The crystal structure of ligand-free tryptophanyl-tRNA
synthetase (TrpRS) was solved at 2.9 Å using a combination
of molecular replacement and maximum-entropy map/phase
improvement. The dimeric structure (R = 23.7,
Rfree = 26.2) is asymmetric, unlike
that of the TrpRS tryptophanyl–5′AMP complex
(TAM; Doublié S, Bricogne G, Gilmore CJ, Carter
CW Jr, 1995, Structure 3:17–31). In agreement
with small-angle solution X-ray scattering experiments,
unliganded TrpRS has a conformation in which both monomers
open, leaving only the tryptophan-binding regions of their
active sites intact. The amino terminal αA-helix, TIGN,
and KMSKS signature sequences, and the distal helical domain
rotate as a single rigid body away from the dinucleotide-binding
fold domain, opening the AMP binding site, seen in the
TAM complex, into two halves. Comparison of side-chain
packing in ligand-free TrpRS and the TAM complex, using
identification of nonpolar nuclei (Ilyin VA, 1994, Protein
Eng 7:1189–1195), shows that significant repacking
occurs between three relatively stable core regions, one
of which acts as a bearing between the other two. These
domain rearrangements provide a new structural paradigm
that is consistent in detail with the “induced-fit”
mechanism proposed for TyrRS by Fersht et al. (Fersht AR,
Knill-Jones JW, Beduelle H, Winter G, 1988, Biochemistry
27:1581–1587). Coupling of ATP binding determinants
associated with the two catalytic signature sequences to
the helical domain containing the presumptive anticodon-binding
site provides a mechanism to coordinate active-site chemistry
with relocation of the major tRNA binding determinants.