Abstract

The end-healing and end-sealing steps of the phage T4-induced RNA restriction-repair pathway are performed by two separate enzymes, a bifunctional polynucleotide 5'-kinase/3'-phosphatase and an ATP-dependent RNA ligase. Here we show that a single trifunctional baculovirus enzyme, RNA ligase 1 (Rnl1), catalyzes the identical set of RNA repair reactions. Three enzymatic activities of baculovirus Rnl1 are organized in a modular fashion within a 694-amino acid polypeptide consisting of an autonomous N-terminal RNA-specific ligase domain, Rnl1-(1-385), and a C-terminal kinase-phosphatase domain, Rnl1-(394-694). The ligase domain is itself composed of two functional units. The N-terminal module Rnl1-(1-270) contains essential nucleotidyltransferase motifs I, IV, and V and suffices for both enzyme adenylylation (step 1 of the ligation pathway) and phosphodiester bond formation at a preactivated RNA-adenylate end (step 3). The downstream module extending to residue 385 is required for ligation of a phosphorylated RNA substrate, suggesting that it is involved specifically in the second step of the end-joining pathway, the transfer of AMP from the ligase to the 5'-PO(4) end to form RNA-adenylate. The end-healing domain Rnl1-(394-694) consists of a proximal 5'-kinase module with an essential P-loop motif ((404)GSGKS(408)) and a distal 3'-phosphatase module with an essential acylphosphatase motif ((560)DLDGT(564)). Our findings have implications for the evolution of RNA repair systems and their potential roles in virus-host dynamics.

Highlights

  • Of a host-encoded anticodon nuclease, PrrC (5)

  • We show that a single trifunctional baculovirus enzyme, RNA ligase 1 (Rnl1), catalyzes the identical set of RNA repair reactions

  • The end-healing and end-sealing steps of the phage T4encoded tRNA repair pathway are performed by two separate enzymes, a bifunctional polynucleotide kinase/phosphatase (Pnkp) and an ATP-dependent RNA ligase (Rnl1)

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

RNA ligase 1; Pnkp, polynucleotide 5Ј-kinase/3Ј-phosphatase; AcNPV, A. californica nucleopolyhedrovirus; aa, amino acid(s); BSA, bovine serum albumin; DTT, dithiothreitol; pRNA, phosphorylated RNA; AppRNA, RNA-adenylate. The inessentiality of the baculovirus ORF86 gene for replication in a laboratory cell culture model echoes the findings that the RNA repair activities of bacteriophage T4 Rnl and Pnkp are inessential in standard laboratory strains of E. coli used to study T4 replication, which lack the prr locus encoding the cellular anticodon nuclease. A major caveat to this line of thought is that there is no evidence as yet that the AcNPV ORF86 gene product possesses any of the activities imputed to it on the basis of amino acid sequence comparisons.

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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