The specificity of valyl-, phenylalanyl-, and tyrosyl-tRNA synthetases from yeast has been examined by a series of stringent tests designed to eliminate the possibility of artefactual interference. Valyl-tRNA synthetase, as well as activating a number of amino acid analogues, will accept alanine, cysteine, isoleucine, and serine in addition to threonine as substrates for both ATP-PPi exchange and transfer to some tRNAVal species. The transfer is not observed if atempts are made to isolate the appropriate aminoacyl-tRNAVal-C-C-A but its role in the overall aminoacylation can be suspected from both the formation of a stable aminoacyl-tRNAVal-C-C-A(3'NH2) compound and from the stoichiometry of ATP hydrolysis during the aminoacylation of the native tRNA. Similar tests with phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase indicate that this enzyme will also activate and transfer other naturally occurring amino acids, namely, leucine, methionine, and tyrosine. The tyrosine enzyme, which lacks the hydrolytic capacity of the other two enzymes (von der Haar, F., & Cramer, F (1976) Biochemistry 15, 4131--4138) is probably absolutely specific for tyrosine. It is concluded that chemical proofreading, in terms of an enzymatic hydrolysis of a misacylated tRNA, plays an important part in maintaining the specificity in the overall reaction and that this activity may be more widespread than has so far been suspected.
The properties of native and of two modified tRNA Val species in the correction of misactivated threonine by valyl-tRNA synthetase have been studied. Whereas Thr-tRNA Val-C-C-A could not be isolated in the valyl-tRNA synthetase catalyzed reaction, Thr-tRNA Val-C-C-3'dA is isolable in up to 50% yield in this system and tRNA Val-C-C-3'NH2A is fully aminoacylated with threonine by the same enzyme. The hydrolysis of preformed Thr-tRNA Val-C-C-A by free valyl-tRNA synthetase is 30 times faster than the corresponding breakdown of Val-tRNA Val-C-C-A. This hydrolytic activity is also observed with Thr-tRNA Val-C-C-3'dA although the rate is reduce to that of the reaction of Val-tRNA Val-C-C-A. Modification of the threonine to O-methylthreonine, which is also a substrate for valyl-tRNA synthetase, leads to stabilization of the O-methylthreonyl-tRNA esters. The AMP/PP independent hydrolysis under aminoacylating conditions, which is a measure of the correction process, indicates that O-MeThr-tRNA Val-C-C-A is only very slowly corrected while the tRNA Val-C-C-3'dA and tRNA Val-C-C-3'NH2A esters are completely stable. Removal of the methoxy group of O-methylthreonine as in alpha-amino-butyric acid increases the rate of the hydrolytic reaction and once again alpha-Abu-tRNA Val-C-C-A and alpha-Abu-tRNA Val-C-C-3'dA are unstable under aminoacylating conditions and not isolable.
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