PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Tethered domains and flexible regions in tRNase Z(L), the long form of tRNase Z.

  • Christopher Wilson,
  • Daryl Ramai,
  • Dmitri Serjanov,
  • Neema Lama,
  • Louis Levinger,
  • Emmanuel J Chang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0066942
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 7
p. e66942

Abstract

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tRNase Z, a member of the metallo-β-lactamase family, endonucleolytically removes the pre-tRNA 3' trailer in a step central to tRNA maturation. The short form (tRNase Z(S)) is the only one found in bacteria and archaebacteria and is also present in some eukaryotes. The homologous long form (tRNase Z(L)), exclusively found in eukaryotes, consists of related amino- and carboxy-domains, suggesting that tRNase Z(L) arose from a tandem duplication of tRNase Z(S) followed by interdependent divergence of the domains. X-ray crystallographic structures of tRNase Z(S) reveal a flexible arm (FA) extruded from the body of tRNase Z remote from the active site that binds tRNA far from the scissile bond. No tRNase Z(L) structures have been solved; alternative biophysical studies are therefore needed to illuminate its functional characteristics. Structural analyses of tRNase Z(L) performed by limited proteolysis, two dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry establish stability of the amino and carboxy domains and flexibility of the FA and inter-domain tether, with implications for tRNase Z(L) function.