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Breaking a single hydrogen bond in the mitochondrial tRNA(Phe)‐PheRS complex leads to phenotypic pleiotropy of human disease

Various pathogenic variants in both mitochondrial tRNA(Phe) and Phenylalanyl‐tRNA synthetase mitochondrial protein coding gene (FARS2) gene encoding for the human mitochondrial PheRS have been identified and associated with neurological and/or muscle‐related pathologies. An important Guanine‐34 (G34...

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Autores principales: Peretz, Moshe, Tworowski, Dmitry, Kartvelishvili, Ekaterine, Livingston, John, Chrzanowska‐Lightowlers, Zofia, Safro, Mark
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7540514/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32115907
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/febs.15268
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author Peretz, Moshe
Tworowski, Dmitry
Kartvelishvili, Ekaterine
Livingston, John
Chrzanowska‐Lightowlers, Zofia
Safro, Mark
author_facet Peretz, Moshe
Tworowski, Dmitry
Kartvelishvili, Ekaterine
Livingston, John
Chrzanowska‐Lightowlers, Zofia
Safro, Mark
author_sort Peretz, Moshe
collection PubMed
description Various pathogenic variants in both mitochondrial tRNA(Phe) and Phenylalanyl‐tRNA synthetase mitochondrial protein coding gene (FARS2) gene encoding for the human mitochondrial PheRS have been identified and associated with neurological and/or muscle‐related pathologies. An important Guanine‐34 (G34)A anticodon mutation associated with myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibers (MERRF) syndrome has been reported in hmit‐tRNA(Phe). The majority of G34 contacts in available aaRSs‐tRNAs complexes specifically use that base as an important tRNA identity element. The network of intermolecular interactions providing its specific recognition also largely conserved. However, their conservation depends also on the invariance of the residues in the anticodon binding domain (ABD) of human mitochondrial Phenylalanyl‐tRNA synthetase (hmit‐PheRS). A defect in recognition of the anticodon of tRNA(Phe) may happen not only because of G34A mutation, but also due to mutations in the ABD. Indeed, a pathogenic mutation in FARS2 has been recently reported in a 9‐year‐old female patient harboring a p.Asp364Gly mutation. Asp364 is hydrogen bonded (HB) to G34 in WT hmit‐PheRS. Thus, there are two pathogenic variants disrupting HB between G34 and Asp364: one is associated with G34A mutation, and the other with Asp364Gly mutation. We have measured the rates of tRNA(Phe) aminoacylation catalyzed by WT hmit‐PheRS and mutant enzymes. These data ranked the residues making a HB with G34 according to their contribution to activity and the signal transduction pathway in the hmit‐PheRS‐tRNA(Phe) complex. Furthermore, we carried out extensive MD simulations to reveal the interdomain contact topology on the dynamic trajectories of the complex, and gaining insight into the structural and dynamic integrity effects of hmit‐PheRS complexed with tRNA(Phe). DATABASE: Structural data are available in PDB database under the accession number(s): 3CMQ, 3TUP, 5MGH, 5MGV.
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spelling pubmed-75405142020-10-09 Breaking a single hydrogen bond in the mitochondrial tRNA(Phe)‐PheRS complex leads to phenotypic pleiotropy of human disease Peretz, Moshe Tworowski, Dmitry Kartvelishvili, Ekaterine Livingston, John Chrzanowska‐Lightowlers, Zofia Safro, Mark FEBS J Original Articles Various pathogenic variants in both mitochondrial tRNA(Phe) and Phenylalanyl‐tRNA synthetase mitochondrial protein coding gene (FARS2) gene encoding for the human mitochondrial PheRS have been identified and associated with neurological and/or muscle‐related pathologies. An important Guanine‐34 (G34)A anticodon mutation associated with myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibers (MERRF) syndrome has been reported in hmit‐tRNA(Phe). The majority of G34 contacts in available aaRSs‐tRNAs complexes specifically use that base as an important tRNA identity element. The network of intermolecular interactions providing its specific recognition also largely conserved. However, their conservation depends also on the invariance of the residues in the anticodon binding domain (ABD) of human mitochondrial Phenylalanyl‐tRNA synthetase (hmit‐PheRS). A defect in recognition of the anticodon of tRNA(Phe) may happen not only because of G34A mutation, but also due to mutations in the ABD. Indeed, a pathogenic mutation in FARS2 has been recently reported in a 9‐year‐old female patient harboring a p.Asp364Gly mutation. Asp364 is hydrogen bonded (HB) to G34 in WT hmit‐PheRS. Thus, there are two pathogenic variants disrupting HB between G34 and Asp364: one is associated with G34A mutation, and the other with Asp364Gly mutation. We have measured the rates of tRNA(Phe) aminoacylation catalyzed by WT hmit‐PheRS and mutant enzymes. These data ranked the residues making a HB with G34 according to their contribution to activity and the signal transduction pathway in the hmit‐PheRS‐tRNA(Phe) complex. Furthermore, we carried out extensive MD simulations to reveal the interdomain contact topology on the dynamic trajectories of the complex, and gaining insight into the structural and dynamic integrity effects of hmit‐PheRS complexed with tRNA(Phe). DATABASE: Structural data are available in PDB database under the accession number(s): 3CMQ, 3TUP, 5MGH, 5MGV. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-03-18 2020-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7540514/ /pubmed/32115907 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/febs.15268 Text en © 2020 The Authors. The FEBS Journal published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Federation of European Biochemical Societies This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Peretz, Moshe
Tworowski, Dmitry
Kartvelishvili, Ekaterine
Livingston, John
Chrzanowska‐Lightowlers, Zofia
Safro, Mark
Breaking a single hydrogen bond in the mitochondrial tRNA(Phe)‐PheRS complex leads to phenotypic pleiotropy of human disease
title Breaking a single hydrogen bond in the mitochondrial tRNA(Phe)‐PheRS complex leads to phenotypic pleiotropy of human disease
title_full Breaking a single hydrogen bond in the mitochondrial tRNA(Phe)‐PheRS complex leads to phenotypic pleiotropy of human disease
title_fullStr Breaking a single hydrogen bond in the mitochondrial tRNA(Phe)‐PheRS complex leads to phenotypic pleiotropy of human disease
title_full_unstemmed Breaking a single hydrogen bond in the mitochondrial tRNA(Phe)‐PheRS complex leads to phenotypic pleiotropy of human disease
title_short Breaking a single hydrogen bond in the mitochondrial tRNA(Phe)‐PheRS complex leads to phenotypic pleiotropy of human disease
title_sort breaking a single hydrogen bond in the mitochondrial trna(phe)‐phers complex leads to phenotypic pleiotropy of human disease
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7540514/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32115907
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/febs.15268
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