The enzyme polynucleotide 5â²-phosphatase (RNA 5â²-triphosphatase, RTPase, EC 3.1.3.33) is an enzyme that catalyzes the reaction
This enzyme belongs to the family of hydrolases, specifically those acting on phosphoric monoester bonds. The systematic name is polynucleotide 5â²-phosphohydrolase. This enzyme is also called 5â²-polynucleotidase.
The only specific molecular function known is the catalysis of the reaction:
RTPases cleave the 5â²-terminal ó-ò phosphoanhydride bond of nascent messenger RNA molecules, enabling the addition of a five-prime cap as part of post-transcriptional modifications. RTPases generate 5â²-diphosphate-ended mRNA and a phosphate ion from 5â²-triphosphate-ended precursor mRNA. mRNA guanylyltransferase then adds a backwards guanosine monophosphate (GMP) group from GTP, generating pyrophosphate, and mRNA (guanine-N7-)-methyltransferase methylates the guanine to form the final 5â²-cap structure.
There are two families of RTPases known so far:
As of late 2007, 5 structures have been solved for this class of enzymes, with PDB accession codes , , , , and .