Recently, tRNA aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase pairs have been evolved that allow one to genetically encode a large array of unnatural amino acids in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. We have determined the crystal structures of two substrate-bound Methanococcus jannaschii tyrosyl aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases that charge the unnatural amino acids p-bromophenylalanine and 3-(2-naphthyl)alanine (NpAla). A comparison of these structures with the substratebound WT synthetase, as well as a mutant synthetase that charges p-acetylphenylalanine, shows that altered specificity is due to both side-chain and backbone rearrangements within the active site that modify hydrogen bonds and packing interactions with substrate, as well as disrupt the ␣8-helix, which spans the WT active site. The high degree of structural plasticity that is observed in these aminoacyltRNA synthetases is rarely found in other mutant enzymes with altered specificities and provides an explanation for the surprising adaptability of the genetic code to novel amino acids.x-ray crystal structure ͉ unnatural amino acids ͉ expanded genetic code ͉ molecular evolution W ith the rare exceptions of selenocysteine (1) and pyrrolysine (2, 3), the common 20 amino acids are conserved across all known organisms. However, there does not appear to be an inherent limit to the size or chemical nature of the genetic code, since it has been shown that additional amino acids can be genetically encoded in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms in response to nonsense or frameshift codons (4, 5). This requires a unique codon-suppressor tRNA pair and the corresponding aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase, which do not crossreact with the amino acids, tRNAs, or synthetases of the host organism (4, 5). The specificity of the aminoacyl tRNA synthetase is then altered by generating large libraries of active-site mutants and passing them through positive and negative selections to identify synthetases that selectively acylate the cognate tRNA with the unnatural amino acid but not any of the common amino acids. This approach has been used to add Ͼ30 unnatural amino acids to the genetic codes of bacteria, yeast, and mammalian cells with high fidelity and efficiencies.In Escherichia coli, a tyrosyl aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase (TyrRS) tRNA CUA Tyr pair from the archea Methanococcus jannaschii (Mj) was used as an orthogonal tRNA synthetase pair (6). Mutant synthetases have been evolved that selectively aminoacylate their cognate suppressor tRNAs with glycosylated (7), photoreactive (8), and metal-binding amino acids, as well as amino acids with unique functional groups (9-11) . To establish the molecular basis for the surprising adaptability of this synthetase, we solved (12) the structure of a mutant Mj TyrRS that is selective for p-acetylphenylalanine (p-AcPhe). The x-ray crystal structure revealed significant structural changes within the enzyme active site that result from the mutations Y32L, D158G, I159C, and L162R. The Y32L and D158G mutations remove two hydrogen bonds (H-bonds) with the...