We have recently reported an in vitro-evolved precursor tRNA
(pre-tRNA) that is able to catalyze aminoacylation on its own
3′-hydroxyl group. This catalytic pre-tRNA is susceptible
to RNase P RNA, generating the 5′-leader ribozyme and
mature tRNA. The 5′-leader ribozyme is also capable of
aminoacylating the tRNA in trans, thus acting as an
aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase-like ribozyme (ARS-like ribozyme).
Here we report its structural characterization that reveals
the essential catalytic core. The ribozyme consists of three
stem-loops connected by two junction regions. The chemical probing
analyses show that a U-rich region (U59–U62 in J2a/3 and
U67–U68 in L3) of the ribozyme is responsible for the
recognition of the phenylalanine substrate. Moreover, a GGU-motif
(G70–U72) of the ribozyme, adjacent to the U-rich region,
forms base pairs with the tRNA 3′ terminus. Our demonstration
shows that simple RNA motifs can recognize both the amino acid
and tRNA simultaneously, thus aminoacylating the 3′ terminus
of tRNA in trans.