Abstract

An Escherichia coli mutant described by Noguchi et al. [Noguchi, S., et al. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 6544-6550] contains tRNA lacking the hypermodified wobble nucleoside queuosine (Q) due to an inactive tRNA-guanine transglycosylase (TGT). TGT catalyzes the posttranscriptional base exchange of the Q precursor preQ1 with the genetically encoded guanine in tRNA(Asp,Asn,His,Tyr). The mutant tgt gene was cloned and sequenced; it contained a single point mutation resulting in the change of serine 90 to phenylalanine. Overexpression of the mutant gene yielded TGT(S90F) that showed a reduced solubility and did not purify in the same fashion as the wild-type enzyme. TGT(S90F) has no detectable enzymic activity. To determine whether serine 90 performs a catalytic role in the TGT reaction or whether the loss of activity was caused solely by a conformational change of the enzyme, we used site-specific mutagenesis to construct serine-to-alanine (S90A) and serine-to-cysteine (S90C) mutants. Both S90A and S90C mutants were purified in a manner identical to that used for the wild-type enzyme. SDS-PAGE of dimethyl suberimidate-cross-linked mutants showed a pattern identical to that of the wild-type TGT, indicative of a trimeric quaternary structure. Native PAGE of wild-type and mutant TGTs in the absence and presence of substrate tRNA exhibited band shifts indicating that both mutants retain the ability to bind tRNA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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