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Efficient protein-facilitated splicing of the yeast mitochondrial bI5 intron.
- Source :
-
Biochemistry [Biochemistry] 1995 Jun 13; Vol. 34 (23), pp. 7728-38. - Publication Year :
- 1995
-
Abstract
- The splicing factor CBP2 is required to excise the yeast mitochondrial group I intron bI5 in vivo and at low magnesium ion concentrations in vitro. CBP2 binding is strengthened 20-fold by increasing Mg2+ concentrations from 5 to 40 mM, implying the protein binds, in part, to the same structure as that stabilized by the cation. The same transition is also observed as a cooperative increase in the rate of self-processing between 5 and 40 mM Mg2+, providing strong evidence for an RNA folding transition promoted by either Mg2+ or CBP2. The first step of splicing, guanosine addition at the 5' splice site, is rate limiting for exon ligation. At low (5 mM) magnesium ion, reaction (measured as kcat/Km or kcat) is accelerated 3 orders of magnitude by saturating CBP2. At near-saturating Mg2+ (40 mM), acceleration is 8- and 30-fold, for kcat and kcat/Km, respectively, so high magnesium ion concentrations fail to compensate completely for protein facilitation. Thus, self-splicing proceeds via two additional transitions as compared with reaction of the bI5-CBP2 complex, only the first of which is efficiently promoted by the cation. Guanosine 5'-monophosphate binds (Kd approximately 0.3 mM) with the same affinity to bI5 and the bI5-protein complex, supporting independent binding of the nucleophile and CBP2. Substitution of a phosphorothioate at the 5' splice site and pH profiles provide evidence that kcat is limited by chemistry at low pH and by a conformational step at high pH. Because binding by either Mg2+ or CBP2 increases the rate of chemistry more than the rate of the conformational step, in the physiological pH range (7-7.6) the protein-facilitated reaction is limited by a conformation step while self-splicing reaction is limited by chemistry. We conclude that CBP2 makes manifold contributions to bI5 splicing: binding compensates for at least two structural defects and accelerates the rate of the chemistry.
- Subjects :
- Base Sequence
Hydrogen Bonding
Introns
Kinetics
Magnesium metabolism
Molecular Sequence Data
Nucleic Acid Conformation
RNA, Mitochondrial
RNA-Binding Proteins chemistry
Recombinant Proteins
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Thermodynamics
Fungal Proteins metabolism
RNA genetics
RNA Splicing
Ribonucleoproteins
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0006-2960
- Volume :
- 34
- Issue :
- 23
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Biochemistry
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 7540041
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00023a020