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Methionyl-tRNA synthetase from Caenorhabditis elegans: A specific multidomain organization for convergent functional evolution

✍ Scribed by Svitlana Havrylenko; Renaud Legouis; Boris Negrutskii; Marc Mirande


Book ID
105355981
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
538 KB
Volume
19
Category
Article
ISSN
0961-8368

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Methionyl‐tRNA synthetase (MetRS) is a multidomain protein that specifically binds tRNA^Met^ and catalyzes the synthesis of methionyl‐tRNA^Met^. The minimal, core enzyme found in Aquifex aeolicus is made of a catalytic domain, which catalyzes the aminoacylation reaction, and an anticodon‐binding domain, which promotes tRNA–protein association. In eukaryotes, additional domains are appended in cis or in trans to the core enzyme and increase the stability of the tRNA–protein complexes. Eventually, as observed for MetRS from Homo sapiens, the C‐terminal appended domain causes a slow release of aminoacyl‐tRNA and establishes a limiting step in the global aminoacylation reaction. Here, we report that MetRS from the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans displays a new type of structural organization. Its very C‐terminal appended domain is related to the oligonucleotide binding‐fold‐based tRNA‐binding domain (tRBD) recovered at the C‐terminus of MetRS from plant, but, in the nematode enzyme, this domain is separated from the core enzyme by an insertion domain. Gel retardation and tRNA aminoacylation experiments show that MetRS from nematode is functionally related to human MetRS despite the fact that their appended tRBDs have distinct structural folds, and are not orthologs. Thus, functional convergence of human and nematode MetRS is the result of parallel and convergent evolution that might have been triggered by the selective pressure to invent processivity of tRNA handling in translation in higher eukaryotes.