Nucleic Acid-Dependent Structural Transition of the Intrinsically Disordered N-Terminal Appended Domain of Human Lysyl-tRNA Synthetase

Int J Mol Sci. 2018 Oct 3;19(10):3016. doi: 10.3390/ijms19103016.

Abstract

Eukaryotic lysyl-tRNA synthetases (LysRS) have an N-terminal appended tRNA-interaction domain (RID) that is absent in their prokaryotic counterparts. This domain is intrinsically disordered and lacks stable structures. The disorder-to-order transition is induced by tRNA binding and has implications on folding and subsequent assembly into multi-tRNA synthetase complexes. Here, we expressed and purified RID from human LysRS (hRID) in Escherichia coli and performed a detailed mutagenesis of the appended domain. hRID was co-purified with nucleic acids during Ni-affinity purification, and cumulative mutations on critical amino acid residues abolished RNA binding. Furthermore, we identified a structural ensemble between disordered and helical structures in non-RNA-binding mutants and an equilibrium shift for wild-type into the helical conformation upon RNA binding. Since mutations that disrupted RNA binding led to an increase in non-functional soluble aggregates, a stabilized RNA-mediated structural transition of the N-terminal appended domain may have implications on the functional organization of human LysRS and multi-tRNA synthetase complexes in vivo.

Keywords: LysRS; aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase; disorder-helix transition; hRID.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Lysine-tRNA Ligase / chemistry*
  • Lysine-tRNA Ligase / metabolism*
  • Mutation
  • Nucleic Acids / chemistry*
  • Nucleic Acids / metabolism*
  • Protein Binding
  • Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs*
  • Protein Structure, Secondary
  • RNA, Transfer / chemistry
  • RNA, Transfer / metabolism
  • Structure-Activity Relationship

Substances

  • Nucleic Acids
  • RNA, Transfer
  • Lysine-tRNA Ligase