Structure and mechanism of E. coli RNA 2′,3′-cyclic phosphodiesterase

2014 
2H (two-histidine) phosphoesterase enzymes are distributed widely in all domains of life and are implicated in diverse RNA and nucleotide transactions, including the transesterification and hydrolysis of cyclic phosphates. Here we report a biochemical and structural characterization of the Escherichia coli 2H protein YapD, which was identified originally as a reversible transesterifying “nuclease/ligase” at RNA 2′,5′-phosphodiesters. We find that YapD is an “end healing” cyclic phosphodiesterase (CPDase) enzyme that hydrolyzes an HORNA>p substrate with a 2′,3′-cyclic phosphodiester to a HORNAp product with a 2′-phosphomonoester terminus, without concomitant end joining. Thus we rename this enzyme ThpR (two-histidine 2′,3′-cyclic phosphodiesterase acting on RNA). The 2.0 A crystal structure of ThpR in a product complex with 2′-AMP highlights the roles of extended histidine-containing motifs 43HxTxxF48 and 125HxTxxR130 in the CPDase reaction. His43-Ne makes a hydrogen bond with the ribose O3′ leaving group, thereby implicating His43 as a general acid catalyst. His125-Ne coordinates the O1P oxygen of the AMP 2′-phosphate (inferred from geometry to derive from the attacking water nucleophile), pointing to His125 as a general base catalyst. Arg130 makes bidentate contact with the AMP 2′-phosphate, suggesting a role in transition-state stabilization. Consistent with these inferences, changing His43, His125, or Arg130 to alanine effaced the CPDase activity of ThpR. Phe48 makes a π–π stack on the adenine nucleobase. Mutating Phe28 to alanine slowed the CPDase by an order of magnitude. The tertiary structure and extended active site motifs of ThpR are conserved in a subfamily of bacterial and archaeal 2H enzymes.
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