thiouridine has been researched along with 2-thiouridine* in 51 studies
*2-thiouridine: structure given in first source [MeSH]
*2-thiouridine: structure given in first source [MeSH]
2 review(s) available for thiouridine and 2-thiouridine
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Human mitochondrial tRNAs: biogenesis, function, structural aspects, and diseases.
Mitochondria are eukaryotic organelles that generate most of the energy in the cell by oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). Each mitochondrion contains multiple copies of a closed circular double-stranded DNA genome (mtDNA). Human (mammalian) mtDNA encodes 13 essential subunits of the inner membrane complex responsible for OXPHOS. These mRNAs are translated by the mitochondrial protein synthesis machinery, which uses the 22 species of mitochondrial tRNAs (mt tRNAs) encoded by mtDNA. The unique structural features of mt tRNAs distinguish them from cytoplasmic tRNAs bearing the canonical cloverleaf structure. The genes encoding mt tRNAs are highly susceptible to point mutations, which are a primary cause of mitochondrial dysfunction and are associated with a wide range of pathologies. A large number of nuclear factors involved in the biogenesis and function of mt tRNAs have been identified and characterized, including processing endonucleases, tRNA-modifying enzymes, and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. These nuclear factors are also targets of pathogenic mutations linked to various diseases, indicating the functional importance of mt tRNAs for mitochondrial activity. Topics: Amino Acyl-tRNA Synthetases; Aminoacylation; Animals; Humans; Mammals; MELAS Syndrome; Mitochondria; Mitochondrial Diseases; Mutation; Oxidative Phosphorylation; Protein Conformation; RNA; RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional; RNA, Mitochondrial; RNA, Transfer; Thiouridine; Transcription, Genetic; Uridine | 2011 |
[Functions and biosynthesis pathway of sulfur-modifications in tRNA].
Topics: Anticodon; Escherichia coli; RNA, Transfer; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Thermus thermophilus; Thiouridine | 2010 |
49 other study(ies) available for thiouridine and 2-thiouridine
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A selective and sensitive detection system for 4-thiouridine modification in RNA.
4-Thiouridine (s Topics: Biotin; RNA; RNA, Transfer; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Thiouridine | 2023 |
Identification of a novel 5-aminomethyl-2-thiouridine methyltransferase in tRNA modification.
The uridine at the 34th position of tRNA, which is able to base pair with the 3'-end codon on mRNA, is usually modified to influence many aspects of decoding properties during translation. Derivatives of 5-methyluridine (xm5U), which include methylaminomethyl (mnm-) or carboxymethylaminomethyl (cmnm-) groups at C5 of uracil base, are widely conserved at the 34th position of many prokaryotic tRNAs. In Gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli, a bifunctional MnmC is involved in the last two reactions of the biosynthesis of mnm5(s2)U, in which the enzyme first converts cmnm5(s2)U to 5-aminomethyl-(2-thio)uridine (nm5(s2)U) and subsequently installs the methyl group to complete the formation of mnm5(s2)U. Although mnm5s2U has been identified in tRNAs of Gram-positive bacteria and plants as well, their genomes do not contain an mnmC ortholog and the gene(s) responsible for this modification is unknown. We discovered that MnmM, previously known as YtqB, is the methyltransferase that converts nm5s2U to mnm5s2U in Bacillus subtilis through comparative genomics, gene complementation experiments, and in vitro assays. Furthermore, we determined X-ray crystal structures of MnmM complexed with anticodon stem loop of tRNAGln. The structures provide the molecular basis underlying the importance of U33-nm5s2U34-U35 as the key determinant for the specificity of MnmM. Topics: Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Proteins; Methyltransferases; Multienzyme Complexes; RNA, Transfer; Thiouridine; Uridine | 2023 |
Preparation of a 4'-Thiouridine Building-Block for Solid-Phase Oligonucleotide Synthesis.
Starting from a commercially available thioether, we report a nine-step synthesis of a 4'-thiouridine phosphoramidite building-block. We install the uracil nucleobase using Pummerer-type glycosylation of a sulfoxide intermediate followed by a series of protecting group manipulations to deliver the desired phosphite. Notably, we introduce a 3',5'-O-di-tert-butylsilylene protecting group within a 4'-thiosugar framework, harnessing this to ensure regiospecific installation of the 2'-O-silyl protecting group. We envisage this methodology will be generally applicable to other 4'-thionucleosides and duly support the exploration of their inclusion within related nucleic acid syntheses. © 2023 The Authors. Current Protocols published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. Basic Protocol 1: (2R,3S,4R)-2,3-O-Isopopropylidene-5-O-tert-butyldiphenylsilyl-1-(4-sulfinyl)cyclopentane: Sulfoxidation Basic Protocol 2: 2',3'-O-Isopropylidene-5'-O-tert-butyldiphenylsilyl-4'-thiouridine: Pummerer glycosylation Basic Protocol 3: 4'-Thiouridine: Deprotection Basic Protocol 4: 2'-O-tert-Butyldimethylsilyl-3',5'-di-tert-butylsiloxy-4'-thiouridine: 2',3',5'-O-silylation Basic Protocol 5: 2'-O-tert-Butyldimethylsilyl-4'-thiouridine: Selective 3'-5'-desilylation Basic Protocol 6: 2'-O-tert-Butyldimethylsilyl-5'-O-dimethoxytrityl-4'-thiouridine: 5'-O-dimethoxytritylation Basic Protocol 7: 2'-O-tert-butyldimethylsilyl-3'-O-[(2-cyanoethoxy)(N,N-diisopropylamino)phosphino]-5'-O-dimethoxytrityl-4'-thiouridine: 3'-O-phosphitylation. Topics: ABO Blood-Group System; Oligonucleotides; Thionucleosides; Thiouridine | 2023 |
Sulfur Availability Impacts Accumulation of the 2-Thiouridine tRNA Modification in Bacillus subtilis.
Posttranscriptional modifications to tRNA are critical elements for the folding and functionality of these adaptor molecules. Sulfur modifications in tRNA are installed by specialized enzymes that act on cognate tRNA substrates at specific locations. Most studied organisms contain a general cysteine desulfurase to mobilize sulfur for the synthesis of S-tRNA and other thio-cofactors. Bacillus subtilis and other Gram-positive bacteria encode multiple cysteine desulfurases that partner with specific sulfur acceptors in the biosynthesis of thio-cofactors. This metabolic layout suggests an alternate mode of regulation in these biosynthetic pathways. In this study, tRNA modifications were exploited as a readout for the functionality of pathways involving cysteine desulfurases. These analyses showed that the relative abundance of 2-thiouridine-modified tRNA (s Topics: Bacillus subtilis; Bacterial Proteins; Carbon-Sulfur Lyases; Cysteine; RNA, Transfer; Sulfur; Thiouridine | 2022 |
Prebiotic phosphorylation of 2-thiouridine provides either nucleotides or DNA building blocks via photoreduction.
Breakthroughs in the study of the origin of life have demonstrated how some of the building blocks essential to biology could have been formed under various primordial scenarios, and could therefore have contributed to the chemical evolution of life. Missing building blocks are then sometimes inferred to be products of primitive biosynthesis, which can stretch the limits of plausibility. Here, we demonstrate the synthesis of 2'-deoxy-2-thiouridine, and subsequently 2'-deoxyadenosine and 2-deoxyribose, under prebiotic conditions. 2'-Deoxy-2-thiouridine is produced by photoreduction of 2,2'-anhydro-2-thiouridine, which is in turn formed by phosphorylation of 2-thiouridine-an intermediate of prebiotic RNA synthesis. 2'-Deoxy-2-thiouridine is an effective deoxyribosylating agent and may have functioned as such in either abiotic or proto-enzyme-catalysed pathways to DNA, as demonstrated by its conversion to 2'-deoxyadenosine by reaction with adenine, and 2-deoxyribose by hydrolysis. An alternative prebiotic phosphorylation of 2-thiouridine leads to the formation of its 5'-phosphate, showing that hypotheses in which 2-thiouridine was a key component of early RNA sequences are within the bounds of synthetic credibility. Topics: Deoxyadenosines; Evolution, Chemical; Models, Chemical; Oxidation-Reduction; Phosphorylation; Thiouridine; Ultraviolet Rays | 2019 |
The Role of SufS Is Restricted to Fe-S Cluster Biosynthesis in Escherichia coli.
