
Nucleotidyl-transfer enzymes, which synthesize, degrade and rearrange DNA and RNA, often depend on metal ions for catalysis. All DNA and RNA polymerases, MutH-like or RNase H-like nucleases and recombinases, and group I introns seem to require two divalent cations to form a complete active site. The two-metal-ion mechanism has been proposed to orient the substrate, facilitate acid-base catalysis and allow catalytic specificity to exceed substrate binding specificity attributable to the stringent metal-ion (Mg2+ in particular) coordination. Not all nucleotidyl-transfer enzymes use two metal ions for catalysis, however. The betabetaalpha-Me and HUH nucleases depend on a single metal ion in the active site for the catalysis. All of these one- and two metal ion-dependent enzymes generate 5'-phosphate and 3'-OH products. Structural and mechanistic comparisons show that these seemingly unrelated nucleotidyl-transferases share a functionally equivalent metal ion.
Models, Molecular, Molecular Structure, Cations, Divalent, Metals, Catalytic Domain, Escherichia coli Proteins, Ribonuclease H, DNA Helicases, Nucleotidyltransferases, Catalysis
Models, Molecular, Molecular Structure, Cations, Divalent, Metals, Catalytic Domain, Escherichia coli Proteins, Ribonuclease H, DNA Helicases, Nucleotidyltransferases, Catalysis
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