Many or all of the sites of pseudouridine (⌿) formation in eukaryotic rRNA are selected by site-specific base-pairing with members of the box H + ACA class of small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs). Database searches previously identified strong homology between the rat nucleolar protein Nap57p, its yeast homolog Cbf5p, and the Escherichia coli ⌿ synthase truB/P35. We therefore tested whether Cbf5p is required for synthesis of ⌿ in the yeast rRNA. After genetic depletion of Cbf5p, formation of ⌿ in the pre-rRNA is dramatically inhibited, resulting in accumulation of the unmodified rRNA. Protein A-tagged Cbf5p coprecipitates all tested members of the box H + ACA snoRNAs but not box C + D snoRNAs or other RNA species. Genetic depletion of Cbf5p leads to depletion of all box H + ACA snoRNAs. These include snR30, which is required for pre-rRNA processing. Depletion of Cbf5p also results in a pre-rRNA processing defect similar to that seen on depletion of snR30. We conclude that Cbf5p is likely to be the rRNA ⌿ synthase and is an integral component of the box H + ACA class of snoRNPs, which function to target the enzyme to its site of action.
We have identified a nuclear pathway that rapidly degrades unspliced pre-mRNAs in yeast. This involves 3'-->5' degradation by the exosome complex and 5'-->3' degradation by the exonuclease Rat1p. 3'-->5' degradation is normally the major pathway and is regulated in response to carbon source. Inhibition of pre-mRNA degradation resulted in increased levels of pre-mRNAs and spliced mRNAs. When splicing was inhibited by mutation of a splicing factor, inhibition of turnover resulted in 20- to 50-fold accumulation of pre-mRNAs, accompanied by increased mRNA production. Splicing of a reporter construct with a 3' splice site mutation was also increased on inhibition of turnover, showing competition between degradation and splicing. We propose that nuclear pre-mRNA turnover represents a novel step in the regulation of gene expression.
The extremely well-conserved La motif (LAM), in synergy with the immediately following RNA recognition motif (RRM), allows direct binding of the (genuine) La autoantigen to RNA polymerase III primary transcripts. This motif is not only found on La homologs, but also on La-related proteins (LARPs) of unrelated function. LARPs are widely found amongst eukaryotes and, although poorly characterized, appear to be RNA-binding proteins fulfilling crucial cellular functions. We searched the fully sequenced genomes of 83 eukaryotic species scattered along the tree of life for the presence of LAM-containing proteins. We observed that these proteins are absent from archaea and present in all eukaryotes (except protists from the Plasmodium genus), strongly suggesting that the LAM is an ancestral motif that emerged early after the archaea-eukarya radiation. A complete evolutionary and structural analysis of these proteins resulted in their classification into five families: the genuine La homologs and four LARP families. Unexpectedly, in each family a conserved domain representing either a classical RRM or an RRM-like motif immediately follows the LAM of most proteins. An evolutionary analysis of the LAM-RRM/RRM-L regions shows that these motifs co-evolved and should be used as a single entity to define the functional region of interaction of LARPs with their substrates. We also found two extremely well conserved motifs, named LSA and DM15, shared by LARP6 and LARP1 family members, respectively. We suggest that members of the same family are functional homologs and/or share a common molecular mode of action on different RNA baits.
Methylations at position N of internal adenosines (mAs) are the most abundant and widespread mRNA modifications. These modifications play crucial roles in reproduction, growth, and development by controlling gene expression patterns at the posttranscriptional level. Their function is decoded by readers that share the YTH domain, which forms a hydrophobic pocket that directly accommodates the mA residues. While the physiological and molecular functions of YTH readers have been extensively studied in animals, little is known about plant readers, even though mAs are crucial for plant survival and development. Viridiplantae contains high numbers of YTH domain proteins. Here, we performed comprehensive evolutionary analysis of YTH domain proteins and demonstrated that they are highly likely to be actual readers with redundant as well as specific functions. We also show that the ECT2 protein from binds to mA-containing RNAs in vivo and that this property relies on the mA binding pocket carried by its YTH domain. ECT2 is cytoplasmic and relocates to stress granules upon heat exposure, suggesting that it controls mRNA fate in the cytosol. Finally, we demonstrate that ECT2 acts to decode the mA signal in the trichome and is required for their normal branching through controlling their ploidy levels.