In Escherichia coli, two different systems that are important for the coordinate formation of Fe-S clusters have been identified, namely, the ISC and SUF systems. The ISC system is the housekeeping Fe-S machinery, which provides Fe-S clusters for numerous cellular proteins. The IscS protein of this system was additionally revealed to be the primary sulfur donor for several sulfur-containing molecules with important biological functions, among which are the molybdenum cofactor (Moco) and thiolated nucleosides in tRNA. Here, we show that deletion of central components of the ISC system in addition to IscS leads to an overall decrease in Fe-S cluster enzyme and molybdoenzyme activity in addition to a decrease in the number of Fe-S-dependent thiomodifications of tRNA, based on the fact that some proteins involved in Moco biosynthesis and tRNA thiolation are Fe-S-dependent. Complementation of the ISC deficient strains with the suf operon restored the activity of Fe-S-containing proteins, including the MoaA protein, which is involved in the conversion of 5'GTP to cyclic pyranopterin monophosphate in the fist step of Moco biosynthesis. While both systems share a high degree of similarity, we show that the function of their respective l-cysteine desulfurase IscS or SufS is specific for each cellular pathway. It is revealed that SufS cannot play the role of IscS in sulfur transfer for the formation of 2-thiouridine, 4-thiouridine, or the dithiolene group of molybdopterin, being unable to interact with TusA or ThiI. The results demonstrate that the role of the SUF system is exclusively restricted to Fe-S cluster assembly in the cell. Topics: Carbon-Sulfur Lyases; Coenzymes; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Proteins; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial; Iron-Sulfur Proteins; Isomerases; Lyases; Metalloproteins; Molybdenum Cofactors; Operon; Pteridines; Recombinant Proteins; RNA, Transfer; Sulfurtransferases; Thiouridine | 2017 |
Nature's Selection of Geranyl Group as a tRNA Modification: The Effects of Chain Length on Base-Pairing Specificity.
The recently discovered geranyl modification on the 2-thio position of wobble U34 residues in tRNA Topics: Base Pairing; Nucleic Acid Conformation; RNA, Bacterial; RNA, Transfer; Structure-Activity Relationship; Terpenes; Thiouridine | 2017 |
Biochemical and structural characterization of oxygen-sensitive 2-thiouridine synthesis catalyzed by an iron-sulfur protein TtuA.
Topics: Bacterial Proteins; Catalysis; Crystallography, X-Ray; Iron-Sulfur Proteins; Ligases; RNA, Bacterial; RNA, Transfer; Thermus thermophilus; Thiouridine | 2017 |
C5-substituents of uridines and 2-thiouridines present at the wobble position of tRNA determine the formation of their keto-enol or zwitterionic forms - a factor important for accuracy of reading of guanosine at the 3΄-end of the mRNA codons.
Modified nucleosides present in the wobble position of the tRNA anticodons regulate protein translation through tuning the reading of mRNA codons. Among 40 of such nucleosides, there are modified uridines containing either a sulfur atom at the C2 position and/or a substituent at the C5 position of the nucleobase ring. It is already evidenced that tRNAs with 2-thiouridines at the wobble position preferentially read NNA codons, while the reading mode of the NNG codons by R5U/R5S2U-containing anticodons is still elusive. For a series of 18 modified uridines and 2-thiouridines, we determined the pKa values and demonstrated that both modifying elements alter the electron density of the uracil ring and modulate the acidity of their N3H proton. In aqueous solutions at physiological pH the 2-thiouridines containing aminoalkyl C5-substituents are ionized in ca. 50%. The results, confirmed also by theoretical calculations, indicate that the preferential binding of the modified units bearing non-ionizable 5-substituents to guanosine in the NNG codons may obey the alternative C-G-like (Watson-Crick) mode, while binding of those bearing aminoalkyl C5-substituents (protonated under physiological conditions) and especially those with a sulfur atom at the C2 position, adopt a zwitterionic form and interact with guanosine via a 'new wobble' pattern. Topics: Amino Acid Transport Systems, Neutral; Codon; Genetic Code; Guanosine; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Protein Biosynthesis; RNA, Messenger; RNA, Transfer; Thiouridine; Uridine | 2017 |
Thiolated uridine substrates and templates improve the rate and fidelity of ribozyme-catalyzed RNA copying.
Ribozyme-catalyzed RNA polymerization is inefficient and error prone. Here we demonstrate that two alternative bases, 2-thio-uridine (s(2)U) and 2-thio-ribo-thymidine (s(2)T), improve the rate and fidelity of ribozyme catalyzed nucleotide addition as NTP substrates and as template bases. We also demonstrate the functionality of s(2)U and s(2)T-containing ribozymes. Topics: Biocatalysis; Kinetics; Reverse Transcription; RNA; RNA, Catalytic; Thiouridine; Transcription, Genetic | 2016 |
Synthesis, base pairing and structure studies of geranylated RNA.
Natural RNAs utilize extensive chemical modifications to diversify their structures and functions. 2-Thiouridine geranylation is a special hydrophobic tRNA modification that has been discovered very recently in several bacteria, such as Escherichia coli, Enterobacter aerogenes, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Salmonella Typhimurium The geranylated residues are located in the first anticodon position of tRNAs specific for lysine, glutamine and glutamic acid. This big hydrophobic terpene functional group affects the codon recognition patterns and reduces frameshifting errors during translation. We aimed to systematically study the structure, function and biosynthesis mechanism of this geranylation pathway, as well as answer the question of why nature uses such a hydrophobic modification in hydrophilic RNA systems. Recently, we have synthesized the deoxy-analog of S-geranyluridine and showed the geranylated T-G pair is much stronger than the geranylated T-A pair and other mismatched pairs in the B-form DNA duplex context, which is consistent with the observation that the geranylated tRNA(Glu) UUC recognizes GAG more efficiently than GAA. In this manuscript we report the synthesis and base pairing specificity studies of geranylated RNA oligos. We also report extensive molecular simulation studies to explore the structural features of the geranyl group in the context of A-form RNA and its effect on codon-anticodon interaction during ribosome binding. Topics: Anticodon; Codon; DNA, B-Form; Escherichia coli; Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Protein Biosynthesis; Ribosomes; RNA; RNA, Transfer; Thiouridine | 2016 |
Identification of a rhodanese-like protein involved in thiouridine biosynthesis in Thermus thermophilus tRNA.
Incorporation of a sulfur atom into 2-thioribothymidine (s Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Bacterial Proteins; Escherichia coli; Gene Expression; Molecular Mimicry; Recombinant Proteins; RNA, Bacterial; RNA, Transfer; Sequence Alignment; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; Sulfurtransferases; Thermus thermophilus; Thiosulfate Sulfurtransferase; Thiouridine | 2016 |
Replacing uridine with 2-thiouridine enhances the rate and fidelity of nonenzymatic RNA primer extension.
The nonenzymatic replication of RNA oligonucleotides is thought to have played a key role in the origin of life prior to the evolution of ribozyme-catalyzed RNA replication. Although the copying of oligo-C templates by 2-methylimidazole-activated G monomers can be quite efficient, the copying of mixed sequence templates, especially those containing A and U, is particularly slow and error-prone. The greater thermodynamic stability of the 2-thio-U(s(2)U):A base pair, relative to the canonical U:A base pair, suggests that replacing U with s(2)U might enhance the rate and fidelity of the nonenzymatic copying of RNA templates. Here we report that this single atom substitution in the activated monomer improves both the kinetics and the fidelity of nonenzymatic primer extension on mixed-sequence RNA templates. In addition, the mean lengths of primer extension products obtained with s(2)U is greater than those obtained with U, augmenting the potential for nonenzymatic replication of heritable function-rich sequences. We suggest that noncanonical nucleotides such as s(2)U may have played a role during the infancy of the RNA world by facilitating the nonenzymatic replication of genomic RNA oligonucleotides. Topics: Kinetics; Models, Molecular; Nucleic Acid Conformation; RNA; Thiouridine | 2015 |
2-Thiouracil deprived of thiocarbonyl function preferentially base pairs with guanine rather than adenine in RNA and DNA duplexes.
2-Thiouracil-containing nucleosides are essential modified units of natural and synthetic nucleic acids. In particular, the 5-substituted-2-thiouridines (S2Us) present in tRNA play an important role in tuning the translation process through codon-anticodon interactions. The enhanced thermodynamic stability of S2U-containing RNA duplexes and the preferred S2U-A versus S2U-G base pairing are appreciated characteristics of S2U-modified molecular probes. Recently, we have demonstrated that 2-thiouridine (alone or within an RNA chain) is predominantly transformed under oxidative stress conditions to 4-pyrimidinone riboside (H2U) and not to uridine. Due to the important biological functions and various biotechnological applications for sulfur-containing nucleic acids, we compared the thermodynamic stabilities of duplexes containing desulfured products with those of 2-thiouracil-modified RNA and DNA duplexes. Differential scanning calorimetry experiments and theoretical calculations demonstrate that upon 2-thiouracil desulfuration to 4-pyrimidinone, the preferred base pairing of S2U with adenosine is lost, with preferred base pairing with guanosine observed instead. Therefore, biological processes and in vitro assays in which oxidative desulfuration of 2-thiouracil-containing components occurs may be altered. Moreover, we propose that the H2U-G base pair is a suitable model for investigation of the preferred recognition of 3'-G-ending versus A-ending codons by tRNA wobble nucleosides, which may adopt a 4-pyrimidinone-type structural motif. Topics: Adenine; Base Pairing; Circular Dichroism; DNA; Guanine; Models, Chemical; Models, Molecular; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Nucleic Acid Denaturation; Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes; RNA; Thermodynamics; Thiouracil; Thiouridine | 2015 |
Abbreviated Pathway for Biosynthesis of 2-Thiouridine in Bacillus subtilis.
