Structure of the unusual methanogen seryl-tRNA synthetase reveals a distinct zincdependent mode of substrate recognition (CROSBI ID 123154)
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Podaci o odgovornosti
Bilokapić, Silvija ; Maier, Timm ; Ahel, Dragana ; Gruić-Sovulj, Ita ; Söll, Dieter ; Weygand-Đurašević, Ivana ; Ban, Nenad
engleski
Structure of the unusual methanogen seryl-tRNA synthetase reveals a distinct zincdependent mode of substrate recognition
Methanogenic archaea possess unusual Seryl-tRNA synthetase (SerRS), evolutionarily distinct from the SerRSs found in eukariotes, bacteria and other archaea. The two types of SerRSs show only minimal sequence similarity ; primarily within class II conserved motifs 1, 2 and 3. Here, we report a 2.5 A resolution crystal structure of the atypical methanogenic Methanosarcina barkeri SerRS and its complexes with ATP, serine and the nonhydrolysable seryl-adenylate analogue 5’ -O-(N-serylsulfamoyl)adenosine. The structures reveal two idiosyncratic features of methanogenic SerRSs: a novel N-terminal tRNA binding domain and an active site zinc ion. The tetra-coordinated Zn2+ ion is bound to three conserved protein ligands (Cys306, Glu355 and Cys461) and binds the amino group of the serine substrate. The absolute requirement of the metal ion for enzymatic activity was confirmed by mutational analysis of the direct zinc ion ligands. Zinc-dependent serine recognition differs fundamentally from the one employed by the bacterial-type SerRSs. Consequently, SerRS represents the only known aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase system that evolved two distinct mechanisms for the recognition of the same amino acid substrate.
seryl-tRNA synthetase; Methanogenic archaea; zinc ion
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