Scott W G
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and The Center for the Molecular Biology of RNA, Sinsheimer Laboratories, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA.
J Mol Biol. 2001 Aug 31;311(5):989-99. doi: 10.1006/jmbi.2001.4886.
Orbital steering is invoked to explain how the three-dimensional structure of a small self-cleaving RNA, the hammerhead ribozyme, both prevents and enhances RNA autocatalysis. Within the conserved catalytic core of the ribozyme, the position of the 2' oxygen atom of the G8 ribose is observed to be aligned almost perfectly with the phosphorus atom and the 5' oxygen atom of the adjacent A9 phosphate group for self-cleavage via an in-line attack mechanism. Despite this apparent near-perfect atomic positioning, no cleavage takes place. The explanation proposed is that a network of hydrogen bonds in the ribozyme core orients or steers the orbitals containing the electron lone pairs of the attacking nucleophile (the 2' oxygen atom) away from the A9 phosphorus atom, eliminating overlap with the vacant phosphorus d-orbitals despite the near-perfect in-line positioning of the oxygen atom, thus preventing catalysis. Because of the near-perfect atomic positioning of the 2' oxygen atom relative to the phosphate group, orbital steering effects in this case are fortuitously uncoupled from conformational, distance and orientation effects, allowing an assessment of the catalytic power due purely to orbital steering. In contrast, a conformational change at the cleavage site is required to bring the 2' oxygen atom and the scissile phosphate group into atomic positions amenable to an in-line attack mechanism. In addition, the conformationally changed structure must then steer the lone-pair orbitals of the correctly positioned 2' oxygen atom toward the scissile phosphorus atom in order for cleavage to take place. We estimate that fulfillment of each of these two required changes may contribute separately an approximately 1000-fold rate enhancement, potentially accounting for a significant fraction of the catalytic power of this ribozyme. Orbital steering therefore appears to be a general phenomenon that may help to explain catalysis in both ribozymes and protein enzymes in a unified manner.
轨道导向被用来解释小型自我切割RNA(锤头状核酶)的三维结构如何既阻止又增强RNA的自我催化作用。在核酶保守的催化核心内,观察到G8核糖的2'氧原子位置几乎与磷原子以及相邻A9磷酸基团的5'氧原子完美对齐,以便通过内攻击机制进行自我切割。尽管存在这种明显近乎完美的原子定位,但并未发生切割。所提出的解释是,核酶核心中的氢键网络使含有亲核攻击孤对电子的轨道(2'氧原子)偏离A9磷原子,尽管氧原子近乎完美地呈直线排列,但消除了与空磷d轨道的重叠,从而阻止了催化作用。由于2'氧原子相对于磷酸基团近乎完美的原子定位,在这种情况下,轨道导向效应偶然地与构象、距离和方向效应解耦,从而能够纯粹评估由于轨道导向而产生的催化能力。相比之下,切割位点需要发生构象变化,以使2'氧原子和可切割的磷酸基团进入适合内攻击机制的原子位置。此外,构象改变后的结构必须随后将正确定位的2'氧原子的孤对轨道导向可切割的磷原子,以便发生切割。我们估计,这两个所需变化中的每一个实现可能分别使反应速率提高约1000倍,这可能占该核酶催化能力的很大一部分。因此,轨道导向似乎是一种普遍现象,可能有助于以统一的方式解释核酶和蛋白质酶中的催化作用。