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Published October 11, 2005 | public
Journal Article

Structural and Functional Investigation of a Putative Archaeal Selenocysteine Synthase

Abstract

Bacterial selenocysteine synthase converts seryl-tRNA^(Sec) to selenocysteinyl-tRNA^(Sec) for selenoprotein biosynthesis. The identity of this enzyme in archaea and eukaryotes is unknown. On the basis of sequence similarity, a conserved open reading frame has been annotated as a selenocysteine synthase gene in archaeal genomes. We have determined the crystal structure of the corresponding protein from Methanococcus jannaschii, MJ0158. The protein was found to be dimeric with a distinctive domain arrangement and an exposed active site, built from residues of the large domain of one protomer alone. The shape of the dimer is reminiscent of a substructure of the decameric Escherichia coli selenocysteine synthase seen in electron microscopic projections. However, biochemical analyses demonstrated that MJ0158 lacked affinity for E. coli seryl-tRNA^(Sec) or M. jannaschii seryl-tRNA^(Sec), and neither substrate was directly converted to selenocysteinyl-tRNA^(Sec) by MJ0158 when supplied with selenophosphate. We then tested a hypothetical M. jannaschii O-phosphoseryl-tRNA^(Sec) kinase and demonstrated that the enzyme converts seryl-tRNA^(Sec) to O-phosphoseryl-tRNA^(Sec) that could constitute an activated intermediate for selenocysteinyl-tRNA^(Sec) production. MJ0158 also failed to convert O-phosphoseryl-tRNA^(Sec) to selenocysteinyl-tRNA^(Sec). In contrast, both archaeal and bacterial seryl-tRNA synthetases were able to charge both archaeal and bacterial tRNA^(Sec) with serine, and E. coli selenocysteine synthase converted both types of seryl-tRNA^(Sec) to selenocysteinyl-tRNA^(Sec). These findings demonstrate that a number of factors from the selenoprotein biosynthesis machineries are cross-reactive between the bacterial and the archaeal systems but that MJ0158 either does not encode a selenocysteine synthase or requires additional factors for activity.

Additional Information

© 2005 American Chemical Society. Received 10 June 2005. Published online 17 September 2005. Published in print 1 October 2005. We thank Gleb P. Bourenkov, beamline BW6 at DESY, for help during synchrotron data collection and Rasso Willkomm, Max-Planck-Institut für Biochemie, for help with cloning and purification of mjaSerRS. We are grateful to August Böck, LMU München, for making available to us various cell strains, expression vectors, and protein preparations.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023