The small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein particles containing H/ACA-type snoRNAs (H/ACA snoRNPs) are crucial trans-acting factors intervening in eukaryotic ribosome biogenesis. Most of these particles generate the site-specific pseudouridylation of rRNAs while a subset are required for 18S rRNA synthesis. To understand in detail how these particles carry out these functions, all of their protein components have to be characterized. For that purpose, we have affinitypurified complexes containing epitope-tagged Gar1p protein, previously shown to be part of H/ACA snoRNPs. Under the conditions used, three polypeptides of 65, 22 and 10 kDa apparent molecular weight specifically copurify with epitope-tagged Gar1p. The 22 and 10 kDa polypeptides were identified as Nhp2p and a novel protein we termed Nop10p, respectively.
Strains carrying rna14.1 and rna15.2 mutations are defective in pre-mRNA 3' cleavage, polyadenylation, and transcription termination. Long extended read-through transcripts generated in rna14.1 and rna15.2 strains are greatly stabilized by depletion of Rrp41p, a core component of the exosome complex or the RNA helicase Dob1p/Mtr4p. The absence of the nuclear-specific exosome component, Rrp6p, from the rna14.1 strain gave a very different phenotype. Short polyadenylated pre-mRNAs were strongly stabilized, and these were functional for translation. Production of these mRNAs was suppressed by depletion of Rrp41p, indicating that they are the products of exosome processing followed by uncoupled polyadenylation. The balance between complete degradation of 3'-unprocessed pre-mRNAs and their processing to functional mRNAs is regulated, with degradation favored on glucose media.
To survive adverse and ever-changing environmental conditions, an organism must be able to adapt. It has long been established that the cellular reaction to stress includes the upregulation of genes coding for specific stress-responsive factors. In the present study, we demonstrate that during the early steps of the heat stress response, 25% of the Arabidopsis seedling transcriptome is targeted for rapid degradation. Our findings demonstrate that this process is catalyzed from 5' to 3' by the cytoplasmic exoribonuclease XRN4, whose function is seemingly reprogrammed by the heat-sensing pathway. The bulk of mRNAs subject to heat-dependent degradation are likely to include both the ribosome-released and polysome associated polyadenylated pools. The cotranslational decay process is facilitated at least in part by LARP1, a heat-specific cofactor of XRN4 required for its targeting to polysomes. Commensurate with their respective involvement at the molecular level, LARP1 and XRN4 are necessary for the thermotolerance of plants to long exposure to moderately high temperature, with xrn4 null mutants being almost unable to survive. These findings provide mechanistic insights regarding a massive stress-induced posttranscriptional downregulation and outline a potentially crucial pathway for plant survival and acclimation to heat stress.
Degradation of mRNAs is usually initiated by deadenylation, the shortening of long poly(A) tails to oligo(A) tails of 12–15 As. Deadenylation leads to decapping and to subsequent 5′ to 3′ degradation by XRN proteins, or alternatively 3′ to 5′ degradation by the exosome. Decapping can also be induced by uridylation as shown for the non-polyadenylated histone mRNAs in humans and for several mRNAs in Schizosaccharomyces pombe and Aspergillus nidulans. Here we report a novel role for uridylation in preventing 3′ trimming of oligoadenylated mRNAs in Arabidopsis. We show that oligo(A)-tailed mRNAs are uridylated by the cytosolic UTP:RNA uridylyltransferase URT1 and that URT1 has no major impact on mRNA degradation rates. However, in absence of uridylation, oligo(A) tails are trimmed, indicating that uridylation protects oligoadenylated mRNAs from 3′ ribonucleolytic attacks. This conclusion is further supported by an increase in 3′ truncated transcripts detected in urt1 mutants. We propose that preventing 3′ trimming of oligo(A)-tailed mRNAs by uridylation participates in establishing the 5′ to 3′ directionality of mRNA degradation. Importantly, uridylation prevents 3′ shortening of mRNAs associated with polysomes, suggesting that a key biological function of uridylation is to confer 5′ to 3′ polarity in case of co-translational mRNA decay.
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