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The aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (AARSs) are key proteins involved in
the translation machinery in living organisms; it is not surprising,
therefore, that these enzymes are found
in all three domains of life. There are twenty specific tRNA
synthetases (one for each amino acid), although not all
organisms contain the full set. Studying the function, structure, and
evolution of these proteins remains an area of intense interest as, in
addition
to being a major constituent of the translation process, these proteins
are also believed to contain vital information spanning the evolution
of life from the ancient "RNA world" to the modern form of life.
Figure 1:The reaction
catalyzed by the aminoacyl tRNA synthetases (aa could be any amino
acid).
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The AARSs are responsible for loading the twenty different amino acids
onto the cognate tRNA during protein synthesis (see Figure 1). Each
AARS is a multidomain protein consisting of (at least) a catalytic
domain and an anticodon binding domain. In all known cases, the
synthetases divide into class I or class II types; class I AARSs
exemplify the basic Rossmann fold, while class II AARSs exhibit a fold
that is unique to them and biotin synthetase holoenzyme. Additionally,
some of the AARSs, for example aspartyl-tRNA synthetase, have an
"insert domain" within their
catalytic domain (see Figure 2). Recognition of the tRNA molecule is
typically performed by the anticodon domain, however
residues that have degenerate codons (e.g. serine has six
different codons) have been found to exploit other
features in the tRNA for recognition (e.g. the acceptor arm or
the so-called discriminator base). These molecular machines operate
with remarkable precision, making only one mistake in every 10,000
translations. The intricate architecture of specific tRNA synthetases
helps to discriminate against mis-coding.
Figure 2:
A snapshot of AspRS-tRNA aspartyl-adenylate complex (from E. Coli)
in the active form. Note the anticodon binding domain (orange), the
insertion domain (pink), and the catalytic domain (blue). tRNA is
docked to AspRS, and the catalytic active site is highlighted within
the catalytic domain (red bubble); the aspartyl-adenylate substrate is
shown in space-filling representation. The residues involved in
specific base recognition on the tRNA are also highlighted within the
anticodon binding domain (green bubble). Note that specific contacts
between the tRNA and Asp-RS allow for strategic positioning of the tRNA
relative to the enzyme.
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Next: Getting Started
Up: tutorial_aars
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Brijeet Dhaliwal
2004-09-15