Barbas, AnaMatos, Rute GAmblar, MonicaLópez-Viñas, EduardoGomez-Puertas, PaulinoArraiano, Cecília Maria2023-11-102023-11-102009-07-31J Biol Chem. 2009 Jul 31;284(31):20486-98.http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12105/16652RNase II is the prototype of a ubiquitous family of enzymes that are crucial for RNA metabolism. In Escherichia coli this protein is a single-stranded-specific 3'-exoribonuclease with a modular organization of four functional domains. In eukaryotes, the RNase II homologue Rrp44 (also known as Dis3) is the catalytic subunit of the exosome, an exoribonuclease complex essential for RNA processing and decay. In this work we have performed a functional characterization of several highly conserved residues located in the RNase II catalytic domain to address their precise role in the RNase II activity. We have constructed a number of RNase II mutants and compared their activity and RNA binding to the wild type using different single- or double-stranded substrates. The results presented in this study substantially improve the RNase II model for RNA degradation. We have identified the residues that are responsible for the discrimination of cleavage of RNA versus DNA. We also show that the Arg-500 residue present in the RNase II active site is crucial for activity but not for RNA binding. The most prominent finding presented is the extraordinary catalysis observed in the E542A mutant that turns RNase II into a "super-enzyme."engVoRhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/BiocatalysisAmino Acid SubstitutionAmino AcidsConserved SequenceDNAEscherichia coliExoribonucleasesKineticsModels, MolecularMutant ProteinsMutationProtein BindingProtein ConformationRNASubstrate SpecificitySurface Plasmon ResonanceDetermination of key residues for catalysis and RNA cleavage specificity: one mutation turns RNase II into a "SUPER-ENZYME"Atribución 4.0 Internacional194580822843120486-9810.1074/jbc.M109.0206931083-351XThe Journal of biological chemistryopen access