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. 1999 Nov 15;18(22):6522–6531. doi: 10.1093/emboj/18.22.6522

A new class of enzyme acting on damaged ribosomes: ribosomal RNA apurinic site specific lyase found in wheat germ.

T Ogasawara 1, T Sawasaki 1, R Morishita 1, A Ozawa 1, K Madin 1, Y Endo 1
PMCID: PMC1171715  PMID: 10562564

Abstract

A new enzyme, which we named ribosomal RNA apurinic site specific lyase (RALyase), is described. The protein was found in wheat embryos and has a molecular weight of 50 625 Da. The enzyme specifically cleaves the phosphodiester bond at the 3' side of the apurinic site introduced by ribosome-inactivating proteins into the sarcin/ricin domain of 28S rRNA. The 3' and 5' ends of wheat 28S rRNA at the cleavage site are 5'-GUACG-alpha-hydroxy-alpha, beta-unsaturated aldehyde and pGAGGA-3', demonstrating that the enzyme catalyzes a beta-elimination reaction. The substrate specificity of the enzyme is extremely high: it acts only at the apurinic site in the sarcin/ricin domain of intact ribosomes, not on deproteinized rRNA or DNA containing apurinic sites. The amino acid sequences of five endopeptidase LysC-liberated peptides from the purified enzyme were determined and used to obtain a cDNA sequence. The open reading frame encodes a protein of 456 amino acids, and a homology search revealed a related rice protein. Similar enzyme activities were also found in other plants that express ribosome-inactivating proteins. We believe that RALyase is part of a complex self-defense mechanism.

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