The 2-thiouridine (s(2)U) modification of the wobble position in glutamate, glutamine, and lysine tRNA molecules serves to stabilize the anticodon structure, improving ribosomal binding and overall efficiency of the translational process. Biosynthesis of s(2)U in Escherichia coli requires a cysteine desulfurase (IscS), a thiouridylase (MnmA), and five intermediate sulfur-relay enzymes (TusABCDE). The E. coli MnmA adenylates and subsequently thiolates tRNA to form the s(2)U modification. Bacillus subtilis lacks IscS and the intermediate sulfur relay proteins, yet its genome contains a cysteine desulfurase gene, yrvO, directly adjacent to mnmA. The genomic synteny of yrvO and mnmA combined with the absence of the Tus proteins indicated a potential functionality of these proteins in s(2)U formation. Here, we provide evidence that the B. subtilis YrvO and MnmA are sufficient for s(2)U biosynthesis. A conditional B. subtilis knockout strain showed that s(2)U abundance correlates with MnmA expression, and in vivo complementation studies in E. coli IscS- or MnmA-deficient strains revealed the competency of these proteins in s(2)U biosynthesis. In vitro experiments demonstrated s(2)U formation by YrvO and MnmA, and kinetic analysis established a partnership between the B. subtilis proteins that is contingent upon the presence of ATP. Furthermore, we observed that the slow-growth phenotype of E. coli ΔiscS and ΔmnmA strains associated with s(2)U depletion is recovered by B. subtilis yrvO and mnmA. These results support the proposal that the involvement of a devoted cysteine desulfurase, YrvO, in s(2)U synthesis bypasses the need for a complex biosynthetic pathway by direct sulfur transfer to MnmA.. The 2-thiouridine (s(2)U) modification of the wobble position in glutamate, glutamine, and lysine tRNA is conserved in all three domains of life and stabilizes the anticodon structure, thus guaranteeing fidelity in translation. The biosynthesis of s(2)U in Escherichia coli requires seven proteins: the cysteine desulfurase IscS, the thiouridylase MnmA, and five intermediate sulfur-relay enzymes (TusABCDE). Bacillus subtilis and most Gram-positive bacteria lack a complete set of biosynthetic components. Interestingly, the mnmA coding sequence is located adjacent to yrvO, encoding a cysteine desulfurase. In this work, we provide evidence that the B. subtilis YrvO is able to transfer sulfur directly to MnmA. Both proteins are sufficient for s(2)U biosynthesis in a pathway independent of the one used in E. coli. Topics: Bacillus subtilis; Bacterial Proteins; Biosynthetic Pathways; RNA, Transfer; Sulfur; Thiouridine | 2015 |
An efficient approach for conversion of 5-substituted 2-thiouridines built in RNA oligomers into corresponding desulfured 4-pyrimidinone products.
An efficient approach for the desulfuration of C5-substituted 2-thiouridines (R5S2U) bound in the RNA chain exclusively to 4-pyrimidinone nucleoside (R5H2U)-containing RNA products is proposed. This post-synthetic transformation avoids the preparation of a suitably protected H2U phosphoramidite, which otherwise would be necessary for solid-phase synthesis of the modified RNA. Optimization of the desulfuration, which included reaction stoichiometry, time and temperature, allowed to transform a set of ten R5S2U-RNAs into their R5H2U-RNA congeners in ca. 90% yield. Topics: Nucleosides; Pyrimidinones; RNA; RNA, Transfer; Solid-Phase Synthesis Techniques; Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization; Sulfuric Acids; Temperature; Thiouridine | 2015 |
Thermodynamic insights into 2-thiouridine-enhanced RNA hybridization.
Nucleobase modifications dramatically alter nucleic acid structure and thermodynamics. 2-thiouridine (s(2)U) is a modified nucleobase found in tRNAs and known to stabilize U:A base pairs and destabilize U:G wobble pairs. The recently reported crystal structures of s(2)U-containing RNA duplexes do not entirely explain the mechanisms responsible for the stabilizing effect of s(2)U or whether this effect is entropic or enthalpic in origin. We present here thermodynamic evaluations of duplex formation using ITC and UV thermal denaturation with RNA duplexes containing internal s(2)U:A and s(2)U:U pairs and their native counterparts. These results indicate that s(2)U stabilizes both duplexes. The stabilizing effect is entropic in origin and likely results from the s(2)U-induced preorganization of the single-stranded RNA prior to hybridization. The same preorganizing effect is likely responsible for structurally resolving the s(2)U:U pair-containing duplex into a single conformation with a well-defined H-bond geometry. We also evaluate the effect of s(2)U on single strand conformation using UV- and CD-monitored thermal denaturation and on nucleoside conformation using (1)H NMR spectroscopy, MD and umbrella sampling. These results provide insights into the effects that nucleobase modification has on RNA structure and thermodynamics and inform efforts toward improving both ribozyme-catalyzed and nonenzymatic RNA copying. Topics: Molecular Dynamics Simulation; Nucleic Acid Denaturation; Nucleic Acid Hybridization; Nucleosides; RNA; RNA, Double-Stranded; Thermodynamics; Thiouridine | 2015 |
The influence of the C5 substituent on the 2-thiouridine desulfuration pathway and the conformational analysis of the resulting 4-pyrimidinone products.
In recent years, increasing attention has been focused on the posttranscriptional modifications present in transfer RNAs (tRNAs), which have been suggested to constitute another level of regulation of gene expression. The most representative among them are the 5-substituted 2-thiouridines (R5S2U), which are located in the wobble position of the anticodon and play a fundamental role in the tuning of the translation process. On the other hand, sulfur-containing biomolecules are the primary site for the attack of reactive oxygen species (ROS). We have previously demonstrated that under in vitro conditions that mimic oxidative stress in the cell, the S2U alone or bound to an RNA chain undergoes desulfuration to yield uridine and 4-pyrimidinone nucleoside (H2U) products. The reaction is pH- and concentration-dependent. In this study, for the first time, we demonstrate that the substituent at the C5 position of the 2-thiouracil ring of R5S2Us influences the desulfuration pathway, and thus the products ratio. As the substituent R changes, the amount of R5H2U increases in the order H->CH3O->CH3OC(O)CH2->HOC(O)CH2NHCH2-≈ CH3NHCH2-, and this effect is more pronounced at lower pH. The conformational analysis of the resulting R5H2U products indicates that independent of the nature of the R5 substituent, the R5H2U nucleosides predominantly adopt a C2'-endo sugar ring conformation, as opposed to the preferred C3'-endo conformation of the parent R5S2Us. Topics: Humans; Models, Molecular; Oxidative Stress; Pyrimidinones; RNA, Transfer; Thiouridine | 2015 |
Transformation of a wobble 2-thiouridine to 2-selenouridine via S-geranyl-2-thiouridine as a possible cellular pathway.
The newly discovered S-geranylated 2-thiouridines (geS2U) (Dumelin et al., 2012) and 2-selenouridines (Se2U) were recently shown to be synthesized by a single enzyme (selenouridine synthase, SelU) through two distinct pathways using the same 2-thiouridine substrate (S2U); however, no clear catalytic mechanism was proposed. We suggest that S-geranyl-2-thiouridine is an intermediate of the SelU-catalyzed conversion of S2U to Se2U. The successful chemical transformation of S2U→geS2U→Se2U is demonstrated here as an initial approximation of the intracellular pathway. The structure of Se2U was confirmed by spectroscopic methods, which included, for the first time, (77)Se NMR data (δ 354ppm). Topics: Biosynthetic Pathways; Cells; Molecular Structure; Organoselenium Compounds; Terpenes; Thiouridine; Uridine | 2014 |
Structural basis for hypermodification of the wobble uridine in tRNA by bifunctional enzyme MnmC.
