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Upregulation of RNase E activity by mutation of a site that uncompetitively interferes with RNA binding

Authors
Go, HayoungMoore, Christopher J.Lee, MinhoShin, EunkyoungJeon, Che OkCha, Chang-JunHan, Seung HyunKim, Su-JinLee, Sang-WonLee, YounghoonHa, Nam-ChulKim, Yong-HakCohen, Stanley N.Lee, Kangseok
Issue Date
11월-2011
Publisher
TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
Keywords
RNase E; RNA degradation; RNA binding; RNase E regulation; Q36R
Citation
RNA BIOLOGY, v.8, no.6, pp.1022 - 1034
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
RNA BIOLOGY
Volume
8
Number
6
Start Page
1022
End Page
1034
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/111262
DOI
10.4161/rna.8.6.18063
ISSN
1547-6286
Abstract
Escherichia coli RNase E contains a site that selectively binds to RNAs containing 5'-monophosphate termini, increasing the efficiency of endonucleolytic cleavage of these RNAs. Random mutagenesis of N-Rne, the N-terminal catalytic region of RNase E, identified a hyperactive variant that remains preferentially responsive to phosphorylation at 5' termini. Biochemical analyses showed that the mutation (Q36R), which replaces glutamine with arginine at a position distant from the catalytic site, increases formation of stable RNA-protein complexes without detectably affecting the enzyme's secondary or tertiary structure. Studies of cleavage of fluorogenic substrate and EMSA experiments indicated that the Q36R mutation increases catalytic activity and RNA binding. However, UV crosslinking and mass spectrometry studies suggested that the mutant enzyme lacks an RNA binding site present in its wild-type counterpart. Two substrate-bound tryptic peptides, (65)HGFLPLK(71)-which includes amino acids previously implicated in substrate binding and catalysis- and (24)LYDLDIESPGHEQK(37)-which includes the Q36 locus-were identified in wild-type enzyme complexes, whereas only the shorter peptide was observed for complexes containing Q36R. Our results identify a novel RNase E locus that disparately affects the number of substrate binding sites and catalytic activity of the enzyme. We propose a model that may account for these surprising effects.
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