47 research outputs found
Investigation of catalysis by bacterial RNase P via LNA and other modifications at the scissile phosphodiester
We analyzed cleavage of precursor tRNAs with an LNA, 2ā²-OCH3, 2ā²-H or 2ā²-F modification at the canonical (c0) site by bacterial RNase P. We infer that the major function of the 2ā²-substituent at nt ā1 during substrate ground state binding is to accept an H-bond. Cleavage of the LNA substrate at the c0 site by Escherichia coli RNase P RNA demonstrated that the transition state for cleavage can in principle be achieved with a locked C3ā² -endo ribose and without the H-bond donor function of the 2ā²-substituent. LNA and 2ā²-OCH3 suppressed processing at the major aberrant mā1 site; instead, the m+1 (nt +1/+2) site was utilized. For the LNA variant, parallel pathways leading to cleavage at the c0 and m+1 sites had different pH profiles, with a higher Mg2+ requirement for c0 versus m+1 cleavage. The strong catalytic defect for LNA and 2ā²-OCH3 supports a model where the extra methylene (LNA) or methyl group (2ā²-OCH3) causes a steric interference with a nearby bound catalytic Mg2+ during its recoordination on the way to the transition state for cleavage. The presence of the protein cofactor suppressed the ground state binding defects, but not the catalytic defects
Cryptic genetic variation promotes rapid evolutionary adaptation in an RNA enzyme
Cryptic variation is caused by the robustness of phenotypes to mutations. Cryptic variation has no effect on phenotypes in a given genetic or environmental background, but it can have effects after mutations or environmental change. Because evolutionary adaptation by natural selection requires phenotypic variation, phenotypically revealed cryptic genetic variation may facilitate evolutionary adaptation. This is possible if the cryptic variation happens to be pre-adapted, or "exapted", to a new environment, and is thus advantageous once revealed. However, this facilitating role for cryptic variation has not been proven, partly because most pertinent work focuses on complex phenotypes of whole organisms whose genetic basis is incompletely understood. Here we show that populations of RNA enzymes with accumulated cryptic variation adapt more rapidly to a new substrate than a population without cryptic variation. A detailed analysis of our evolving RNA populations in genotype space shows that cryptic variation allows a population to explore new genotypes that become adaptive only in a new environment. Our observations show that cryptic variation contains new genotypes pre-adapted to a changed environment. Our results highlight the positive role that robustness and epistasis can have in adaptive evolution