Methylaminomethyl modification of uridine or 2-thiouridine (mnm5U34 or mnm5s2U34) at the wobble position of tRNAs specific for glutamate, lysine and arginine are observed in Escherichia coli and allow for specific recognition of codons ending in A or G. In the biosynthetic pathway responsible for this post-transcriptional modification, the bifunctional enzyme MnmC catalyzes the conversion of its hypermodified substrate carboxymethylaminomethyl uridine (cmnm5U34) to mnm5U34. MnmC catalyzes the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)-dependent oxidative cleavage of carboxymethyl group from cmnm5U34 via an imine intermediate to generate aminomethyl uridine (nm5U34), which is subsequently methylated by S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) to yield methylaminomethyl uridine (mnm5U34).. The X-ray crystal structures of SAM/FAD-bound bifunctional MnmC from Escherichia coli and Yersinia pestis, and FAD-bound bifunctional MnmC from Yersinia pestis were determined and the catalytic functions verified in an in vitro assay.. The crystal structures of MnmC from two Gram negative bacteria reveal the overall architecture of the enzyme and the relative disposition of the two independent catalytic domains: a Rossmann-fold domain containing the SAM binding site and an FAD containing domain structurally homologous to glycine oxidase from Bacillus subtilis. The structures of MnmC also reveal the detailed atomic interactions at the interdomain interface and provide spatial restraints relevant to the overall catalytic mechanism. Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Binding Sites; Catalytic Domain; Crystallography, X-Ray; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Proteins; Flavin-Adenine Dinucleotide; Molecular Sequence Data; Multienzyme Complexes; Recombinant Proteins; RNA, Transfer; S-Adenosylmethionine; Sequence Alignment; Static Electricity; Thiouridine; Uridine; Yersinia pestis | 2013 |
Structural and mechanistic basis for enhanced translational efficiency by 2-thiouridine at the tRNA anticodon wobble position.
The 2-thiouridine (s(2)U) at the wobble position of certain bacterial and eukaryotic tRNAs enhances aminoacylation kinetics, assists proper codon-anticodon base pairing at the ribosome A-site, and prevents frameshifting during translation. By mass spectrometry of affinity-purified native Escherichia coli tRNA1(Gln)UUG, we show that the complete modification at the wobble position 34 is 5-carboxyaminomethyl-2-thiouridine (cmnm(5)s(2)U). The crystal structure of E. coli glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS) bound to native tRNA1(Gln) and ATP demonstrates that cmnm(5)s(2)U34 improves the order of a previously unobserved 11-amino-acid surface loop in the distal β-barrel domain of the enzyme and imparts other local rearrangements of nearby amino acids that create a binding pocket for the 2-thio moiety. Together with previously solved structures, these observations explain the degenerate recognition of C34 and modified U34 by GlnRS. Comparative pre-steady-state aminoacylation kinetics of native tRNA1(Gln), synthetic tRNA1(Gln) containing s(2)U34 as sole modification, and unmodified wild-type and mutant tRNA1(Gln) and tRNA2(Gln) transcripts demonstrates that the exocyclic sulfur moiety improves tRNA binding affinity to GlnRS 10-fold compared with the unmodified transcript and that an additional fourfold improvement arises from the presence of the cmnm(5) moiety. Measurements of Gln-tRNA(Gln) interactions at the ribosome A-site show that the s(2)U modification enhances binding affinity to the glutamine codons CAA and CAG and increases the rate of GTP hydrolysis by E. coli EF-Tu by fivefold. Topics: Adenosine Triphosphate; Amino Acyl-tRNA Synthetases; Anticodon; Base Sequence; Crystallography, X-Ray; Escherichia coli; Molecular Docking Simulation; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Nucleosides; Protein Binding; Protein Biosynthesis; Protein Conformation; Ribosomes; RNA, Transfer; RNA, Transfer, Gln; Thiouridine | 2013 |
Altered 2-thiouridylation impairs mitochondrial translation in reversible infantile respiratory chain deficiency.
Childhood-onset mitochondrial encephalomyopathies are severe, relentlessly progressive conditions. However, reversible infantile respiratory chain deficiency (RIRCD), due to a homoplasmic mt-tRNA(Glu) mutation, and reversible infantile hepatopathy, due to tRNA 5-methylaminomethyl-2-thiouridylate methyltransferase (TRMU) deficiency, stand out by showing spontaneous recovery, and provide the key to treatments of potential broader relevance. Modification of mt-tRNA(Glu) is a possible functional link between these two conditions, since TRMU is responsible for 2-thiouridylation of mt-tRNA(Glu), mt-tRNA(Lys) and mt-tRNA(Gln). Here we show that down-regulation of TRMU in RIRCD impairs 2-thiouridylation and exacerbates the effect of the mt-tRNA(Glu) mutation by triggering a mitochondrial translation defect in vitro. Skeletal muscle of RIRCD patients in the symptomatic phase showed significantly reduced 2-thiouridylation. Supplementation with l-cysteine, which is required for optimal TRMU function, rescued respiratory chain enzyme activities in human cell lines of patients with RIRCD as well as deficient TRMU. Our results show that l-cysteine supplementation is a potential treatment for RIRCD and for TRMU deficiency, and is likely to have broader application for the growing group of intra-mitochondrial translation disorders. Topics: Cell Line; Cysteine; Gene Expression Regulation; Humans; Mitochondria; Mitochondrial Diseases; Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathies; Mitochondrial Proteins; Muscle, Skeletal; Mutation; Myoblasts; Oxidative Phosphorylation; Protein Biosynthesis; RNA, Transfer; Thiouridine; tRNA Methyltransferases | 2013 |
Desulfuration of 2-thiouridine with hydrogen peroxide in the physiological pH range 6.6-7.6 is pH-dependent and results in two distinct products.
The 2-thiomodified nucleosides, located at first position of tRNAs anticodon, may constitute a primary target for oxidative attack under conditions of oxidative stress. Desulfuration of 2-thiouridine (S2U) was investigated in the (1)H NMR scale in the presence of 100mM H2O2 and phosphate buffer in the physiological pH range, from pH 6.6 to 7.6. The obtained data demonstrate an intriguing result that within one unit of the pH range uridine is the major product of the S2U desulfuration in the pH 7.6, while the 4-pyrimidinone nucleoside (H2U) is dominant in pH 6.6. The possible desulfuration pathway and the biological importance of the transformation of S2U either to U or H2U are discussed in the context of the tRNA oxidative damage. Topics: Anticodon; Hydrogen Peroxide; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; RNA, Transfer; Sulfur; Thiouridine; Uridine | 2013 |
mt-tRNA components: synthesis of (2-thio)uridines modified with blocked glycine/taurine moieties at C-5,1.
In this paper, we discuss the usefulness of reductive amination of 5-formyl-2',3'-O-isopropylidene(-2-thio)uridine with glycine or taurine esters in the presence of sodium triacetoxyborohydride (NaBH(OAc)3) for the synthesis of the native mitochondrial (mt) tRNA components 5-carboxymethylaminomethyl(-2-thio)uridine (cmnm(5)(s(2))U) and 5-taurinomethyl(-2-thio)uridine (τm(5)(s(2))U) with a blocked amino acid function. 2-(Trimethylsilyl)ethyl and 2-(p-nitrophenyl)ethyl esters of glycine and 2-(2,4,5-trifluorophenyl)ethyl ester of taurine were selected as protection of carboxylic and sulfonic acid residues, respectively. The first synthesis of 5-formyl-2',3'-O-isopropylidene-2-thiouridine is also reported. Topics: Glycine; Indicators and Reagents; Mitochondria; RNA, Transfer; Taurine; Thiouridine | 2013 |
Modified Foxp3 mRNA protects against asthma through an IL-10-dependent mechanism.
Chemically modified mRNA is capable of inducing therapeutic levels of protein expression while circumventing the threat of genomic integration often associated with viral vectors. We utilized this novel therapeutic tool to express the regulatory T cell transcription factor, FOXP3, in a time- and site-specific fashion in murine lung, in order to prevent allergic asthma in vivo. We show that modified Foxp3 mRNA rebalanced pulmonary T helper cell responses and protected from allergen-induced tissue inflammation, airway hyperresponsiveness, and goblet cell metaplasia in 2 asthma models. This protection was conferred following delivery of modified mRNA either before or after the onset of allergen challenge, demonstrating its potential as both a preventive and a therapeutic agent. Mechanistically, FOXP3 induction controlled Th2 and Th17 inflammation by regulating innate immune cell recruitment through an IL-10-dependent pathway. The protective effects of FOXP3 could be reversed by depletion of IL-10 or administration of recombinant IL-17A or IL-23. Delivery of Foxp3 mRNA to sites of inflammation may offer a novel, safe therapeutic tool for the treatment of allergic asthma and other diseases driven by an imbalance in helper T cell responses. Topics: Airway Remodeling; Airway Resistance; Animals; Asthma; Cell Line; Cytidine; Female; Forkhead Transcription Factors; Gene Expression; Genetic Therapy; Humans; Immunity, Innate; Inflammation Mediators; Interleukin-10; Interleukin-17; Interleukin-23; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Mice, Knockout; Pyroglyphidae; RNA, Messenger; Th17 Cells; Th2 Cells; Thiouridine; Transfection | 2013 |
Crystal structures of murine norovirus-1 RNA-dependent RNA polymerase in complex with 2-thiouridine or ribavirin.
