Thermodynamic and Kinetic Framework of Selenocysteyl-tRNASec Recognition by Elongation Factor SelB*
- From the Department of Physical Biochemistry, Max-Planck-Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Am Fassberg 11, 37077 Göttingen, Germany
- 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 49-0551-2012901; Fax: 49-0551-2012905; E-mail: rodnina{at}mpibpc.mpg.de.
Abstract
SelB is a specialized translation elongation factor that delivers selenocysteyl-tRNASec (Sec-tRNASec) to the ribosome. Here we show that Sec-tRNASec binds to SelB·GTP with an extraordinary high affinity (Kd = 0.2 pm). The tight binding is driven enthalpically and involves the net formation of four ion pairs, three of which may involve the Sec residue. The dissociation of tRNA from the ternary complex SelB·GTP·Sec-tRNASec is very slow (0.3 h−1), and GTP hydrolysis accelerates the release of Sec-tRNASec by more than a million-fold (to 240 s−1). The affinities of Sec-tRNASec to SelB in the GDP or apoforms, or Ser-tRNASec and tRNASec to SelB in any form, are similar (Kd = 0.5 μm). Thermodynamic coupling in binding of Sec-tRNASec and GTP to SelB ensures at the same time the specificity of Sec- versus Ser-tRNASec selection and rapid release of Sec-tRNASec from SelB after GTP cleavage on the ribosome. SelB provides an example for the evolution of a highly specialized protein-RNA complex toward recognition of unique set of identity elements. The mode of tRNA recognition by SelB is reminiscent of another specialized factor, eIF2, rather than of EF-Tu, the common delivery factor for all other aminoacyl-tRNAs, in line with a common evolutionary ancestry of SelB and eIF2.
- Methods/Physical Methods
- Protein/Binding/RNA
- Protein/Synthesis
- RNA/Ribosomes
- RNA/Transfer RNA
- RNA/Translation
- Translation
- Translation/Elongation Factors
Footnotes
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↵* This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.
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↵2 The abbreviations used are:
- Sec
- selenocysteine
- EF-Tu
- elongation factor Tu
- DTT
- dithiothreitol
- aa-tRNA
- aminoacyl-tRNA
- GDPNP
- guanosine 5′-βγ-imidodiphosphate.
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- Received November 2, 2009.
- Revision received November 20, 2009.
- © 2010 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











