The DEAH-box helicase Prp43 is a key player in pre-mRNA splicing as well as the maturation of rRNAs. The exact modus operandi of Prp43 and of all other spliceosomal DEAH-box RNA helicases is still elusive. Here, we report crystal structures of Prp43 complexes in different functional states and the analysis of structure-based mutants providing insights into the unwinding and loading mechanism of RNAs. The Prp43•ATP-analog•RNA complex shows the localization of the RNA inside a tunnel formed by the two RecA-like and C-terminal domains. In the ATP-bound state this tunnel can be transformed into a groove prone for RNA binding by large rearrangements of the C-terminal domains. Several conformational changes between the ATP- and ADP-bound states explain the coupling of ATP hydrolysis to RNA translocation, mainly mediated by a β-turn of the RecA1 domain containing the newly identified RF motif. This mechanism is clearly different to those of other RNA helicases.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.21510.001
The spliceosome is a single-turnover enzyme that needs to be dismantled after catalysis to both release the mRNA and recycle small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) for subsequent rounds of pre-mRNA splicing. The RNP remodeling events occurring during spliceosome disassembly are poorly understood, and the composition of the released snRNPs are only roughly known. Using purified components in vitro, we generated post-catalytic spliceosomes that can be dissociated into mRNA and the intron-lariat spliceosome (ILS) by addition of the RNA helicase Prp22 plus ATP and without requiring the step 2 proteins Slu7 and Prp18. Incubation of the isolated ILS with the RNA helicase Prp43 plus Ntr1/Ntr2 and ATP generates defined spliceosomal dissociation products: the intron-lariat, U6 snRNA, a 20-25S U2 snRNP containing SF3a/b, an 18S U5 snRNP, and the ''nineteen complex'' associated with both the released U2 snRNP and intron-lariat RNA. Our system reproduces the entire ordered disassembly phase of the spliceosome with purified components, which defines the minimum set of agents required for this process. It enabled us to characterize the proteins of the ILS by mass spectrometry and identify the ATPase action of Prp43 as necessary and sufficient for dissociation of the ILS without the involvement of Brr2 ATPase.[Keywords: intron-lariat spliceosome; disassembly; Prp22; Prp43; Brr2] Supplemental material is available for this article. Pre-mRNA splicing proceeds by way of two phosphoester transfer reactions and is catalyzed by the spliceosome, which consists of the U1, U2, U4/U6, and U5 small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) and numerous nonsnRNP proteins (Will and Lü hrmann 2011). The snRNPs are involved in recognizing short conserved sequences of the pre-mRNA, including the 59 and 39 splice sites (SS) and the branch site (BS), and in positioning the reactive nucleotides for catalysis. The spliceosome is a dynamic molecular machine, undergoing several major structural rearrangements during its functional cycle. These events are mediated by at least eight conserved DExD/H-box NTPases (hereafter termed RNA helicases) that act at discrete stages of the splicing pathway (Staley and Guthrie 1998;Cordin et al. 2012).Spliceosome assembly is initiated by the binding of U1 and U2 snRNPs to the 59 and the BS, respectively. This is followed by the recruitment of the U4/U6.U5 tri-snRNP, forming the precatalytic B complex. Catalytic activation of the spliceosome (leading to complex B act ) involves the displacement of U1 and U4 snRNAs from the spliceosome and the formation of new base pair interactions between the U6 and U2 snRNAs and the 59 SS (Staley and Guthrie 1998). The resulting RNA structure plays a central role in catalyzing both steps of splicing (Nilsen 1998).These RNA-RNA rearrangements are remodeled by the combined actions of the RNA helicases Prp28 and Brr2, which disrupt the base-pairing between U1 snRNA and the 59 SS and between the U4 and U6 snRNAs, respectively (Laggerbauer et al. 1998;Raghunathan and Guthrie 1998;Staley...
How far do H/ACA sRNPs contribute to rRNA pseudouridylation in Archaea was still an open question. Hence here, by computational search in three Pyrococcus genomes, we identified seven H/ACA sRNAs and predicted their target sites in rRNAs. In parallel, we experimentally identified 17 Ψ residues in P. abyssi rRNAs. By in vitro reconstitution of H/ACA sRNPs, we assigned 15 out of the 17 Ψ residues to the 7 identified H/ACA sRNAs: one H/ACA motif can guide up to three distinct pseudouridylations. Interestingly, by using a 23S rRNA fragment as the substrate, one of the two remaining Ψ residues could be formed in vitro by the aCBF5/aNOP10/aGAR1 complex without guide sRNA. Our results shed light on structural constraints in archaeal H/ACA sRNPs: the length of helix H2 is of 5 or 6 bps, the distance between the ANA motif and the targeted U residue is of 14 or 15 nts, and the stability of the interaction formed by the substrate rRNA and the 3′-guide sequence is more important than that formed with the 5′-guide sequence. Surprisingly, we showed that a sRNA–rRNA interaction with the targeted uridine in a single-stranded 5′-UNN-3′ trinucleotide instead of the canonical 5′-UN-3′ dinucleotide is functional.
In archaeal rRNAs, the isomerization of uridine into pseudouridine (Ψ) is achieved by the H/ACA sRNPs and the minimal set of proteins required for RNA:Ψ-synthase activity is the aCBF5–aNOP10 protein pair. The crystal structure of the aCBF5–aNOP10 heterodimer from Pyrococcus abyssi was solved at 2.1 Å resolution. In this structure, protein aNOP10 has an extended shape, with a zinc-binding motif at the N-terminus and an α-helix at the C-terminus. Both motifs contact the aCBF5 catalytic domain. Although less efficiently as does the full-length aNOP10, the aNOP10 C-terminal domain binds aCBF5 and stimulates the RNA-guided activity. We show that the C-terminal domain of aCBF5 (the PUA domain), which is wrapped by an N-terminal extension of aCBF5, plays a crucial role for aCBF5 binding to the guide sRNA. Addition of this domain in trans partially complement particles assembled with an aCBF5ΔPUA truncated protein. In the crystal structure, the aCBF5–aNOP10 complex forms two kinds of heterotetramers with parallel and perpendicular orientations of the aNOP10 terminal α-helices, respectively. By gel filtration assay, we showed that aNOP10 can dimerize in solution. As both residues Y41 and L48 were needed for dimerization, the dimerization likely takes place by interaction of parallel α-helices.
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