Mazumder Raja, Iyer Lakshminarayan M, Vasudevan Sona, Aravind L
National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20894, USA.
Nucleic Acids Res. 2002 Dec 1;30(23):5229-43. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkf645.
2',3' Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases are enzymes that catalyze at least two distinct steps in the splicing of tRNA introns in eukaryotes. Recently, the biochemistry and structure of these enzymes, from yeast and the plant Arabidopsis thaliana, have been extensively studied. They were found to share a common active site, characterized by two conserved histidines, with the bacterial tRNA-ligating enzyme LigT and the vertebrate myelin-associated 2',3' phosphodiesterases. Using sensitive sequence profile analysis methods, we show that these enzymes define a large superfamily of predicted phosphoesterases with two conserved histidines (hence 2H phosphoesterase superfamily). We identify several new families of 2H phosphoesterases and present a complete evolutionary classification of this superfamily. We also carry out a structure- function analysis of these proteins and present evidence for diverse interactions for different families, within this superfamily, with RNA substrates and protein partners. In particular, we show that eukaryotes contain two ancient families of these proteins that might be involved in RNA processing, transcriptional co-activation and post-transcriptional gene silencing. Another eukaryotic family restricted to vertebrates and insects is combined with UBA and SH3 domains suggesting a role in signal transduction. We detect these phosphoesterase modules in polyproteins of certain retroviruses, rotaviruses and coronaviruses, where they could function in capping and processing of viral RNAs. Furthermore, we present evidence for multiple families of 2H phosphoesterases in bacteria, which might be involved in the processing of small molecules with the 2',3' cyclic phosphoester linkages. The evolutionary analysis suggests that the 2H domain emerged through a duplication of a simple structural unit containing a single catalytic histidine prior to the last common ancestor of all life forms. Initially, this domain appears to have been involved in RNA processing and it appears to have been recruited to perform various other functions in later stages of evolution.
2',3'-环核苷酸磷酸二酯酶是一类在真核生物中催化tRNA内含子剪接至少两个不同步骤的酶。最近,来自酵母和植物拟南芥的这些酶的生物化学和结构得到了广泛研究。人们发现它们与细菌tRNA连接酶LigT以及脊椎动物髓鞘相关的2',3'-磷酸二酯酶共享一个由两个保守组氨酸所表征的共同活性位点。使用灵敏的序列谱分析方法,我们表明这些酶定义了一个具有两个保守组氨酸的预测磷酸酯酶的大型超家族(因此称为2H磷酸酯酶超家族)。我们鉴定出了几个新的2H磷酸酯酶家族,并给出了这个超家族的完整进化分类。我们还对这些蛋白质进行了结构-功能分析,并给出证据表明在这个超家族中不同家族与RNA底物和蛋白质伴侣之间存在多样的相互作用。特别地,我们表明真核生物含有这类蛋白质的两个古老家族,它们可能参与RNA加工、转录共激活和转录后基因沉默。另一个局限于脊椎动物和昆虫的真核生物家族与UBA和SH3结构域结合,表明其在信号转导中起作用。我们在某些逆转录病毒、轮状病毒和冠状病毒的多蛋白中检测到这些磷酸酯酶模块,它们可能在病毒RNA的加帽和加工中发挥作用。此外,我们给出证据表明细菌中存在多个2H磷酸酯酶家族,它们可能参与具有2',3'-环磷酸酯键的小分子的加工。进化分析表明,2H结构域是在所有生命形式的最后一个共同祖先之前通过一个包含单个催化组氨酸的简单结构单元的复制而出现的。最初,这个结构域似乎参与RNA加工,并且在进化的后期阶段似乎被招募来执行各种其他功能。