4.4 Article

Insights into substrate promiscuity of human seryl-tRNA synthetase

Journal

RNA
Volume 23, Issue 11, Pages 1685-1699

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1261/rna.061069.117

Keywords

SerRS; selenocysteine; serine; tRNA; aminoacylation; tRNA recognition; serylation

Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institutes of Health [GM097042]
  2. UIC Chancellor's Undergraduate Research Award
  3. UIC Honors College Research Grant
  4. UIC CCTS Pre-doctoral Education for Clinical and Translational Scientists Fellowship
  5. UIC Provost Deiss Award

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Seryl-tRNA synthetase (SerRS) attaches L-serine to the cognate serine tRNA (tRNA(Ser)) and the noncognate selenocysteine tRNA (tRNA(Sec)). The latter activity initiates the anabolic cycle of selenocysteine (Sec), proper decoding of an in-frame Sec UGA codon, and synthesis of selenoproteins across all domains of life. While the accuracy of SerRS is important for overall proteome integrity, it is its substrate promiscuity that is vital for the integrity of the selenoproteome. This raises a question as to what elements in the two tRNA species, harboring different anticodon sequences and adopting distinct folds, facilitate aminoacylation by a common aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase. We sought to answer this question by analyzing the ability of human cytosolic SerRS to bind and act on tRNA(Ser), tRNA(Sec), and 10 mutant and chimeric constructs in which elements of tRNA(Ser) were transposed onto tRNA(Sec). We show that human SerRS only subtly prefers tRNA(Ser) to tRNA(Sec), and that discrimination occurs at the level of the serylation reaction. Surprisingly, the tRNA mutants predicted to adopt either the 7/5 or 8/5 fold are poor SerRS substrates. In contrast, shortening of the acceptor arm of tRNA(Sec) by a single base pair yields an improved SerRS substrate that adopts an 8/4 fold. We suggest that an optimal tertiary arrangement of structural elements within tRNA(Sec) and tRNA(Ser) dictate their utility for serylation. We also speculate that the extended acceptor-T Psi C arm of tRNA(Sec) evolved as a compromise for productive binding to SerRS while remaining the major recognition element for other enzymes involved in Sec and selenoprotein synthesis.

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