4.6 Article

The Helicase Activity of Ribonuclease R Is Essential for Efficient Nuclease Activity

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 290, Issue 25, Pages 15697-15706

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M115.650176

Keywords

ATP; Escherichia coli (E; coli); ribonuclease; RNA degradation; RNA helicase

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM 16317]

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Background:Escherichia coli RNase R contains an intrinsic RNA helicase activity. Results: Walker A and Walker B motifs located in the C- and N-terminal regions, respectively, are required for helicase activity. Conclusion: RNase R helicase activity utilizes the nuclease catalytic channel and stimulates the nuclease activity. Significance: These findings help to explain how RNase R efficiently degrades structured RNA. RNase R, which belongs to the RNB family of enzymes, is a 3 to 5 hydrolytic exoribonuclease able to digest highly structured RNA. It was previously reported that RNase R possesses an intrinsic helicase activity that is independent of its ribonuclease activity. However, the properties of this helicase activity and its relationship to the ribonuclease activity were not clear. Here, we show that helicase activity is dependent on ATP and have identified ATP-binding Walker A and Walker B motifs that are present in Escherichia coli RNase R and in 88% of mesophilic bacterial genera analyzed, but absent from thermophilic bacteria. We also show by mutational analysis that both of these motifs are required for helicase activity. Interestingly, the Walker A motif is located in the C-terminal region of RNase R, whereas the Walker B motif is in its N-terminal region implying that the two parts of the protein must come together to generate a functional ATP-binding site. Direct measurement of ATP binding confirmed that ATP binds only when double-stranded RNA is present. Detailed analysis of the helicase activity revealed that ATP hydrolysis is not required because both adenosine 5-O-(thiotriphosphate) and adenosine 5-(,-imino)triphosphate can stimulate helicase activity, as can other nucleoside triphosphates. Although the nuclease activity of RNase R is not needed for its helicase activity, the helicase activity is important for effective nuclease activity against a dsRNA substrate, particularly at lower temperatures and with more stable duplexes. Moreover, competition experiments and mutational analysis revealed that the helicase activity utilizes the same catalytic channel as the nuclease activity. These findings indicate that the helicase activity plays an essential role in the catalytic efficiency of RNase R.

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