The role of complementary hydrogen bonding as a determinant of biological specificity has been examined by protein engineering of the tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase. Deletion of a side chain between enzyme and substrate to leave an unpaired, uncharged hydrogen-bond donor or acceptor weakens binding energy by only 0.5-1.5 kcal mol-1. But the presence of an unpaired and charged donor or acceptor weakens binding by a further approximately 3 kcal mol-1.
Site-directed mutagenesis of the tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase followed by kinetic studies has shown that residues which are distant from the active site of the free enzyme are brought into play as the structure of the enzyme changes during catalysis. Positively charged side chains which are in mobile loops of the enzyme envelope the negatively charged pyrophosphate moiety during the transition state for the formation of tyrosyl adenylate in an induced-fit mechanism. Residues Lys-82 and Arg-86, which are on one side of the rim of the binding site pocket, and Lys-230 and Lys-233, which are on the other side, have been mutated to alanine residues and also to asparagine or glutamine. The resultant mutants still form 1 mol of tyrosyl adenylate/mol of dimer but with rate constants up to 8000 times lower. Construction of difference energy diagrams reveals that all the residues specifically interact with the transition state for the reaction and with pyrophosphate in the E.Tyr-AMP.PPi complex. Yet, the epsilon-NH3+ groups of Lys-230 and Lys-233 in the crystalline enzyme are at least 8 A too far away to interact with the pyrophosphate moiety in the transition state at the same time as do Lys-82 and Arg-86. Binding of substrates must, therefore, induce a conformational change in the enzyme that brings these residues into range. Consistent with this proposal is the observation that all four residues are in flexible regions of the protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The fidelity of DNA polymerase‐alpha from calf thymus (9S enzyme) in copying bacteriophage phi174am16 DNA in vitro has been determined from the frequency of production of different revertants. In the self‐priming reaction we were able to measure the frequencies of base pairing mismatches during the course of replication on biasing the ratios of deoxynucleoside triphosphates. The frequency of dGTP:T, dGTP:G and dATP:G mismatches were 7.6 x 10(‐5), 4.4 x 10(‐5) and 2.8 x 10(‐5), respectively, at equal concentrations of the deoxynucleoside triphosphates. dCTP:A, dGTP:A, dCTP:T and dTTP:T mismatches were below the limit of detection (<5 x 10(‐6)). A synthetic dodecamer primer with a 3′ end covering the first two bases of the amber codon was used to determine the misinsertion frequency of the first nucleotide incorporated. This gave a misinsertion frequency of 1.5 x 10(‐4) for the dGTP:T mismatch, which is slightly higher than that observed from the pool bias studies. Further, it showed no sensitivity to biasing the nucleotide pool, suggesting a different mechanism for the incorporation of the first nucleotide. These data do not support ‘energy‐relay’‐like models for achieving high accuracy in eukaryotes. The observed misinsertion frequencies were corrected for mismatch repair of the heteroduplexes during the transfection experiments by parallel experiments using a mismatched primer. This was synthesized to have the same G:T mismatch as produced in the preceding experiment.
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