4.4 Article

Ground-state coordination of a catalytic metal to the scissile phosphate of a tertiary-stabilized Hammerhead ribozyme

Journal

RNA
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages 16-23

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1261/rna.030239.111

Keywords

Hammerhead ribozyme; metal rescue; catalytic RNA; kinetics; mechanism; metals

Funding

  1. NIH [GM058096, GM007759-29]
  2. NSF [DGE-0742540]

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Although the Hammerhead ribozyme (HHRz) has long been used as a model system in the field of ribozyme enzymology, several details of its mechanism are still not well understood. In particular, significant questions remain concerning the disposition and role of catalytic metals in the HHRz. Previous metal-rescue experiments using a minimal HHRz resulted in prediction of a catalytic metal that is bound in the A9/G10.1 site in the ground state of the reaction and that bridges to the scissile phosphate further along the reaction pathway. Native or extended HHRz constructs contain tertiary contacts that stabilize a more compact structure at moderate ionic strength. We performed Cd2+ rescue experiments on an extended HHRz from Schistosoma mansoni using stereo-pure scissile phosphorothioate-substituted substrates in order to determine whether a metal ion makes contact with the scissile phosphate in the ground state or further along the reaction coordinate. Inhibition in Ca2+/Mg2+ and rescue by thiophilic Cd2+ was specific for the R-p-S stereoisomer of the scissile phosphate. The affinity of the rescuing Cd2+, measured in two different ionic strength backgrounds, increased fourfold to 17-fold when the pro-R-p oxygen is replaced by sulfur. These data support a model in which the rescuing metal ion makes a ground-state interaction with the scissile phosphate in the native HHRz. The resulting model for Mg2+ activation in the HHRz places a metal ion in contact with the scissile phosphate, where it may provide ground-state electrostatic activation of the substrate.

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