A universally conserved adenosine, A2451, within the ribosomal
peptidyl transferase center has been proposed to act as a general
acid–base catalyst during peptide bond formation. Evidence
in support of this proposal came from pH-dependent dimethylsulfate
(DMS) modification within Escherichia coli ribosomes.
A2451 displayed reactivity consistent with an apparent acidity
constant (pKa) near neutrality, though
pH-dependent structural flexibility could not be rigorously
excluded as an explanation for the enhanced reactivity at high
pH. Here we present three independent lines of evidence in support
of the alternative interpretation. First, A2451 in ribosomes
from the archaebacteria Haloarcula marismortui displays
an inverted pH profile that is inconsistent with proton-mediated
base protection. Second, in ribosomes from the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, C2452 rather than A2451 is
modified in a pH-dependent manner. Third, within E. coli
ribosomes, the position of A2451 modification (N1 or N3 imino
group) was analyzed by testing for a Dimroth rearrangement of
the N1-methylated base. The data are more consistent with DMS
modification of the A2451 N1, a functional group that, according
to the 50S ribosomal crystal structure, is solvent inaccessible
without structural rearrangement. It therefore appears that
pH-dependent DMS modification of A2451 does not provide evidence
either for or against a general acid-base mechanism of protein
synthesis. Instead the data suggest that there is pH-dependent
conformational flexibility within the peptidyl transferase center,
the exact nature and physiological relevance of which is not
known.