Identification, characterization, and structure of a tRNA splicing enzyme RNA 5′-OH kinase from the pathogenic fungi Mucorales

  1. Stewart Shuman1
  1. 1Molecular Biology Program, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York 10065, USA
  2. 2Microbiology and Immunology Department, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York 10065, USA
  1. Corresponding author: shumans{at}mskcc.org
  1. Handling editor: Eric Phizicky

Abstract

Fungal Trl1 is an essential tRNA splicing enzyme composed of C-terminal cyclic phosphodiesterase and central polynucleotide kinase end-healing domains that convert the 2′,3′-cyclic-PO4 and 5′-OH ends of tRNA exons into the 3′-OH,2′-PO4 and 5′-PO4 termini required for sealing by an N-terminal ATP-dependent ligase domain. Trifunctional Trl1 enzymes are present in most human fungal pathogens and are untapped targets for antifungal drug discovery. Mucorales species, deemed high-priority human pathogens by WHO, elaborate a noncanonical tRNA splicing apparatus in which a stand-alone monofunctional RNA ligase enzyme joins 3′-OH,2′-PO4 and 5′-PO4 termini. Here we identify a stand-alone Mucor circinelloides polynucleotide kinase (MciKIN) and affirm its biological activity in tRNA splicing by genetic complementation in yeast. Recombinant MciKIN catalyzes magnesium-dependent phosphorylation of 5′-OH RNA and DNA ends in vitro. MciKIN displays a strong preference for GTP as the phosphate donor in the kinase reaction, a trait shared with the stand-alone RNA kinase homologs from Mucorales species Rhizopus azygosporus (RazKIN) and Lichtheimia corymbifera (LcoKIN) and with the kinase domains of fungal Trl1 enzymes. We report a 1.65 Å crystal structure of RazKIN in complex with GDP•Mg2+ that illuminates the basis for guanosine nucleotide specificity.

Keywords

  • Received August 27, 2024.
  • Accepted September 24, 2024.

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