16 research outputs found
HemK, a class of protein methyl transferase with similarity to DNA methyl transferases, methylates polypeptide chain release factors, and hemK knockout induces defects in translational termination
HemK, a universally conserved protein of unknown function, has high amino acid similarity with DNA-(adenine-N6) methyl transferases (MTases). A certain mutation in hemK gene rescues the photosensitive phenotype of a ferrochelatase-deficient (hemH) mutant in Escherichia coli. A hemK knockout strain of E. coli not only suffered severe growth defects, but also showed a global shift in gene expression to anaerobic respiration, as determined by microarray analysis, and this shift may lead to the abrogation of photosensitivity by reducing the oxidative stress. Suppressor mutations that abrogated the growth defects of the hemK knockout strain were isolated and shown to be caused by a threonine to alanine change at codon 246 of polypeptide chain release factor (RF) 2, indicating that hemK plays a role in translational termination. Consistent with such a role, the hemK knockout strain showed an enhanced rate of read-through of nonsense codons and induction of transfer-mRNA-mediated tagging of proteins within the cell. By analysis of the methylation of RF1 and RF2 in vivo and in vitro, we showed that HemK methylates RF1 and RF2 in vitro within the tryptic fragment containing the conserved GGQ motif, and that hemK is required for the methylation within the same fragment of, at least, RF1 in vivo. This is an example of a protein MTase containing the DNA MTase motif and also a protein-(glutamine-N5) MTase
Accommodating the bacterial decoding release factor as an alien protein among the RNAs at the active site of the ribosome
The decoding release factor (RF) triggers termination of protein synthesis by functionally mimicking a tRNA to span the decoding centre and the peptidyl transferase centre (PTC) of the ribosome. Structurally, it must fit into a site crafted for a tRNA and surrounded by five other RNAs, namely the adjacent peptidyl tRNA carrying the completed polypeptide, the mRNA and the three rRNAs. This is achieved by extending a structural domain from the body of the protein that results in a critical conformational change allowing it to contact the PTC. A structural model of the bacterial termination complex with the accommodated RF shows that it makes close contact with the first, second and third bases of the stop codon in the mRNA with two separate loops of structure: the anticodon loop and the loop at the tip of helix alpha5. The anticodon loop also makes contact with the base following the stop codon that is known to strongly influence termination efficiency. It confirms the close contact of domain 3 of the protein with the key RNA structures of the PTC. The mRNA signal for termination includes sequences upstream as well as downstream of the stop codon, and this may reflect structural restrictions for specific combinations of tRNA and RF to be bound onto the ribosome together. An unbiased SELEX approach has been investigated as a tool to identify potential rRNA-binding contacts of the bacterial RF in its different binding conformations within the active centre of the ribosome