediates are found when the process takes place in the ribosome. Second, the proton shuttle mechanism is suggested to be efficient only through the participation of the A2451 2'-OH and two crystallographic water molecules. Finally, the mechanisms in solution and in the ribosome are very different, and this difference may help us to understand the origin of the efficient catalytic role played by the ribosome.  相似文献   

6.
We present a theoretical analysis of the role of the natural chirality of the sugar ring ( D-enantiomeric form) in the peptide synthesis reaction in ribosome. The study is based on a model from the crystal structure of the ribosomal subunit of Haloarcula marismortui using hybrid quantum mechanical-molecular mechanical method. The result indicates that the natural heterochiral sugar-amino acid combination ( D: L) is most favorable for the formation of the peptide bond within the structure of peptidyl transferase center (PTC). Other possible combinations of unnatural chiral form of the sugar-amino acid pair are unfavorable to perform the reaction within the PTC. The presence of the sugar ring has favorable influence on the rotatory path. The chirality of the 2' carbon of the sugar ring is vital for the peptide synthesis. Alteration of the stereochemistry or removal of chirality at the 2' center makes the rate as several orders slower in magnitude. This is in agreement with the recent experimental result that the replacement of the 2' OH by H or F reduces the rate by several orders of magnitude. Two different mechanisms for the catalytic effect of the stereochemistry of 2' OH are investigated. In one mechanism, the 2' OH is involved in proton shuttle, and in the second mechanism, the OH group acts as an anchoring group. The transition state barriers of both mechanisms are found to be comparable. The natural chirality of the 2' center helps lowering the transition state barrier height of the reaction substantially compared with the cases where the 2' center is made achiral or with altered chirality. Thus, the stereochemistry of the 2' center has a major role in synthesis. Few surrounding residues like U2620, A2486, G2618, and C2487 have favorable influence on rotatory path, while the residues like U2541, C2104, C2105, A2485, C2542, C2608, U2619, and A2637 have little influence. The present study shows that the natural chirality of the sugar ring and amino acid makes a perfect heteropair within the PTC to carry out peptide synthesis with high efficiency.  相似文献   

7.
Various hydrogen-bonded complexes of methanol with different proton accepting and proton donating molecules containing Cl, F, NH(2), OH, OR, and COOH functional groups have been modeled using DFT with hybrid B3LYP and M05-2X functionals. The latter functional was found to provide more accurate estimates of the structural and thermodynamic parameters of the complexes of halides, amines, and alcohols. The characteristics of these complexes are influenced not only by the principle hydrogen bond of the methanol OH with the proton acceptor heteroatom, but also by additional hydrogen bonds of a C-H moiety with methanol oxygen as a proton acceptor. The contribution of the former hydrogen bond in the total binding enthalpy increases in the order chlorides < fluorides < alcohols < amines, while the contribution of the second type of hydrogen bond increases in the reverse order. A general correlation was found between the binding enthalpy of the complex and the electrostatic potential at the hydrogen center participating in the formation of the hydrogen bond. The calculated binding enthalpies of different complexes were used to clarify which functional groups can potentially form a hydrogen bond to the 2'-OH hydroxyl group in ribose, which is strong enough to block it from participation in the intramolecular catalytic activation of the peptide bond synthesis. Such blocking could result in inhibition of the protein biosynthesis in the living cell if the corresponding group is delivered as a part of a drug molecule in the vicinity of the active site in the ribosome. According to our results, such activity can be accomplished by secondary or tertiary amines, alkoxy groups, deprotonated carboxyl groups, and aliphatic fluorides, but not by the other modeled functional groups.  相似文献   

8.
Experimental studies have shown that peptide synthesis in ribosome exhibits a homochiral preference. We present, for the first time, an analysis of the origin of the phenomenon using hybrid quantum chemical studies based on a model of peptidyl transferase center from the crystal structure of the ribosomal part of Haloarcula marismortui. The study quantitatively shows that the observed homochiral preference is due to the difference in the nonbonded interaction between amino acids at the A- and P-terminals as well as due to the difference in interaction with the U2620 residue. A major part of the discrimination comes from the variation of nonbonded interaction of rotating A-terminal during the approach of the former toward the P-terminal. The difference indicates that, during the rotatory motion between A- and P-terminals for the proximal positioning of the reactant for reaction to occur, the interaction for a L-L pair is far less repulsive compared to the same process for a D-L pair. The activation barriers for L-L and D-L pairs of the neutral state of phenylalanine leading to corresponding dipeptides are also compared. The corresponding difference in rate constants is 40-fold. The study provides an understanding of how preferred addition of L-L pairs of amino acids rather than D-L pairs leads to retention of homochirality in peptides.  相似文献   

