Abstract

We purified polyhistidine (His6)-tagged and native Escherichia coli MiaA tRNA prenyltransferase, which uses dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMAPP) to isopentenylate A residues adjacent to the anticodons of most tRNA species that read codons starting with U residues. Kinetic and binding studies of purified MiaA were performed with several substrates, including synthetic wild-type tRNAPhe, the anticodon stem-loop (ACSLPhe) of tRNAPhe, and bulk tRNA isolated from a miaA mutant. Gel filtration shift and steady-state kinetic determinations showed that affinity-purified MiaA had the same properties as native MiaA and was completely active for tRNAPhe binding. MiaA had a Kmapp (tRNA substrates) approximately 3 nM, which is orders of magnitude lower than that of other purified tRNA modification enzymes, a Kmapp (DMAPP) = 632 nM, and a kcatapp = 0.44 s-1. MiaA activity was minimally affected by other modifications or nonsubstrate tRNA species present in bulk tRNA isolated from a miaA mutant. MiaA modified ACSLPhe with a kcatapp/Kmapp substrate specificity about 17-fold lower than that for intact tRNAPhe, mostly due to a decrease in apparent substrate binding affinity. Quantitative Western immunoblotting showed that MiaA is an abundant protein in exponentially growing bacteria (660 monomers per cell; 1.0 microM concentration) and is present in a catalytic excess. However, MiaA activity was strongly competitively inhibited for DMAPP by ATP and ADP (Kiapp = 0.06 microM), suggesting that MiaA activity is inhibited substantially in vivo and that DMAPP may bind to a conserved P-loop motif in this class of prenyltransferases. Band shift, filter binding, and gel filtration shift experiments support a model in which MiaA tRNA substrates are recognized by binding tightly to MiaA multimers possibly in a positively cooperative way (Kdapp approximately 0.07 microM).

Highlights

  • The tRNA prenyltransferase (EC 2.5.1.8) encoded by the miaA gene of Escherichia coli catalyzes the addition of a ⌬2isopentenyl group from dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMAPP)1

  • Stoichiometry of MiaA Binding to RNA Substrates—We further investigated the composition of complexes formed between MiaA and synthetic tRNAPhe or Anticodon Stem-Loop of tRNAPhe (ACSLPhe) molecules by performing band shift and filter binding assays

  • We report here steady-state kinetic and binding studies of the E. coli MiaA tRNA prenyltransferase modification enzyme

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Summary

Kinetic and Binding Properties of MiaA tRNA Prenyltransferase

Designated MOD5, has been developed into an important system to study subcellular localization of proteins [36]. Over 20 years ago, Rosenbaum and Gefter [37] and Soll and co-workers [38] partially purified E. coli MiaA. These pioneering studies demonstrated the substrates and some of the conditions required for MiaA activity and established the sequential pathway for ms2i6A37 biosynthesis in tRNA We report rapid methods of MiaA purification and analyses of MiaA steady-state kinetics and tRNA substrate utilization and binding. We present direct quantitation of the cellular amount of the MiaA tRNA modification enzyme. Our results show that MiaA substrate selection is complicated and likely regulated by several mechanisms

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
Oligonucleotide designation
RESULTS
DMAPP nM
DISCUSSION
Full Text
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