How pre-ribosomes temporally and spatially mature during intranuclear biogenesis is not known. Here, we report three nucleolar proteins, Noc1p to Noc3p, that are required for ribosome maturation and transport. They can be isolated in two distinct complexes: Noc1p/Noc2p associates with 90S and 66S pre-ribosomes and is enriched in the nucleolus, and Noc2p/Noc3p associates with 66S pre-ribosomes and is mainly nucleoplasmic. Mutation of each Noc protein impairs intranuclear transport of 60S subunits at different stages and inhibits pre-rRNA processing. Overexpression of a conserved domain common to Noc1p and Noc3p is dominant-negative for cell growth, with a defect in nuclear 60S subunit transport, but no inhibition of pre-rRNA processing. We propose that the dynamic interaction of Noc proteins is crucial for intranuclear movement of ribosomal precursor particles, and, thereby represent a prerequisite for proper maturation.
By combining cryofixation and cryosubstitution in a structural and functional analysis of the nucleus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we identified morphological subcompartments in the nucleolus. These were similar to those of nucleoli of higher eukaryotes, such as the fibrillar centre (FC), the dense fibrillar component (DFC) and the granular component (GC). In situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry revealed RNA polymerase I and proteins involved in early steps of ribosomal maturation along the DFC, while the ribosomal genes were detected at the FCs. Our results also suggest that ribosomal transcripts are distributed along a nucleolar network that might include both DFC and GC. We also show that pre-ribosomal subunits may be exported along tracks to the cytoplasm. Export takes place through all the pores of the nuclear envelope, not just those in contact with the nucleolus. Moreover, comparison of the nucleolar organization in S. cerevisiae and in Schizosaccharomyces pombe demonstrated than the distribution of the 5S genes with respect to the 35S transcription unit does not modify the organization of the nucleolus. We also report, for the first time, the ultrastructural localization of RNA polymerase II in yeast. The distribution of RNA polymerase II and morphological details that could be observed in the extra-nucleolar region of cryofixed cells provided cytological evidence of a peripheral region extending along the nuclear envelope that could correspond to heterochromatin in higher eukaryotes.
Using Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains with genetically modified nucleoli, we show here that changing parameters as critical as the tandem organization of the ribosomal genes and the polymerase transcribing rDNA, although profoundly modifying the position and the shape of the nucleolus, only partially alter its functional subcompartmentation. High-resolution morphology achieved by cryofixation, together with ultrastructural localization of nucleolar proteins and rRNA, reveals that the nucleolar structure, arising upon transcription of rDNA from plasmids by RNA polymerase I, is still divided in functional subcompartments like the wild-type nucleolus. rRNA maturation is restricted to a fibrillar component, reminiscent of the dense fibrillar component in wild-type cells; a granular component is also present, whereas no fibrillar center can be distinguished, which directly links this latter substructure to rDNA chromosomal organization. Although morphologically different, the mininucleoli observed in cells transcribing rDNA with RNA polymerase II also contain a fibrillar subregion of analogous function, in addition to a dense core of unknown nature. Upon repression of rDNA transcription in this strain or in an RNA polymerase I thermosensitive mutant, the nucleolar structure falls apart (in a reversible manner), and nucleolar constituents partially relocate to the nucleoplasm, indicating that rRNA is a primary determinant for the assembly of the nucleolus.
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