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A bridge between the aminoacylation and editing domains of leucyl-tRNA synthetase is crucial for its synthetic activity.


ABSTRACT: Leucyl-tRNA synthetases (LeuRSs) catalyze the linkage of leucine with tRNA(Leu). LeuRS contains a catalysis domain (aminoacylation) and a CP1 domain (editing). CP1 is inserted 35 Å from the aminoacylation domain. Aminoacylation and editing require CP1 to swing to the coordinated conformation. The neck between the CP1 domain and the aminoacylation domain is defined as the CP1 hairpin. The location of the CP1 hairpin suggests a crucial role in the CP1 swing and domain-domain interaction. Here, the CP1 hairpin of Homo sapiens cytoplasmic LeuRS (hcLeuRS) was deleted or substituted by those from other representative species. Lack of a CP1 hairpin led to complete loss of aminoacylation, amino acid activation, and tRNA binding; however, the mutants retained post-transfer editing. Only the CP1 hairpin from Saccharomyces cerevisiae LeuRS (ScLeuRS) could partly rescue the hcLeuRS functions. Further site-directed mutagenesis indicated that the flexibility of small residues and the charge of polar residues in the CP1 hairpin are crucial for the function of LeuRS.

SUBMITTER: Huang Q 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4138327 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A bridge between the aminoacylation and editing domains of leucyl-tRNA synthetase is crucial for its synthetic activity.

Huang Qian Q   Zhou Xiao-Long XL   Hu Qin-Hua QH   Lei Hui-Yan HY   Fang Zhi-Peng ZP   Yao Peng P   Wang En-Duo ED  

RNA (New York, N.Y.) 20140722 9


Leucyl-tRNA synthetases (LeuRSs) catalyze the linkage of leucine with tRNA(Leu). LeuRS contains a catalysis domain (aminoacylation) and a CP1 domain (editing). CP1 is inserted 35 Å from the aminoacylation domain. Aminoacylation and editing require CP1 to swing to the coordinated conformation. The neck between the CP1 domain and the aminoacylation domain is defined as the CP1 hairpin. The location of the CP1 hairpin suggests a crucial role in the CP1 swing and domain-domain interaction. Here, the  ...[more]

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