Editing of tRNA has a wide phylogenetic distribution among
eukaryotes and in some cases serves to expand the decoding capacity
of the target tRNA. We previously described C-to-U editing of
the wobble position of the imported tRNATrp in
Leishmania mitochondria, which is essential for decoding
UGA codons as tryptophan. Here we show the complete set of
nucleotide modifications in the anticodon arm of the mitochondrial
and cytosolic tRNATrp as determined by electrospray
ionization mass spectrometry. This analysis revealed extensive
mitochondria-specific posttranscriptional modifications, including
the first example of thiolation of U33, the “universally
unmodified” uridine. In light of the known rigidity imparted
on sugar conformation by thiolation, our discovery of a thiolated
U33 suggests that conformational flexibility is not a universal
feature of the anticodon structural signature. In addition,
the in vivo analysis of tRNATrp variants presented
shows a single base-pair reversal in the anticodon stem of
tRNATrp is sufficient to abrogate editing in vivo,
indicating that subtle changes in anticodon structure can have
drastic effects on editing efficiency.