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Dive into the research topics where Monika Martick is active.

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Featured researches published by Monika Martick.


Cell | 2006

Tertiary Contacts Distant from the Active Site Prime a Ribozyme for Catalysis

Monika Martick; William G. Scott

Minimal hammerhead ribozymes have been characterized extensively by static and time-resolved crystallography as well as numerous biochemical analyses, leading to mutually contradictory mechanistic explanations for catalysis. We present the 2.2 A resolution crystal structure of a full-length Schistosoma mansoni hammerhead ribozyme that permits us to explain the structural basis for its 1000-fold catalytic enhancement. The full-length hammerhead structure reveals how tertiary interactions occurring remotely from the active site prime this ribozyme for catalysis. G-12 and G-8 are positioned consistent with their previously suggested roles in acid-base catalysis, the nucleophile is aligned with a scissile phosphate positioned proximal to the A-9 phosphate, and previously unexplained roles of other conserved nucleotides become apparent within the context of a distinctly new fold that nonetheless accommodates the previous structural studies. These interactions permit us to explain the previously irreconcilable sets of experimental results in a unified, consistent, and unambiguous manner.


Nature | 2008

A discontinuous hammerhead ribozyme embedded in a mammalian messenger RNA

Monika Martick; Lucas H. Horan; Harry F. Noller; William G. Scott

Structured RNAs embedded in the untranslated regions (UTRs) of messenger RNAs can regulate gene expression. In bacteria, control of a metabolite gene is mediated by the self-cleaving activity of a ribozyme embedded in its 5′ UTR. This discovery has raised the question of whether gene-regulating ribozymes also exist in eukaryotic mRNAs. Here we show that highly active hammerhead ribozymes are present in the 3′ UTRs of rodent C-type lectin type II (Clec2) genes. Using a hammerhead RNA motif search with relaxed delimitation of the non-conserved regions, we detected ribozyme sequences in which the invariant regions, in contrast to the previously identified continuous hammerheads, occur as two fragments separated by hundreds of nucleotides. Notably, a fragment pair can assemble to form an active hammerhead ribozyme structure between the translation termination and the polyadenylation signals within the 3′ UTR. We demonstrate that this hammerhead structure can self-cleave both in vitro and in vivo, and is able to reduce protein expression in mouse cells. These results indicate that an unrecognized mechanism of post-transcriptional gene regulation involving association of discontinuous ribozyme sequences within an mRNA may be modulating the expression of several CLEC2 proteins that function in bone remodelling and the immune response of several mammals.


PLOS Biology | 2008

Capturing hammerhead ribozyme structures in action by modulating general base catalysis.

Young In Chi; Monika Martick; Monica Lares; Rosalind Kim; William G. Scott; Sung-Hou Kim

We have obtained precatalytic (enzyme–substrate complex) and postcatalytic (enzyme–product complex) crystal structures of an active full-length hammerhead RNA that cleaves in the crystal. Using the natural satellite tobacco ringspot virus hammerhead RNA sequence, the self-cleavage reaction was modulated by substituting the general base of the ribozyme, G12, with A12, a purine variant with a much lower pKa that does not significantly perturb the ribozymes atomic structure. The active, but slowly cleaving, ribozyme thus permitted isolation of enzyme–substrate and enzyme–product complexes without modifying the nucleophile or leaving group of the cleavage reaction, nor any other aspect of the substrate. The predissociation enzyme-product complex structure reveals RNA and metal ion interactions potentially relevant to transition-state stabilization that are absent in precatalytic structures.


Structure | 2008

The Crystal Structure of the Escherichia coli RNase E Apoprotein and a Mechanism for RNA Degradation

Daniel J. Koslover; Anastasia J. Callaghan; Maria Jose Marcaida; Elspeth F. Garman; Monika Martick; William G. Scott; Ben F. Luisi

Summary RNase E is an essential bacterial endoribonuclease involved in the turnover of messenger RNA and the maturation of structured RNA precursors in Escherichia coli. Here, we present the crystal structure of the E. coli RNase E catalytic domain in the apo-state at 3.3 Å. This structure indicates that, upon catalytic activation, RNase E undergoes a marked conformational change characterized by the coupled movement of two RNA-binding domains to organize the active site. The structural data suggest a mechanism of RNA recognition and cleavage that explains the enzymes preference for substrates possessing a 5′-monophosphate and accounts for the protective effect of a triphosphate cap for most transcripts. Internal flexibility within the quaternary structure is also observed, a finding that has implications for recognition of structured RNA substrates and for the mechanism of internal entry for a subset of substrates that are cleaved without 5′-end requirements.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Structure and function of regulatory RNA elements: Ribozymes that regulate gene expression

