L-arginine recognition by yeast arginyl-tRNA synthetase

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Abstract

The crystal structure of arginyl-tRNA synthetase (ArgRS) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a class I aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase (aaRS), with L-arginine bound to the active site has been solved at 2.75 Å resolution and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 19.7%. ArgRS is composed predominantly of α-helices and can be divided into five domains, including the class I-specific active site. The N-terminal domain shows striking similarity to some completely unrelated proteins and defines a module which should participate in specific tRNA recognition. The C-terminal domain, which is the putative anticodon-binding module, displays an all-α-helix fold highly similar to that of Escherichia coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase. While ArgRS requires tRNA(Arg) for the first step of the aminoacylation reaction, the results show that its presence is not a prerequisite for L-arginine binding. All H-bond-forming capability of L-arginine is used by the protein for the specific recognition. The guanidinium group forms two salt bridge interactions with two acidic residues, and one H-bond with a tyrosine residue; these three residues are strictly conserved in all ArgRS sequences. This tyrosine is also conserved in other class I aaRS active sites but plays several functional roles. The ArgRS structure allows the definition of a new framework for sequence alignments and subclass definition in class I aaRSs.

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Cavarelli, J., Delagoutte, B., Eriani, G., Gangloff, J., & Moras, D. (1998). L-arginine recognition by yeast arginyl-tRNA synthetase. EMBO Journal, 17(18), 5438–5448. https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/17.18.5438

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