The reoccurrence of water molecules in crystal
structures of RNase T1 was investigated. Five waters were
found to be invariant in RNase T1 as well as in six other
related fungal RNases. The structural, dynamical, and functional
characteristics of one of these conserved hydration sites
(WAT1) were analyzed by protein engineering, X-ray crystallography,
and 17O and 2H nuclear magnetic relaxation
dispersion (NMRD). The position of WAT1 and its surrounding
hydrogen bond network are unaffected by deletions of two
neighboring side chains. In the mutant Thr93Gln, the Gln93Nε2
nitrogen replaces WAT1 and participates in a similar hydrogen
bond network involving Cys6, Asn9, Asp76, and Thr91. The
ability of WAT1 to form four hydrogen bonds may explain
why evolution has preserved a water molecule, rather than
a side-chain atom, at the center of this intricate hydrogen
bond network. Comparison of the 17O NMRD profiles
from wild-type and Thr93Gln RNase T1 yield a mean residence
time of 7 ns at 27 °C and an orientational order parameter
of 0.45. The effects of mutations around WAT1 on the kinetic
parameters of RNase T1 are small but significant and probably
relate to the dynamics of the active site.