9.
The sequence of events by which protein, RNA, and DNA emerged during early biological evolution is one of the most profound questions regarding the origin of life. The contemporary role of aminoacyl-adenylates as intermediates in both ribosomal and nonribosomal peptide synthesis suggests that they may have served as substrates for uncoded peptide synthesis during early evolution. We report a highly active peptidyl transferase ribozyme family, isolated by in vitro selection, that efficiently catalyzes dipeptide synthesis by using an aminoacyl-adenylate substrate. It was characterized by sequence and structural analysis and kinetic studies. Remarkably, the ribozyme catalyzed the formation of 30 different dipeptides, the majority of rates being within 5-fold that of the Met-Phe dipeptide required by the selection. The isolation of this synthetic ribozyme fosters speculation that ribozyme-mediated uncoded peptide synthesis may have preceded coded peptide synthesis.  相似文献   

10.
In search of new anti‐tuberculars compatible with anti‐retroviral therapy we re‐identified amicetin as a lead compound. Amicetin's binding to the 70S ribosomal subunit of Thermus thermophilus (Tth) has been unambiguously determined by crystallography and reveals it to occupy the peptidyl transferase center P‐site of the ribosome. The amicetin binding site overlaps significantly with that of the well‐known protein synthesis inhibitor balsticidin S. Amicetin, however, is the first compound structurally characterized to bind to the P‐site with demonstrated selectivity for the inhibition of prokaryotic translation. The natural product‐ribosome structure enabled the synthesis of simplified analogues that retained both potency and selectivity for the inhibition of prokaryotic translation.  相似文献   

11.
The creation of orthogonal large and small ribosomal subunits, which interact with each other but not with endogenous ribosomal subunits, would extend our capacity to create new functions in the ribosome by making the large subunit evolvable. To this end, we rationally designed a ribosomal RNA that covalently links the ribosome subunits via an RNA staple. The stapled ribosome is directed to an orthogonal mRNA, allowing the introduction of mutations into the large subunit that reduce orthogonal translation, but have minimal effects on cell growth. Our approach provides a promising route towards orthogonal subunit association, which may enable the evolution of key functional centers in the large subunit, including the peptidyl‐transferase center, for unnatural polymer synthesis in cells.  相似文献   

12.
In search of new anti-tuberculars compatible with anti-retroviral therapy we re-identified amicetin as a lead compound. Amicetin's binding to the 70S ribosomal subunit of Thermus thermophilus (Tth) has been unambiguously determined by crystallography and reveals it to occupy the peptidyl transferase center P-site of the ribosome. The amicetin binding site overlaps significantly with that of the well-known protein synthesis inhibitor balsticidin S. Amicetin, however, is the first compound structurally characterized to bind to the P-site with demonstrated selectivity for the inhibition of prokaryotic translation. The natural product-ribosome structure enabled the synthesis of simplified analogues that retained both potency and selectivity for the inhibition of prokaryotic translation.  相似文献   

13.
The stereospecific formation of peptide bonds under mild conditions and without side reactions is still a formidable task in peptide synthesis. One approach that springs to mind, namely the use of the naturally occurring catalyst involved in the biosynthesis of proteins, the ribosomal peptidyl transferase, cannot be realized in practice. The fact, however, that the natural cleavage of proteins is carried out by other enzymes, namely the proteases, together with the reversibility of these cleavage reactions in principle, has led to an interesting synthetic concept. Proteases normally catalyze the enzymatic degradation of proteins and peptides by hydrolytic cleavage of the peptide bond in an exergonic reaction. The use of physicochemical principles in order to influence the equilibrium, the concentration of products, and the kinetic parameters of the reaction results in the successful application of the catalytic properties of proteases to peptide synthesis. The purpose of this review is to describe and summarize the methods used in such approaches and to attempt a systematic categorization. The principles are applied to the synthesis of such practically relevant products as aspartame and human insulin.  相似文献   

14.
In this issue of Chemistry & Biology, Lang et al. (2008) add an important step toward a molecular understanding of ribosomal peptide-bond formation: they unravel the involvement of an essential partner of the reaction, namely the 2'-OH group of the 23S rRNA nucleotide A2451.  相似文献   

15.
Exploration of the full potential of thioamide substitution as a tool in the chemical biology of peptides and proteins has been hampered by insufficient synthetic strategies for the site‐specific introduction of a thioamide bond into a peptide backbone. A novel ynamide‐mediated two‐step strategy for thiopeptide bond formation with readily available monothiocarboxylic acids as thioacyl donors is described. The α‐thioacyloxyenamide intermediates formed from the ynamides and monothiocarboxylic acids can be purified, characterized, and stored. The balance between their activity and stability enables them to act as effective thioacylating reagents to afford thiopeptide bonds under mild reaction conditions. Amino acid functional groups such as OH, CONH2, and indole NH groups need not be protected during thiopeptide synthesis. The modular nature of this strategy enables the site‐specific incorporation of a thioamide bond into peptide backbones in both solution and the solid phase.  相似文献   

