We have solved to 3.3 Å resolution the crystal
structure of the HIV reverse-transcription primer tRNA(Lys,3).
The overall structure is exactly comparable to the well-known
L-shape structure first revealed by yeast tRNA(Phe). In
particular, it unambiguously shows a canonical anticodon
loop. This contradicts previous results in short RNA
fragment studies and leads us to conclude that neither
frameshifting specificities of tRNA(Lys) nor tRNA(Lys,3)
primer selection by HIV are due to a specific three-dimensional
anticodon structure. Comparison of our structure with the
results of an NMR study on a hairpin representing a
nonmodified anticodon stem-loop makes plausible the conclusion
that chemical modifications of the wobble base U34 to
5-methoxycarbonyl-methyl-2-thiouridine and of A37 to
2-methylthio-N-6-threonylcarbamoyl-adenosine
would be responsible for a canonical 7-nt anticodon-loop
structure, whereas the unmodified form would result in
a noncanonical UUU short triloop. The hexagonal crystal
packing is remarkable and shows tight dimers of tRNAs forming
a right-handed double superhelix. Within the dimers, the
tRNAs are associated head-to-tail such that the CCA end
of one tRNA interacts with the anticodon of the symmetry-related
tRNA. This provides us with a partial view of a codon–anticodon
interaction and gives insights into the positioning of
residue 37, and of its posttranscriptional modifications,
relative to the first base of the codon.