Murine norovirus-1 (MNV-1) shares many features with human norovirus (HuNoV) and both are classified within the norovirus genus of Caliciviridae family. MNV-1 is used as the surrogate for HuNoV research since it is the only form that can be grown in cell culture. HuNoV and MNV-1 RNA dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) proteins with the sequence identity of 59% show essentially identical conformations. Here we report the first structural evidence of 2-thiouridine (2TU) or ribavirin binding to MNV-1 RdRp, based on the crystal structures determined at 2.2Å and 2.5Å resolutions, respectively. Cellular and biochemical studies revealed stronger inhibitory effect of 2TU on the replication of MNV-1 in RAW 264.7 cells, compared to that of ribavirin. Our complex structures highlight the key interactions involved in recognition of the nucleoside analogs which block the active site of the viral RNA polymerase. Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Binding Sites; Cell Line; Crystallography, X-Ray; Mice; Models, Molecular; Molecular Sequence Data; Norovirus; Protein Binding; Ribavirin; RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase; Thiouridine; Viral Proteins; Virus Replication | 2012 |
Prediction of the stability of modified RNA duplexes based on deformability analysis: oligoribonucleotide derivatives modified with 2'-O-cyanoethyl-5-propynyl-2-thiouridine as a promising component.
We describe a method to predict the stability of a modified RNA duplex. Ten unique modified RNA duplexes showed a linear relationship between the calculated and experimentally determined duplex stabilities. Topics: Nucleic Acid Conformation; Oligoribonucleotides; RNA; RNA Stability; Thiouridine; Transition Temperature | 2012 |
The 2-thiouridine unit in the RNA strand is desulfured predominantly to 4-pyrimidinone nucleoside under in vitro oxidative stress conditions.
The 2-thiouridine (S2U) unit in the RNA strand is predominantly desulfured with H(2)O(2) to 4-pyrimidinone nucleoside (H2U). The resulting H2U-RNA exhibits significantly lower binding affinity to its complementary strand and in certain conditions undergoes strand scission. These results may explain the tRNA loss of biological function in oxidative stress conditions. Topics: Base Pairing; Hydrogen Peroxide; Oxidation-Reduction; Oxidative Stress; Pyrimidinones; RNA, Transfer; Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization; Sulfur; Thiouridine; Transition Temperature | 2011 |
Theoretical study on conformational preferences of ribose in 2-thiouridine--the role of the 2'OH group.
Conformational changes in ribose are well-known to play a significant role in biomolecular identification. The mechanism of selectivity towards C3'-endo conformation (conformer b) in ribose of 2-thiouridine has been studied using DFT (B3LYP) and MP2 methodology, together with 6-31+G(d,p) basis set. The polarity of the C2S2 bond is enhanced due to the orientation of H2' towards the S2 atoms, which leads to a difference in the corresponding bond lengths, the atomic charges and the vO2'H2' stretch vibrations in all the conformers. NBO analysis shows that charge transfer mainly occurs in the C2N3 and C2S2 orbitals. The higher stability of conformer b is attributed to its larger orbital interaction energies within the 2-thiouracil base, and total orbital interaction energies of conformer b. Our conclusion is that the distant electrostatic rather than hydrogen bonding effects between 2'OH and the S2 atoms play the dominant role in the orbital interaction, and enhance the selectivity towards the C3'-endo conformation of ribose. Topics: Models, Chemical; Models, Molecular; Molecular Conformation; Ribose; Thermodynamics; Thiouridine; Water | 2010 |
A forward-genetic screen and dynamic analysis of lambda phage host-dependencies reveals an extensive interaction network and a new anti-viral strategy.
Latently infecting viruses are an important class of virus that plays a key role in viral evolution and human health. Here we report a genome-scale forward-genetics screen for host-dependencies of the latently-infecting bacteriophage lambda. This screen identified 57 Escherichia coli (E. coli) genes--over half of which have not been previously associated with infection--that when knocked out inhibited lambda phage's ability to replicate. Our results demonstrate a highly integrated network between lambda and its host, in striking contrast to the results from a similar screen using the lytic-only infecting T7 virus. We then measured the growth of E. coli under normal and infected conditions, using wild-type and knockout strains deficient in one of the identified host genes, and found that genes from the same pathway often exhibited similar growth dynamics. This observation, combined with further computational and experimental analysis, led us to identify a previously unannotated gene, yneJ, as a novel regulator of lamB gene expression. A surprising result of this work was the identification of two highly conserved pathways involved in tRNA thiolation-one pathway is required for efficient lambda replication, while the other has anti-viral properties inhibiting lambda replication. Based on our data, it appears that 2-thiouridine modification of tRNAGlu, tRNAGln, and tRNALys is particularly important for the efficient production of infectious lambda phage particles. Topics: Bacteriophage lambda; Escherichia coli; Gene Expression Regulation; Genes, Bacterial; Genes, Viral; Genetic Testing; Host-Pathogen Interactions; Thiouridine; Virus Replication | 2010 |
Mechanistic characterization of the sulfur-relay system for eukaryotic 2-thiouridine biogenesis at tRNA wobble positions.
The wobble modification in tRNAs, 5-methoxycarbonylmethyl-2-thiouridine (mcm(5)s(2)U), is required for the proper decoding of NNR codons in eukaryotes. The 2-thio group confers conformational rigidity of mcm(5)s(2)U by largely fixing the C3'-endo ribose puckering, ensuring stable and accurate codon-anticodon pairing. We have identified five genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, YIL008w (URM1), YHR111w (UBA4), YOR251c (TUM1), YNL119w (NCS2) and YGL211w (NCS6), that are required for 2-thiolation of mcm(5)s(2)U. An in vitro sulfur transfer experiment revealed that Tum1p stimulated the cysteine desulfurase of Nfs1p, and accepted persulfide sulfurs from Nfs1p. URM1 is a ubiquitin-related modifier, and UBA4 is an E1-like enzyme involved in protein urmylation. The carboxy-terminus of Urm1p was activated as an acyl-adenylate (-COAMP), then thiocarboxylated (-COSH) by Uba4p. The activated thiocarboxylate can be utilized in the subsequent reactions for 2-thiouridine formation, mediated by Ncs2p/Ncs6p. We could successfully reconstitute the 2-thiouridine formation in vitro using recombinant proteins. This study revealed that 2-thiouridine formation shares a pathway and chemical reactions with protein urmylation. The sulfur-flow of eukaryotic 2-thiouridine formation is distinct mechanism from the bacterial sulfur-relay system which is based on the persulfide chemistry. Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Base Sequence; Carbon-Sulfur Lyases; Gene Deletion; Genes, Fungal; Genome, Fungal; Genomics; Mitochondrial Proteins; Molecular Sequence Data; Protein Structure, Tertiary; RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional; RNA, Transfer; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins; Sulfides; Sulfur; Sulfurtransferases; Thiosulfate Sulfurtransferase; Thiouridine | 2009 |
Chemical synthesis and properties of 5-taurinomethyluridine and 5-taurinomethyl-2-thiouridine.
Unique taurine-containing uridine derivatives, 5-taurinomethyluridine (tau m5U) and 5-taurinomethyl-2-thiouridine (tau m5s2U), which were discovered in mammalian mitochondrial tRNAs, exist at the first position of the anticodon. In this paper, we report the first efficient synthesis of tau m5U and tau m5s2U and describe their physicochemical properties. These modified ribonucleosides were synthesized by the reaction of 5-substituted uridine derivatives with a tetrabutylammonium salt of taurine that is highly reactive and well-soluble in common organic solvents. UV and 1H NMR spectrometric studies revealed the structural properties of the taurine-containing base moieties and the sugar conformations of these modified ribonucleosides. Topics: Molecular Structure; Spectrum Analysis; Taurine; Thiouridine; Uridine | 2009 |
The structure of the human tRNALys3 anticodon bound to the HIV genome is stabilized by modified nucleosides and adjacent mismatch base pairs.
