We have performed a deletion and mutational analysis of the catalytic
ribonuclease (RNase) P RNA subunit from the extreme thermophilic eubac
terium Thermus thermophilus HB8. Catalytic activity was reduced 600-fo
ld when the terminal helix, connecting the 5' and 3' ends of the molec
ule, was destroyed by deleting 15 nucleotides from the 3' end. In comp
arison, the removal of a large portion (94 nucleotides, about one quar
ter of the RNA) of the upper loop region impaired function only to a r
elatively moderate extent (400-fold reduction in activity). The termin
al helix appears to be crucial for the proper folding of RNase P RNA,
possibly by orientating the adjacent universally conserved pseudoknot
structure. The region containing the lower half of the pseudoknot stru
cture was shown to be a key element for enzyme function, as was the re
gion of nucleotides 328-335. Deleting a conserved hairpin (nucleotides
304-327) adjacent to this region and replacing the hairpin by a tetra
nucleotide sequence or a single cytidine reduced catalytic activity on
ly 6-fold, whereas a simultaneous mutation of the five highly conserve
d nucleotides in the region of nucleotides 328-335 reduced catalytic a
ctivity by >10(5)-fold. The two strictly conserved adenines 244 and 24
5 (nucleotides 248/249 in Escherichia coil RNase P RNA) were not as es
sential for enzyme function as suggested by previous data. However, ad
ditional disruption of two helical segments (nucleotides 235-242) adja
cent to nucleotides 244 and 245 reduced activity by >10(4)-fold, suppo
rting the notion that nucleotides in this region are also part of the
active core structure. Finally, we suggest that the severe interferenc
e with RNase P RNA function caused by many deletions supports the noti
on that the great bulk of its almost 400 nucleotides co-organize a sin
gle domain of higher order RNA structure.