Next: Introduction
Ab initio and QM/MM Calculations on a Prototype of Catalytic RNA
Fabrice Leclerc & Martin Karplus
UniversitŽ Louis Pasteur, Institut Le Bel
Laboratoire de Chimie Biophysique
4, rue Blaise Pascal, Strasbourg 67000, France
Introduction
The hammerhead ribozyme is one of the smallest catalytic RNAs known as catalyst for the
site-specific cleavage of a phosphodiester linkage. Because of its small size, it has been
extensively studied as a prototype for catalytic RNAs. The recent determination by X-ray
crystallography of several conformational intermediates of this biologically active ribozyme (Fig. 1)
provides a framework from which a detailed molecular mechanism of catalysis can be modeled. So far,
no theoretical study has been done on catalytic RNAs. Thus by this study we intend to propose the
first detailed mechanism for a ribozyme and investigate the role of the divalent metal ions and the
active site surrounding in the catalysis.
Figure 1: X-ray structure of the hammerhead ribozyme. The phosphodiester backbo
ne is represented by
a white ribbon. The active site is included in a yellow circle where the atoms
are colored
according a standard scheme (carbon: green, oxygen: red, phosphorus: purple).
T he bond cleaved
during the phosphate ester hydrolysis (in red) is indicated by a purple arrow.
Mg2+ cations
are cofactors in this reaction, they are represented by a van der Waals spheres
(orange).
The reaction proceeds via an in-line attack on the phosphodiester bond: the activated 2'O-species generated by deprotonation of the 2'OH of the attacking nucleotide acts as nucleophile, the
leaving group corresponding to a 5'OH species. The reaction proceeds via an in-line attack of the
activated 2'O- on the phosphodiester bond leading to an inversion of configuration in the
stereochemistry of the phosphate group (Fig. 2). Two mechanisms have been proposed for the
reaction; they essentially differ by the way the 2'O- species is generated: in the di-anionic
mechanism, the proton is taken from the solution
while in the mono-anionic
mechanism, it is an internal proton transfer. Thio analogs of the natural RNA substrate have been
used to infer the ligand sites to the metal ions used as cofactors in the reaction. However, the
exact metal coordinations are not known and there is no strong evidence for inner or outer sphere
coordinations.
Figure 2: Detailed view of the active site based on a two-metal-ion mechanism.
The arrow (purple)
represents the nucleophilic attack of the O2' oxygen on the phosphate group.
The attack that
proceeds via an in-line mechanism (alignment of O2',
P and O5') leads to the formation of the O2'-P
bond and the breaking of the P-O5' bond.
Preliminary Results
Three different thio analogs of the natural RNA substrate have been studied experimentally: in the
first one (pro-RpS), the pro-R non-bridging oxygen of the phosphate group is replaced by sulfur; in
the second one (pro-RpS, pro-SpS) both the pro-R and pro-S non-bridging oxygen atoms are replaced by
sulfur; in the last one the bridging O5' oxygen corresponding to the leaving group is replaced by
sulfur. The pro-RpS analog is cleaved at a lower rate but the catalytic activity is partially
restored by substituting the normal metal cofactors (rescue effect), Mg2+, by more thiophilic
metal ions such as Mn2+ or Cd2+ [Scott2]. On the other hand, the dithioate analog
(pro-RpS, pro-SpS) is still cleaved in presence of Mg2+ though at a lower rate.
The studies have been carried out on a small model representing a minimum active site of the
hammerhead ribozyme. The RNA model used in the study includes a ribose moiety, a methyl-phosphate
group and two solvated metal ions (Mg2+). Different metal configurations involving inner or
outer-sphere coordinations have been explored. We have identified two configurations favorable to
the in-line attack: the coordinations of the two metal cations were inferred from experimental data
on the ``rescue effect'', and from ab initio calculations at the Hartree-Fock level
(HF/3-21+G*).
Research Proposal
The two configurations favorable to the in-line attack will be used as initial geometry to follow
the reaction path. In the first configuration, the two metal ions have inner-sphere coordinations
with the O2' and the pro-R oxygen for the first metal, and with the O5' and pro-R oxygen for the
second metal. We will study the hydrolysis of the mono and dithioate analogs but only the
intermediates on the reaction path will be calculated. To reproduce the experimental conditions of
the hydrolysis of the pro-RpS analog in our calculations, only one of the two Mg2+ will be
replaced by Cd2+: two cases will be considered since the thiophilic metal Cd2+ can be
coordinated to a sulfur at both metal sites. In the second configuration, only the metal
stabilizing the leaving group at the O5' site has a inner-sphere coordination. Thus, the metal at
this position will be replaced by Cd2+ for the calculations on the pro-RpS analog. The
calculations for the hydrolysis of the dithioate analog will be carried out with two Mg2+ ions,
as measured experimentally (Derrick & Uhlenbeck, personal communication).
Methods
The reaction path will be followed by QM/MM calculations where the RNA model and the two metal ions
are treated by quantum mechanics and the water molecules coordinated to the metal ions by molecular
mechanics. The CHARMM/GAMESS program (the GAMESS ab initio package interfaced to the CHARMM
program) is used to model the reaction path from the reactants (initial geometries) to the products
by imposing distance constraints on the O2'-P and P-O5' bonds corresponding to an antisymmetric
stretch.
Figure 2: Detailed view of the active site based on a two-metal-ion mechanism. The arrow (purple)
represents the nucleophilic attack of the O2' oxygen on the phosphate group. The attack which
proceeds via an in-line mechanism (alignment of O2', P and O5') leads to the formation of the O2'-P
bond and the breaking of the P-O5' bond.