4lab

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Crystal structure of the catalytic domain of RluB

Structural highlights

4lab is a 1 chain structure with sequence from Escherichia coli K-12. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA. For a guided tour on the structure components use FirstGlance.
Method:X-ray diffraction, Resolution 2.5043Å
Ligands:CL, PT
Resources:FirstGlance, OCA, PDBe, RCSB, PDBsum, ProSAT

Function

RLUB_ECOLI Responsible for synthesis of pseudouridine from uracil-2605 in 23S ribosomal RNA.

Publication Abstract from PubMed

RluB catalyses the modification of U2605 to pseudouridine (Psi) in a stem-loop at the peptidyl transferase center of Escherichia coli 23S rRNA. The homolog RluF is specific to the adjacent nucleotide in the stem, U2604. The 1.3 A resolution crystal structure of the complex between the catalytic domain of RluB and the isolated substrate stem-loop, in which the target uridine is substituted by 5-fluorouridine (5-FU), reveals a covalent bond between the isomerized target base and tyrosine 140. The structure is compared with the catalytic domain alone determined at 2.5 A resolution. The RluB-bound stem-loop has essentially the same secondary structure as in the ribosome, with a bulge at A2602, but with 5-FU2605 flipped into the active site. We showed earlier that RluF induced a frame-shift of the RNA, moving A2602 into the stem and translating its target, U2604, into the active site. A hydrogen-bonding network stabilizes the bulge in the RluB-RNA but is not conserved in RluF and so RluF cannot stabilize the bulge. On the basis of the covalent bond between enzyme and isomerized 5-FU we propose a Michael addition mechanism for pseudouridine formation that is consistent with all experimental data.

The mechanism of pseudouridine synthases from a covalent complex with RNA, and alternate specificity for U2605 versus U2604 between close homologs.,Czudnochowski N, Ashley GW, Santi DV, Alian A, Finer-Moore J, Stroud RM Nucleic Acids Res. 2013 Nov 7. PMID:24214967[1]

From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

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See Also

References

  1. Czudnochowski N, Ashley GW, Santi DV, Alian A, Finer-Moore J, Stroud RM. The mechanism of pseudouridine synthases from a covalent complex with RNA, and alternate specificity for U2605 versus U2604 between close homologs. Nucleic Acids Res. 2013 Nov 7. PMID:24214967 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkt1050

Contents


PDB ID 4lab

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