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Three-Point Binding Model

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In mRNA, 3 nucleotides of specific sequence encode 1 amino acid (CODON) R-tRNAR has 3 nucleotides complementary through base pairing to the codon for R ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Three-Point Binding Model


1
Three-Point Binding Model
  • First proposed by Ogsten (1948) to explain
    biological enantioselection/enantiospecificity
  • Serves as a model for chromatographic chiral
    stationary phases
  • Preferential binding occurs via intramolecular
    non-covalent forces
  • H-bonding
  • salt bridge
  • Ionic
  • Dipole-dipole
  • Van der Waals

2
Enantioselection by an Enzyme
CH2OH moieties are different because of
non-equivalent binding sites in the enzyme
3
Three-Point Binding Model - Enantiospecificity
  • Only one enantiomer binds to enzyme is involved
    in reaction

4
With the other enantiomer
5
  • ? we get enantiospecificity (substrate
    biomolecule are chiral)
  • To do this efficiently, we need a large
    biomolecule to align three binding sites to give
    high specificity
  • One problem with model
  • Model is a static representation ? lock key

6
Binding
  • The cost of binding
  • Km (Michaelis constant) small value indicates
    high affinity for substrate
  • ? Kbinding ( 1/Km)
  • Strong binding ? K gt 1
  • ?G -RT ln K
  • ?G must be ve

7
  • ?Gbinding ?Hbinding- T?Sbinding
  • For 2 molecules in, 1 out ?S is ve
  • ? (-T?S) term is ve
  • Entropy disfavors binding of substrate to enzyme
  • To get good binding, need ve ?H (i.e. bond
    formation)
  • Each non-covalent interaction is small (H-bond
    5 kcal/mol), but still gives a ve ?H
  • Enzymes use many FGs to sum up many weak
    non-covalent interactions (i.e. 3 points)

8
  • Back to tyrosyl-tRNA synthase

9
Tyrosyl-tRNA synthase
  • Use binding to orient CO2- nucleophile adjacent
    to P? specifically as electrophile ? specificity
  • Many non-covalent interactions overcome entropy
    of binding H-bonds

Can isolate this complex in the absence of tRNA
10
Tyrosyl-tRNA Synthase.tyr-adenylate
11
Bind ATP
Binding AAs

3 point binding enantiospecificity
ATP, not dATP
Tyr specificity


Main chain contacts
12
Orient ? PO4 towards CO2-

Increase P?


Main chain contacts
13
  • We have examined the crystal structure of
    tyrosyl-tRNA synthase (Tyr ATP bound)
  • Key contacts
  • 3 point binding model for (S)-tyrosine
  • We inferred geometry of bound ATP prior to
    reaction (i.e. ATP is no longer bound to enzyme)
  • Step 1
  • CO2- attacks PO42- (?) giving pentacoordinate P
    (trigonal bipyramidal) intermediate

14
  • Step 2
  • Diphosphate must leave
  • Cannot see this step ? PPi has already left the
    enzyme site in the crystal structure
  • However, can use model building to include P?
    P? of ATP

Thr40 His45 form H-bonds to P?
?
?
Stronger H-bonds are formed in TS than in trig.
Bipyramidal intermediate
?
Lower TS energy ? accelerate collapse of
intermediate
Gln195
15
Tests of Mechanism
  • Site-directed mutagenesis
  • Replace Gln195 with Gly ? (Gln195Gly)
  • Rate slows by gt 1000 fold
  • ??G? 4 kcal/mol
  • Developing -ve charge (on oxygen) in TS is no
    longer stabilized
  • Energy diagram?
  • Other mutants
  • Tyr34Phe
  • His48Gly
  • These other mutations showed smaller decreases in
    ?G
  • All contribute in some way to stabilize TS

16
  • Do Thr-40 His-45 really bind ?/? phosphates?
  • Thr 40 ? Ala (? 7000 fold)
  • His 45 ? Gly (? 300 fold)
  • ? Both decelerate the reaction
  • Double mutant ? 300,000 fold slower!

17
A Chemical Model for Adenylate Reaction
  • Mimic the proximity effect in an enzyme with
    small organic molecules

Rate is comparable to tyrosyl-adenylate formation
? unimolecular reaction
Detect by UV
18
  • Step 2 leads to adenylate CO2H group is now
    activated
  • Once activated, tRNAtyr-OH can bind
  • Step 3
  • 3-OH attacks acyl adenylate
  • -ve charge increases on O of carbonyl ? H-bonding
    stabilizes this charge (more in TS than in SM)
  • ? H-bonding (of Gln) is more important for TS

19
X-ray Structure of tRNAGln
3-OH
  • Example of tRNA bound to tRNA synthase (stable
    without Gln)
  • tRNA (red) binds to enzyme via multiple H-bonds
  • 3-OH oriented close to ATP (consistent with
    proposed mechanism in tyrosyl-tRNA)

ATP
20
Unique Role of Methionine
  • Recall, Methionine is the 1st amino acid in a
    peptide/protein (start codon)
  • As seen previously, Met is also formylated

From N-formyltetrahydrofolate
protected
21
Reaction is catalysed by becoming
pseud-intramolecular (recall DNA template
synthesis) Ribosome holds pieces together ?
Ribosome is cellular workbench
Protection with formyl group allows condensation
one way around only (only one nucleophile)
tRNAfMet falls off P site
Dipeptide moves over to P site
22
Control of Sequence
  • mRNA (messenger RNA) made by copying sequence of
    DNA in gene
  • Goes to ribosome, along with rRNA (ribosomal
    RNA-part of ribosome structure) tRNA (with AAs
    attached)
  • In mRNA, 3 nucleotides of specific sequence
    encode 1 amino acid (CODON)
  • R-tRNAR has 3 nucleotides complementary through
    base pairing to the codon for R
  • Specific binding at A site
  • Codons for start stop control the final protein
    length

23
P site
CODON
A site
Rxn translocation
P site
Tyr
Met
A site
Arg
24
Catalysis of Reaction?
  • Synthesis on ribosome is faster by 107 than rxn
    without ribosome
  • Peptide formation is not catalyzed by protein ?
    no protein within 20 ? of active site
  • rRNA (catalytic RNA) has been proposed

Adenosine from rRNA
25
  • However, modification of bases has shown little
    effect on catalytic activity (2-fold decrease)
  • May be the 2-OH (of tRNA) at last nucleotide on
    P site i.e., the substrate! (see Nature
    Struct. Mol. Biol. (2004), 11, p 1101
  • Modified sugar at 3OH
  • OH ? H
  • OH ? F

Both substitutions reduce rate by 106!
26
adenosine
27
Why the Reduction in the Rate?
P site
A site
Accounts for most of rate acceleration ? e.g. of
catalytic RNA substrate catalysis
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