The potential for water to participate in RNA catalyzed reactions has been the topic of several recent studies. Here, we report crystals of a minimal, hinged hairpin ribozyme in complex with the transition-state analog vanadate at 2.05 Å resolution. Waters are present in the active site and are discussed in light of existing views of catalytic strategies employed by the hairpin ribozyme. A second structure harboring a 29,59-phosphodiester linkage at the site of cleavage was also solved at 2.35 Å resolution and corroborates the assignment of active site waters in the structure containing vanadate. A comparison of the two structures reveals that the 29,59 structure adopts a conformation that resembles the reaction intermediate in terms of (1) the positioning of its nonbridging oxygens and (2) the covalent attachment of the 29-O nucleophile with the scissile G+1 phosphorus. The 29,59-linked structure was then overlaid with scissile bonds of other small ribozymes including the glmS metabolite-sensing riboswitch and the hammerhead ribozyme, and suggests the potential of the 29,59 linkage to elicit a reaction-intermediate conformation without the need to form metalloenzyme complexes. The hairpin ribozyme structures presented here also suggest how water molecules bound at each of the nonbridging oxygens of G+1 may electrostatically stabilize the transition state in a manner that supplements nucleobase functional groups. Such coordination has not been reported for small ribozymes, but is consistent with the structures of protein enzymes. Overall, this work establishes significant parallels between the RNA and protein enzyme worlds.Keywords: hairpin ribozyme; 29,59-phosphodiester; vanadate; reaction intermediate; transition-state stabilization; active-site waters
INTRODUCTIONProtein enzymes have evolved numerous strategies to lower the energetic barrier required to convert substrates into products (Knowles 1991). Polanyi and Pauling perceptively envisioned that this could be accomplished by distorting the precatalytic geometry of the reactants into that of the transition state, which entails the expenditure of binding energy derived from the substrate-protein interaction (Lienhard 1973;Borman and Wolfenden 2004). As such, knowledge of the stereochemical interactions employed by an enzyme during the transition state can provide great insight into the chemical strategies utilized by the catalyst to accelerate a reaction rate (Lienhard 1973). Although envisioning the transition state of a phosphoryl-transfer reaction would appear somewhat trivial (Dennis and Westheimer 1966;Knowles 1980), understanding the factors leading to formation and stabilization of such intermediates for a given enzyme is not. This statement is especially true in the case of RNA enzymes, whose rateenhancing features are only beginning to be understood (Doherty and Doudna 2001;Doudna and Lorsch 2005;Fedor and Williamson 2005;Bevilacqua and Yajima 2006), despite the conserved and essential nature of ribocatalysts in biology.Although it is diffi...