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NMR-Based Reappraisal of the Coordination of a Metal Ion at the Pro-<i>R</i>p Oxygen of the A9/G10.1 Site in a Hammerhead Ribozyme
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Citations
30
References
2004
Year
Molecular BiologyHammerhead RibozymeNucleic Acid ChemistryProtein FoldingControversial ScottMetal-binding SiteStructure-function Enzyme KineticsProtein ChemistryBiochemistryStructural BiologyActive ConformationNatural SciencesEnzyme CatalysisMetalloproteinNucleic Acid BiochemistryProtein NmrNmr-based ReappraisalMedicineMetal Ion
In the identification of a metal-binding site within enzymes, kinetic analyses based on thio-effects and Cd(2+)-rescues are widely used. In those analyses, kinetic studies using a phosphorothioate have been discussed on the premise that the substitution by a sulfur atom does not change the conformation of a ribozyme. However, our present NMR structural analysis demonstrates the change of the conformation at the metal-binding site by Rp-sulfur but not by Sp-sulfur substitution and warns against incautious interpretations of thio-effects and rescue phenomena in kinetic studies using a phosphorothioate. Our analysis further demonstrates that, in solution, a Cd(2+) ion can interact with an Rp-phosphorothioate (in support of the controversial McKay's structure, Nature 1994, 372, 68-74) and with an Sp-phosphorothioate (in support of the controversial Scott's structure, Cell 1995, 81, 991-1002) at the metal-binding A9/G10.1 site and that, in the former case, the bound Cd(2+) ion can return the ribozyme to an active conformation and rescue its enzymatic activity.
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