Replication of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) requires base pairing of the reverse transcriptase primer, human tRNA(Lys3), to the viral RNA. Although the major complementary base pairing occurs between the HIV primer binding sequence (PBS) and the tRNA's 3'-terminus, an important discriminatory, secondary contact occurs between the viral A-rich Loop I, 5'-adjacent to the PBS, and the modified, U-rich anticodon domain of tRNA(Lys3). The importance of individual and combined anticodon modifications to the tRNA/HIV-1 Loop I RNA's interaction was determined. The thermal stabilities of variously modified tRNA anticodon region sequences bound to the Loop I of viral sub(sero)types G and B were analyzed and the structure of one duplex containing two modified nucleosides was determined using NMR spectroscopy and restrained molecular dynamics. The modifications 2-thiouridine, s(2)U(34), and pseudouridine, Psi(39), appreciably stabilized the interaction of the anticodon region with the viral subtype G and B RNAs. The structure of the duplex results in two coaxially stacked A-form RNA stems separated by two mismatched base pairs, U(162)*Psi(39) and G(163)*A(38), that maintained a reasonable A-form helix diameter. The tRNA's s(2)U(34) stabilized the interaction between the A-rich HIV Loop I sequence and the U-rich anticodon, whereas the tRNA's Psi(39) stabilized the adjacent mismatched pairs. Topics: Anticodon; Base Pair Mismatch; Base Sequence; Carbohydrates; Genome, Viral; HIV-1; Humans; Models, Molecular; Molecular Sequence Data; Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular; Protons; Pseudouridine; RNA, Transfer, Lys; RNA, Viral; Thermodynamics; Thiouridine | 2009 |
Preparation of short interfering RNA containing the modified nucleosides 2-thiouridine, pseudouridine, or dihydrouridine.
Modified uridine derivatives such as 2-thiouridine (s(2)U), pseudouridine (Psi), and dihydrouridine (D) are naturally existing nucleoside units identified in tRNA molecules. Recently, we have shown that such base-modified units introduced into functionally important sites of siRNA modulate thermodynamic stability of the duplex and its gene silencing activity. In this unit, we describe chemical synthesis of 3'-phosphoramidite derivatives of s(2)U and D units (the 3'-phosphoramidite derivative of Psi is commercially available), and their use for the synthesis of RNA oligonucleotides according to the routine phosphoramidite protocol. The only exception concerns the oxidation step with I(2)/pyridine/water which, if applied towards oligonucleotides containing s(2)U units, would lead to the loss of sulfur. Therefore, to avoid this side reaction, tert-butyl hydroperoxide is used as an oxidizing reagent. After the oligonucleotide chain assembly is completed, the resulting oligomer is deprotected under mild basic conditions (MeNH(2)/EtOH/DMSO) to avoid dihydrouracil ring opening, which is a reported side-reaction during the routine synthesis of dihydrouridine-containing RNA. Oligonucleotides modified with s(2)U, D, or Psi units are useful models for structure-function studies. Here, the procedure for preparation of siRNA duplexes is described. Topics: Chemistry, Organic; Oligonucleotides; Pseudouridine; RNA, Small Interfering; Thiouridine; Uridine | 2009 |
Chemical synthesis of LNA-2-thiouridine and its influence on stability and selectivity of oligonucleotide binding to RNA.
Hybridization to RNA is important for many applications, including antisense therapeutics, RNA interference, and microarray screening. Similar thermodynamic stabilities of A-U and G-U base pairs result in difficulties in selective binding to RNA. Moreover, A-U pairs are weaker than G-C pairs so that binding is sometimes weak when many A-U pairs are present. It is known, however, that replacement of uridine with 2-thiouridine significantly improves binding and selectivity. To test for additional improvement of binding and of the specificity for binding A over G, LNA-2-thiouridine was synthesized for the first time and incorporated into many LNA-2'-O-methyl-RNA/RNA duplexes. UV melting was used to measure the thermodynamic effect of replacing 2'-O-methyluridine with 2'-O-methyl-2-thiouridine or LNA-2-thiouridine. The 2-thiouridine usually enhances binding and selectivity. Selectivity is optimized when a single 2-thiouridine is placed at an internal position in a duplex. Topics: Nucleic Acid Hybridization; Nucleotides; Oligonucleotides; Pyrenes; Ribose; RNA; RNA, Double-Stranded; Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet; Thermodynamics; Thiouridine; Transition Temperature; Uridine | 2009 |
Facilitating RNA structure prediction with microarrays.
Determining RNA secondary structure is important for understanding structure-function relationships and identifying potential drug targets. This paper reports the use of microarrays with heptamer 2'-O-methyl oligoribonucleotides to probe the secondary structure of an RNA and thereby improve the prediction of that secondary structure. When experimental constraints from hybridization results are added to a free-energy minimization algorithm, the prediction of the secondary structure of Escherichia coli 5S rRNA improves from 27 to 92% of the known canonical base pairs. Optimization of buffer conditions for hybridization and application of 2'-O-methyl-2-thiouridine to enhance binding and improve discrimination between AU and GU pairs are also described. The results suggest that probing RNA with oligonucleotide microarrays can facilitate determination of secondary structure. Topics: Base Pairing; Base Sequence; Binding Sites; Computational Biology; Escherichia coli; Methylation; Molecular Sequence Data; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Nucleic Acid Hybridization; Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis; Ribonuclease H; RNA Probes; RNA, Ribosomal, 5S; Thermodynamics; Thiouridine | 2006 |
Structural basis for sulfur relay to RNA mediated by heterohexameric TusBCD complex.
Uridine at wobble position 34 of tRNA(Lys), tRNA(Glu), and tRNA(Gln) is exclusively modified into 2-thiouridine (s2U), which is crucial for both precise codon recognition and recognition by the cognate aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. Recent Escherichia coli genetic studies revealed that the products of five novel genes, tusABCDE, function in the s2U modification. Here, we solved the 2.15 angstroms crystal structure of the E. coli TusBCD complex, a sulfur transfer mediator, forming a heterohexamer composed of a dimer of the heterotrimer. Structure-based sequence alignment suggested two putative active site Cys residues, Cys79 (in TusC) and Cys78 (in TusD), which are exposed on the hexameric complex. In vivo mutant analyses revealed that only Cys78, in the TusD subunit, participates in sulfur transfer during the s2U modification process. Since the single Cys acts as a catalytic residue, we proposed that TusBCD mediates sulfur relay via a putative persulfide state of the TusD subunit. Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Binding Sites; Crystallography, X-Ray; Cysteine; DNA Mutational Analysis; Escherichia coli Proteins; Models, Molecular; Molecular Sequence Data; Protein Subunits; RNA, Transfer; Sequence Alignment; Thiouridine | 2006 |
Orchestrating sulfur incorporation into RNA.
Topics: Bacterial Proteins; Carbon-Sulfur Lyases; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Proteins; Genes, Bacterial; Models, Biological; Models, Chemical; Models, Genetic; Mutation; RNA; RNA, Transfer; Sulfur; Thionucleosides; Thiouridine | 2006 |
Structural effects of hypermodified nucleosides in the Escherichia coli and human tRNALys anticodon loop: the effect of nucleosides s2U, mcm5U, mcm5s2U, mnm5s2U, t6A, and ms2t6A.
Previous nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies of unmodified and pseudouridine39-modified tRNA(Lys) anticodon stem loops (ASLs) show that significant structural rearrangements must occur to attain a canonical anticodon loop conformation. The Escherichia coli tRNA(Lys) modifications mnm(5)s(2)U34 and t(6)A37 have indeed been shown to remodel the anticodon loop, although significant dynamic flexibility remains within the weakly stacked U35 and U36 anticodon residues. The present study examines the individual effects of mnm(5)s(2)U34, s(2)U34, t(6)A37, and Mg(2+) on tRNA(Lys) ASLs to decipher how the E. coli modifications accomplish the noncanonical to canonical structural transition. We also investigated the effects of the corresponding human tRNA(Lys,3) versions of the E. coli modifications, using NMR to analyze tRNA ASLs containing the nucleosides mcm(5)U34, mcm(5)s(2)U34, and ms(2)t(6)A37. The human wobble modification has a less dramatic loop remodeling effect, presumably because of the absence of a positive charge on the mcm(5) side chain. Nonspecific magnesium effects appear to play an important role in promoting anticodon stacking. Paradoxically, both t(6)A37 and ms(2)t(6)A37 actually decrease anticodon stacking compared to A37 by promoting U36 bulging. Rather than stack with U36, the t(6)A37 nucleotide in the free tRNAs is prepositioned to form a cross-strand stack with the first codon nucleotide as seen in the recent crystal structures of tRNA(Lys) ASLs bound to the 30S ribosomal subunit. Wobble modifications, t(6)A37, and magnesium each make unique contributions toward promoting canonical tRNA structure in the fundamentally dynamic tRNA(Lys)(UUU) anticodon. Topics: Adenosine; Anticodon; Base Pairing; Binding Sites; Codon; Escherichia coli; Genetic Engineering; Humans; Magnesium; Models, Molecular; Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Pseudouridine; Ribosomes; RNA, Transfer, Lys; Thermodynamics; Thionucleosides; Thiouridine | 2005 |
MnmA and IscS are required for in vitro 2-thiouridine biosynthesis in Escherichia coli.
