Abstract

RNase T is a classical member of the DEDDh family of exonucleases with a unique sequence preference in that its 3'-to-5' exonuclease activity is blocked by a 3'-terminal dinucleotide CC in digesting both single-stranded RNA and DNA. Our previous crystal structure analysis of RNase T-DNA complexes show that four phenylalanine residues, F29, F77, F124, and F146, stack with the two 3'-terminal nucleobases. To elucidate if the π-π stacking interactions between aromatic residues and nucleobases play a critical role in sequence-specific protein-nucleic acid recognition, here we mutated two to four of the phenylalanine residues in RNase T to tryptophan (W mutants) and tyrosine (Y mutants). The Escherichia coli strains expressing either the W mutants or the Y mutants had slow growth phenotypes, suggesting that all of these mutants could not fully substitute the function of the wild-type RNase T in vivo. DNA digestion assays revealed W mutants shared similar sequence specificity with wild-type RNase T. However, the Y mutants exhibited altered sequence-dependent activity, digesting ssDNA with both 3'-end CC and GG sequences. Moreover, the W and Y mutants had reduced DNA-binding activity and lower thermal stability as compared to wild-type RNase T. Taken together, our results suggest that the four phenylalanine residues in RNase T not only play critical roles in sequence-specific recognition, but also in overall protein stability. Our results provide the first evidence showing that the π-π stacking interactions between nucleobases and protein aromatic residues may guide the sequence-specific activity for DNA and RNA enzymes.

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