William G. Scott; Monika Martick; Young In Chi

Since their discovery in the 1980s, it has gradually become apparent that there are several functional classes of naturally occurring ribozymes. These include ribozymes that mediate RNA splicing (the Group I and Group II introns, and possibly the RNA components of the spliceosome), RNA processing ribozymes (RNase P, which cleaves precursor tRNAs and other structural RNA precursors), the peptidyl transferase center of the ribosome, and small, self-cleaving genomic ribozymes (including the hammerhead, hairpin, HDV and VS ribozymes). The most recently discovered functional class of ribozymes include those that are embedded in the untranslated regions of mature mRNAs that regulate the genes translational expression. These include the prokaryotic glmS ribozyme, a bacterial riboswitch, and a variant of the hammerhead ribozyme, which has been found embedded in mammalian mRNAs. With the discovery of a mammalian riboswitch ribozyme, the question of how an embedded hammerhead ribozymes switching mechanism works becomes a compelling question. Recent structural results suggest several possibilities.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Threshold occupancy and specific cation binding modes in the hammerhead ribozyme active site are required for active conformation

Tai-Sung Lee; George M. Giambaşu; Carlos P. Sosa; Monika Martick; William G. Scott; Darrin M. York

The relationship between formation of active in-line attack conformations and monovalent (Na(+)) and divalent (Mg(2+)) metal ion binding in hammerhead ribozyme (HHR) has been explored with molecular dynamics simulations. To stabilize repulsions between negatively charged groups, different requirements of the threshold occupancy of metal ions were observed in the reactant and activated precursor states both in the presence and in the absence of a Mg(2+) in the active site. Specific bridging coordination patterns of the ions are correlated with the formation of active in-line attack conformations and can be accommodated in both cases. Furthermore, simulation results suggest that the HHR folds to form an electronegative recruiting pocket that attracts high local concentrations of positive charge. The present simulations help to reconcile experiments that probe the metal ion sensitivity of HHR catalysis and support the supposition that Mg(2+), in addition to stabilizing active conformations, plays a specific chemical role in catalysis.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2013

Active-site monovalent cations revealed in a 1.55-Å-resolution hammerhead ribozyme structure.

M. Anderson; Eric P. Schultz; Monika Martick; William G. Scott

We have obtained a 1.55-Å crystal structure of a hammerhead ribozyme derived from Schistosoma mansoni under conditions that permit detailed observations of Na(+) ion binding in the ribozymes active site. At least two such Na(+) ions are observed. The first Na(+) ion binds to the N7 of G10.1 and the adjacent A9 phosphate in a manner identical with that previously observed for divalent cations. A second Na(+) ion binds to the Hoogsteen face of G12, the general base in the hammerhead cleavage reaction, thereby potentially dissipating the negative charge of the catalytically active enolate form of the nucleotide base. A potential but more ambiguous third site bridges the A9 and scissile phosphates in a manner consistent with that of previous predictions. Hammerhead ribozymes have been observed to be active in the presence of high concentrations of monovalent cations, including Na(+), but the mechanism by which monovalent cations substitute for divalent cations in hammerhead catalysis remains unclear. Our results enable us to suggest that Na(+) directly and specifically substitutes for divalent cations in the hammerhead active site. The detailed geometry of the pre-catalytic active-site complex is also revealed with a new level of precision, thanks to the quality of the electron density maps obtained from what is currently the highest-resolution ribozyme structure in the Protein Data Bank.


Chemistry & Biology | 2008

Solvent Structure and Hammerhead Ribozyme Catalysis

Monika Martick; Tai-Sung Lee; Darrin M. York; William G. Scott


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Role of Mg2+ in Hammerhead Ribozyme Catalysis from Molecular Simulation

Tai-Sung Lee; Carlos Silva López; George M. Giambaşu; Monika Martick; William G. Scott; Darrin M. York


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2007

Insight into the role of Mg2+ in hammerhead ribozyme catalysis from X-ray crystallography and molecular dynamics simulation

Tai-Sung Lee; Carlos Silva López; Monika Martick; William G. Scott; Darrin M. York

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Lucas H. Horan

University of California

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Monica Lares

University of California

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Rosalind Kim

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Sung-Hou Kim

University of California

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