Thionucleosides are uniquely present in tRNA. In many organisms, tRNA specific for Lys, Glu, and Gln contain hypermodified 2-thiouridine (s(2)U) derivatives at wobble position 34. The s(2) group of s(2)U34 stabilizes anticodon structure, confers ribosome binding ability to tRNA and improves reading frame maintenance. Earlier studies have mapped and later identified the mnmA gene (formerly asuE or trmU) as required for the s(2)U modification in Escherichia coli. We have prepared a nonpolar deletion of the mnmA gene and show that it is not required for viability in E. coli. We also cloned mnmA from E. coli, and overproduced and purified the protein. Using a gel mobility shift assay, we show that MnmA binds to unmodified E. coli tRNA(Lys) with affinity in the low micromolar range. MnmA does not bind observably to the nonsubstrate E. coli tRNA(Phe). Corroborating this, tRNA(Glu) protected MnmA from tryptic digestion. ATP also protected MnmA from trypsinolysis, suggesting the presence of an ATP binding site that is consistent with analysis of the amino acid sequence. We have reconstituted the in vitro biosynthesis of s(2)U using unmodified E. coli tRNA(Glu) as a substrate. The activity requires MnmA, Mg-ATP, l-cysteine, and the cysteine desulfurase IscS. HPLC analysis of thiolated tRNA digests using [(35)S]cysteine confirms that the product of the in vitro reaction is s(2)U. As in the case of 4-thiouridine synthesis, purified IscS-persulfide is able to provide sulfur for in vitro s(2)U synthesis in the absence of cysteine. Small RNAs that represent the anticodon stem loops for tRNA(Glu) and tRNA(Lys) are substrates of comparable activity to the full length tRNAs, indicating that the major determinants for substrate recognition are contained within this region. Topics: Aminopeptidases; Anticodon; Binding Sites; Carbon-Sulfur Lyases; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Proteins; Kinetics; Plasmids; RNA-Binding Proteins; RNA, Transfer, Amino Acyl; Substrate Specificity; Sulfides; Sulfur; Thiouridine | 2003 |
Synthesis and properties of 2'-O-alkylated 2-thiouridine derivatives and oligonucleotides containing 2'-O-alkylated 2-thiouridine derivatives.
Oligonucleotides containing 2-thiouridine form stable RNA duplexes with complementary RNAs and show high selectivity in the base pair recognition. Moreover, alkylation of the 2'-hydroxyl group provides new insight into developments of new antisense RNAs capable of formation of more stable duplexes with target RNAs. Oligonucleotides having such properties are desirable as agents for the antisense strategy and SNPs analysis. In this study, we report a new method for the synthesis of 2-thiouridine and its 2'-O-alkylated derivatives. The hybridization and structural properties of these modified nucleosides were also studied in detail by the 1H NMR analysis and melting temperature (Tm) measurement of RNA duplexes. Topics: Alkylation; Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular; Oligonucleotides; Thiouridine | 2003 |
Conserved bases in the TPsi C loop of tRNA are determinants for thermophile-specific 2-thiouridylation at position 54.
2-Thioribothymidine (s(2)T) is a post-transcriptionally modified nucleoside of U54 specifically found in thermophilic bacterial tRNAs. The 2-thiocarbonyl group of s(2)T54 is known to be responsible for the thermostability of tRNA. The s(2)T54 content in tRNA varies depending on the cultivation temperature, a feature that confers thermal adaptation of protein synthesis in Thermus thermophilus. Little is known about the biosynthesis of s(2)T, including the sulfur donor, modification enzyme, and the tRNA structural requirements. To characterize 2-thiolation at position 54 in tRNA, we constructed an in vivo expression system using tRNA(Asp) with an altered sequence and a host-vector for T. thermophilus. We were able to detect in vivo activity of s(2)T54 thiolase using phenyl mercuric gel electrophoresis followed by Northern hybridization. 2-Thiolation at position 54 was identified in the precursor form of the tRNA, indicating that 2-thiolation precedes tRNA processing. To ascertain the elements that determine 2-thiolation in tRNA, systematic site-directed mutagenesis was carried out using the tRNA(Asp) gene. Conserved residues C56 and A58 were identified as major determinants of 2-thiolation, whereas tertiary interaction between the T and D loops and non-conserved nucleosides in the T loop were revealed not to be important for the reaction. Topics: Base Sequence; Blotting, Northern; Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel; Escherichia coli; Mass Spectrometry; Mercury; Molecular Sequence Data; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed; Mutation; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Plasmids; Protein Binding; Protein Structure, Tertiary; RNA; RNA, Transfer; Temperature; Thermus thermophilus; Thiouridine | 2002 |
Accurate translation of the genetic code depends on tRNA modified nucleosides.
Transfer RNA molecules translate the genetic code by recognizing cognate mRNA codons during protein synthesis. The anticodon wobble at position 34 and the nucleotide immediately 3' to the anticodon triplet at position 37 display a large diversity of modified nucleosides in the tRNAs of all organisms. We show that tRNA species translating 2-fold degenerate codons require a modified U(34) to enable recognition of their cognate codons ending in A or G but restrict reading of noncognate or near-cognate codons ending in U and C that specify a different amino acid. In particular, the nucleoside modifications 2-thiouridine at position 34 (s(2)U(34)), 5-methylaminomethyluridine at position 34 (mnm(5)U(34)), and 6-threonylcarbamoyladenosine at position 37 (t(6)A(37)) were essential for Watson-Crick (AAA) and wobble (AAG) cognate codon recognition by tRNA(UUU)(Lys) at the ribosomal aminoacyl and peptidyl sites but did not enable the recognition of the asparagine codons (AAU and AAC). We conclude that modified nucleosides evolved to modulate an anticodon domain structure necessary for many tRNA species to accurately translate the genetic code. Topics: Adenosine; Asparagine; Base Pairing; Base Sequence; Codon; Genetic Code; Molecular Sequence Data; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Nucleosides; Protein Biosynthesis; Protein Structure, Tertiary; Ribosomes; RNA; RNA, Messenger; RNA, Ribosomal, 16S; RNA, Transfer; Thiouridine; Uridine | 2002 |
Wobble modification defect in tRNA disturbs codon-anticodon interaction in a mitochondrial disease.
We previously showed that in mitochondrial tRNA(Lys) with an A8344G mutation responsible for myoclonus epilepsy associated with ragged-red fibers (MERRF), a subgroup of mitochondrial encephalomyopathic diseases, the normally modified wobble base (a 2-thiouridine derivative) remains unmodified. Since wobble base modifications are essential for translational efficiency and accuracy, we used mitochondrial components to estimate the translational activity in vitro of purified tRNA(Lys) carrying the mutation and found no mistranslation of non-cognate codons by the mutant tRNA, but almost complete loss of translational activity for cognate codons. This defective translation was not explained by a decline in aminoacylation or lowered affinity toward elongation factor Tu. However, when direct interaction of the codon with the mutant tRNA(Lys) defective anticodon was examined by ribosomal binding analysis, the wild-type but not the mutant tRNA(Lys) bound to an mRNA- ribosome complex. We therefore concluded that the anticodon base modification defect, which is forced by the pathogenic point mutation, disturbs codon- anticodon pairing in the mutant tRNA(Lys), leading to a severe reduction in mitochondrial translation that eventually could result in the onset of MERRF. Topics: Animals; Base Sequence; Binding Sites; Cattle; Cell Line; DNA, Mitochondrial; HeLa Cells; Humans; Lysine-tRNA Ligase; MELAS Syndrome; MERRF Syndrome; Mitochondria; Molecular Sequence Data; Mutation; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Protein Biosynthesis; RNA; RNA, Mitochondrial; RNA, Transfer, Lys; Thiouridine | 2001 |
Surface plasmon resonance kinetic studies of the HIV TAR RNA kissing hairpin complex and its stabilization by 2-thiouridine modification.