16.
In the course of protein biosynthesis, the 3′-ends of aminoacyl-tRNA (aa-tRNA) and peptidyl-tRNA specifically interact with macromolecules of the protein biosynthesis machinery. The 3′-end of tRNA consists of an invariant C-C-A single strand. Interaction of the aminoacyl-tRNA 3′-end with elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) containing bound GTP is necessary for the formation of the aa-tRNA·EF-Tu·GTP complex and, after the complex binds to the ribosome, for the GTP hydrolysis. This process is followed by the specific binding of the aminoacyl-tRNA 3′-end to the aminoacyl (A) site of the ribosome. In this review, a model is proposed that involves Watson-Crick base pairing of the C? C sequence of the aminoacyl-tRNA 3′-end with a specific G? G sequence of the ribosomal 23S RNA. Similarly, peptidyl-tRNA binds with its 3′-end to the peptidyl (P) site of the ribosome. This binding may also involve Watson-Crick base pairing of the C-C-A sequence with a complementary sequence of 23S RNA. It is proposed that peptide bond formation is catalyzed by a functional site of the 23S RNA located near the 3′-ends of aminoacyl-tRNA and peptidyl-tRNA. A model is suggested in which two loops of the 23S RNA, brought into close proximity via folding, are involved both in binding the 3′-ends of the tRNAs and in catalyzing peptide bond formation. This model presumes a dynamic structure for ribosomal RNA, which is modulated by interaction with elongation factors and ribosomal proteins.  相似文献   

17.
BACKGROUND: The 2'-hydroxyl of U preceding the cleavage site, U(-1), in the Tetrahymena ribozyme reaction contributes 10(3)-fold to catalysis relative to a 2'-hydrogen atom. Previously proposed models for the catalytic role of this 2'-OH involve coordination of a catalytic metal ion and hydrogen-bond donation to the 3'-bridging oxygen. An additional model, hydrogen-bond donation by the 2'-OH to a nonbridging reactive phosphoryl oxygen, is also consistent with previous results. We have tested these models using atomic-level substrate modifications and kinetic and thermodynamic analyses. RESULTS: Replacing the 2'-OH with -NH(3)(+) increases the reaction rate approximately 60-fold, despite the absence of lone-pair electrons on the 2'-NH(3)(+) group to coordinate a metal ion. Binding and reaction of a modified oligonucleotide substrate with 2'-NH(2) at U(-1) are unaffected by soft-metal ions. These results suggest that the 2'-OH of U(-1) does not interact with a metal ion. The contribution of the 2'-moiety of U(-1) is unperturbed by thio substitution at either of the nonbridging oxygens of the reactive phosphoryl group, providing no indication of a hydrogen bond between the 2'-OH and the nonbridging phosphoryl oxygens. In contrast, the 10(3)-fold catalytic advantage of 2'-OH relative to 2'-H is eliminated when the 3'-bridging oxygen is replaced by sulfur. As sulfur is a weaker hydrogen-bond acceptor than oxygen, this effect suggests a hydrogen-bonding interaction between the 2'-OH and the 3'-bridging oxygen. CONCLUSIONS: These results provide the first experimental support for the model in which the 2'-OH of U(-1) donates a hydrogen bond to the neighboring 3'-bridging oxygen, thereby stabilizing the developing negative charge on the 3'-oxygen in the transition state.  相似文献   

18.
3'-(α-L-Aminoacylamido)deoxyadenosines are ribosomal A-site binders and mimic the nascent peptide accepting 3'-terminus of aminoacyl transfer RNA. Their α-amino groups exhibit intrinsic basicities in bulk water that differ by up to 1.8 pK(a) units. Only the neutral form of these nucleophiles can be active during ribosomal peptidyl transfer catalysis.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The 2' OH of the peptidyl-tRNA substrate is thought to be important for catalysis of both peptide bond formation and peptide release in the ribosomal active site. The release reaction also specifically depends on a release factor protein (RF) to hydrolyze the ester linkage of the peptidyl-tRNA upon recognition of stop codons in the A site. Here, we demonstrate that certain amino acid substitutions (in particular those containing hydroxyl or thiol groups) in the conserved GGQ glutamine of release factor RF1 can rescue defects in the release reaction associated with peptidyl-tRNA substrates lacking a 2' OH. We explored this rescue effect through biochemical and computational approaches that support a model where the 2' OH of the P-site substrate is critical for orienting the nucleophile in a hydrogen-bonding network productive for catalysis.  相似文献   

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