Surface plasmon resonance (BIACORE) was used to determine the kinetic values for formation of the HIV TAR-TAR* ('kissing hairpin') RNA complex. The TAR component was also synthesized with the modified nucleoside 2-thiouridine at position 7 in the loop and the kinetics and equilibrium dissociation constants compared with the unmodified TAR hairpin. The BIACORE data show an equilibrium dissociation constant of 1.58 nM for the complex containing the s(2)U modified TAR hairpin, which is 8-fold lower than for the parent hairpin (12.5 nM). This is a result of a 2-fold faster k(a) (4.14x10(5) M(-1) s(-1) versus 2.1x10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) and a 4-fold slower k(d) (6.55x10(-4) s(-1) versus 2.63x10(-3) s(-1)). (1)H NMR imino spectra show that the secondary structure interactions involved in complex formation are retained in the s(2)U-modified complex. Magnesium has been reported to significantly stabilize the TAR-TAR* complex and we found that Mn(2+) and Ca(2+) are also strongly stabilizing, while Mg(2+) exhibited the greatest effect on the complex kinetics. The stabilizing effects of 2-thiouridine indicate that this base modification may be generally useful as an antisense RNA modification for oligonucleotide therapeutics which target RNA loops. Topics: Calcium; Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel; HIV Long Terminal Repeat; Humans; Kinetics; Magnesium; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Molecular Structure; Nucleic Acid Conformation; RNA Stability; RNA, Viral; Surface Plasmon Resonance; Thiouridine | 2000 |
Single atom modification (O-->S) of tRNA confers ribosome binding.
Escherichia coli tRNALysSUU, as well as human tRNALys3SUU, has 2-thiouridine derivatives at wobble position 34 (s2U*34). Unlike the native tRNALysSUU, the full-length, unmodified transcript of human tRNALys3UUU and the unmodified tRNALys3UUU anticodon stem/loop (ASLLys3UUU) did not bind AAA- or AAG-programmed ribosomes. In contrast, the completely unmodified yeast tRNAPhe anticodon stem/loop (ASLPheGAA) had an affinity (Kd = 136+/-49 nM) similar to that of native yeast tRNAPheGmAA (Kd = 103+/-19 nM). We have found that the single, site-specific substitution of s2U34 for U34 to produce the modified ASLLysSUU was sufficient to restore ribosomal binding. The modified ASLLysSUU bound the ribosome with an affinity (Kd = 176+/-62 nM) comparable to that of native tRNALysSUU (Kd = 70+/-7 nM). Furthermore, in binding to the ribosome, the modified ASLLys3SUU produced the same 16S P-site tRNA footprint as did native E. coli tRNALysSUU, yeast tRNAPheGmAA, and the unmodified ASLPheGAA. The unmodified ASLLys3UUU had no footprint at all. Investigations of thermal stability and structure monitored by UV spectroscopy and NMR showed that the dynamic conformation of the loop of modified ASLLys3SUU was different from that of the unmodified ASLLysUUU, whereas the stems were isomorphous. Based on these and other data, we conclude that s2U34 in tRNALysSUU and in other s2U34-containing tRNAs is critical for generating an anticodon conformation that leads to effective codon interaction in all organisms. This is the first example of a single atom substitution (U34-->s2U34) that confers the property of ribosomal binding on an otherwise inactive tRNA. Topics: Aldehydes; Anticodon; Butanones; Escherichia coli; Humans; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Nucleic Acid Denaturation; Nucleic Acid Hybridization; Ribosomes; RNA, Fungal; RNA, Transfer, Lys; Spectrum Analysis; Temperature; Thiouridine | 1999 |
Investigation of the recognition of an important uridine in an internal loop of a hairpin ribozyme prepared using post-synthetically modified oligonucleotides.
We introduced 4-thio- ((4S)U), 2-thio- ((2S)U), 4- O -methyluridine ((4Me)U) and cytidine substitutions for U+2, which is an important base for cleavage in a substrate RNA. Oligonucleotides containing 4-thio- and 4- O -methyluridine were prepared by a new convenient post-synthetic modification method using a 4- O - p -nitrophenyl-uridine derivative. A hairpin ribozyme cleaved the substrate RNA with either C+2, (4S)U+2 or (4Me)U+2 at approximately 14-, 6- and 4-fold lower rates, respectively, than that of the natural substrate. In contrast, the substrate with a (2S)U+2 was cleaved with the same activity as the natural substrate. These results suggest that the O4 of U+2 is involved in hydrogen bonding at loop A, but the O2 of U+2 is not recognized by the active residues. Circular dichroism data of the ribozymes containing (4S)U+2 and (2S)U+2, as well as the susceptibility of the thiocarbonyl group to hydrogen peroxide, suggest that a conformational change of U+2 occurs during the domain docking in the cleavage reaction. We propose here the conformational change of U+2 from the ground state to the active molecule during the reaction. Topics: Circular Dichroism; Cross-Linking Reagents; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Oligonucleotides; Photochemistry; RNA; RNA, Catalytic; Thiouridine; Uridine | 1999 |
Thermodynamics of RNA-RNA duplexes with 2- or 4-thiouridines: implications for antisense design and targeting a group I intron.
Antisense compounds are designed to optimize selective hybridization of an exogenous oligonucleotide to a cellular target. Typically, Watson-Crick base pairing between the antisense compound and target provides the key recognition element. Uridine (U), however, not only stably base pairs with adenosine (A) but also with guanosine (G), thus reducing specificity. Studies of duplex formation by oligonucleotides with either an internal or a terminal 2- or 4-thiouridine (s(2)U or s(4)U) show that s(2)U can increase the stability of base pairing with A more than with G, while s(4)U can increase the stability of base pairing with G more than with A. The latter may be useful when binding can be enhanced by tertiary interactions with a s(4)U-G pair. To test the effects of s(2)U and s(4)U substitutions on tertiary interactions, binding to a group I intron ribozyme from mouse-derived Pneumocystis carinii was measured for the hexamers, r(AUGACU), r(AUGACs(2)U), and r(AUGACs(4)U), which mimic the 3' end of the 5' exon. The results suggest that at least one of the carbonyl groups of the 3' terminal U of r(AUGACU) is involved in tertiary interactions with the catalytic core of the ribozyme and/or thio groups change the orientation of a terminal U-G base pair. Thus thio substitutions may affect tertiary interactions. Studies of trans-splicing of 5' exon mimics to a truncated rRNA precursor, however, indicate that thio substitutions have negligible effects on overall reactivity. Therefore, modified bases can enhance the specificity of base pairing while retaining other activities and, thus, increase the specificity of antisense compounds targeting cellular RNA. Topics: Animals; Base Pairing; Binding Sites; Exons; Introns; Mice; Molecular Mimicry; Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes; Pneumocystis; RNA Precursors; RNA, Antisense; RNA, Catalytic; RNA, Ribosomal; Thermodynamics; Thiouridine | 1999 |
Synthesis and studies on the effect of 2-thiouridine and 4-thiouridine on sugar conformation and RNA duplex stability.
In order to understand the effect of 2-thiouridine (s2U) substitution on RNA structure and the potential for stabilization of tRNA codon-anticodon interactions through s2U-34 modification, a pentamer RNA sequence, Gs2UUUC, was synthesized and characterized by NMR spectroscopy. The single strand contains the UUU anticodon sequence of tRNALys with flanking GCs to increase duplex stability. Regiochemical effects of uridine thiolation were determined by comparing the structure and stability of the 2-thiouridine containing oligonucleotide with an identical sequence containing 4-thiouridine (s4U) and also the normal uridine nucleoside. Circular dichroism spectrum indicated an A-form helical conformation for Gs2UUUC which was further confirmed by 2D ROESY NMR experiments. The duplex stability of the three pentamers complexed with a 2'-O-methyl-ribonucleotide complementary strand, GmAmAmAmCm, was determined by UV thermal melting studies and by 1H NMR spectroscopy. The duplex containing s2U has a T m of 30.7 degrees C compared to 19. 0 degrees C for the unmodified control and 14.5 degrees C for the s4U containing duplex. The results from UV experiments were corroborated by imino proton NMR studies that show proton exchange rates, chemical shift differences, and NH proton linewidths indicative of the stability order s2U >U >s4U. The magnitude of the effect of s2U in our model system is comparable to the 20 degrees C stabilization observed by Grosjean and co-workers for 2-thiolation in a codon-anticodon model system composed of two tRNAs with complementary anticodon sequences [Houssier, C., Degee, P., Nicoghosian, K. and Grosjean, H. (1988) J. Biomol. Struct. Dyn., 5, 1259-1266]. Topics: Anticodon; Codon; Indicators and Reagents; Kinetics; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Oligoribonucleotides; RNA; RNA, Transfer, Lys; Thermodynamics; Thiouridine | 1997 |