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1.
The eukaryotic exosome is a macromolecular complex essential for RNA processing and decay. It has recently been shown that the RNase activity of the yeast exosome core can be mapped to a single subunit, Rrp44, which processively degrades single-stranded RNAs as well as RNAs containing secondary structures. Here we present the 2.3 A resolution crystal structure of S. cerevisiae Rrp44 in complex with single-stranded RNA. Although Rrp44 has a linear domain organization similar to bacterial RNase II, in three dimensions the domains have a different arrangement. The three domains of the classical nucleic-acid-binding OB fold are positioned on the catalytic domain such that the RNA-binding path observed in RNase II is occluded. Instead, RNA is threaded to the catalytic site via an alternative route suggesting a mechanism for RNA-duplex unwinding. The structure provides a molecular rationale for the observed biochemical properties of the RNase R family of nucleases.  相似文献   

2.
Members of the ribonuclease III (RNase III) family regulate gene expression by processing double-stranded RNA (dsRNA). This family includes eukaryotic Dicer and Drosha enzymes that generate small dsRNAs in the RNA interference (RNAi) pathway. The fungus Mucor lusitanicus, which causes the deadly infection mucormycosis, has a complex RNAi system encompassing a non-canonical RNAi pathway (NCRIP) that regulates virulence by degrading specific mRNAs. In this pathway, Dicer function is replaced by R3B2, an atypical class I RNase III, and small single-stranded RNAs (ssRNAs) are produced instead of small dsRNA as Dicer-dependent RNAi pathways. Here, we show that R3B2 forms a homodimer that binds to ssRNA and dsRNA molecules, but exclusively cuts ssRNA, in contrast to all known RNase III. The dsRNA cleavage inability stems from its unusual RNase III domain (RIIID) because its replacement by a canonical RIIID allows dsRNA processing. A crystal structure of R3B2 RIIID resembles canonical RIIIDs, despite the low sequence conservation. However, the groove that accommodates dsRNA in canonical RNases III is narrower in the R3B2 homodimer, suggesting that this feature could be responsible for the cleavage specificity for ssRNA. Conservation of this activity in R3B2 proteins from other mucormycosis-causing Mucorales fungi indicates an early evolutionary acquisition.  相似文献   

3.
Zamore PD 《Molecular cell》2001,8(6):1158-1160
RNase III endonucleases cleave double-stranded RNA, transforming precursor RNAs into mature RNAs that act in pre-mRNA splicing, RNA modification, translation, gene silencing, and the regulation of developmental timing. The recently solved structure of an RNase III endonuclease domain provides a hint at how this family of ribonucleases functions.  相似文献   

4.
Ribonuclease III (RNase III) type of enzymes are double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-specific endoribonucleases that have important roles in RNA maturation and mRNA decay. They are involved in processing precursors of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) in bacteria as well as precursors of short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) and microRNAs (miRNAs) in eukaryotes. RNase III proteins have been grouped in three major classes according to their domain organization. In this issue of Molecular Microbiology, Redko et al. identified a novel class of bacterial RNase III, named Mini-III, consisting only of the RNase III catalytic domain and functioning in the maturation of the 23S rRNA in Bacillus subtilis. Its absence from proteobacteria reveals that this step is mechanistically different from the corresponding step in Escherichia coli. The fact that Mini-III orthologues are present in unicellular photosynthetic eukaryotes and in plants opens new opportunities for functional studies of this type of RNases.  相似文献   

5.
RNase III enzymes are a highly conserved family of proteins that specifically cleave double-stranded (ds)RNA. These proteins are involved in a diverse group of functions, including ribosomal RNA processing, mRNA maturation and decay, snRNA and snoRNA processing, and RNA interference. Here we report the crystal structure of the nuclease domain of RNase III from the pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Although globally similar to other RNase III folds, this structure has some features not observed in previously reported models. These include the presence of an additional metal ion near the catalytic site, as well as conserved secondary structural elements that are proposed to have functional roles in the recognition of dsRNAs.  相似文献   

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RNase MRP is a ribonucleoprotein endoribonuclease involved in eukaryotic pre-rRNA processing. The enzyme possesses an RNA subunit, structurally related to that of RNase P RNA, that is thought to be catalytic. RNase MRP RNA sequences from Saccharomycetaceae species are structurally well defined through detailed phylogenetic and structural analysis. In contrast, higher eukaryote MRP RNA structure models are based on comparative sequence analysis of only five sequences and limited probing data. Detailed structural analysis of the Homo sapiens MRP RNA, entailing enzymatic and chemical probing, is reported. The data are consistent with the phylogenetic secondary structure model and demonstrate unequivocally that higher eukaryote MRP RNA structure differs significantly from that reported for Saccharomycetaceae species. Neither model can account for all of the known MRP RNAs and we thus propose the evolution of at least two subsets of RNase MRP secondary structure, differing predominantly in the predicted specificity domain.  相似文献   

8.
Human Dicer contains two RNase III domains (RNase IIIa and RNase IIIb) that are responsible for the production of short interfering RNAs and microRNAs. These small RNAs induce gene silencing known as RNA interference. Here, we report the crystal structure of the C-terminal RNase III domain (RNase IIIb) of human Dicer at 2.0 Å resolution. The structure revealed that the RNase IIIb domain can form a tightly associated homodimer, which is similar to the dimers of the bacterial RNase III domains and the two RNase III domains of Giardia Dicer. Biochemical analysis showed that the RNase IIIb homodimer can cleave double-stranded RNAs (dsRNAs), and generate short dsRNAs with 2 nt 3′ overhang, which is characteristic of RNase III products. The RNase IIIb domain contained two magnesium ions per monomer around the active site. The distance between two Mg-1 ions is approximately 20.6 Å, almost identical with those observed in bacterial RNase III enzymes and Giardia Dicer, while the locations of two Mg-2 ions were not conserved at all. We presume that Mg-1 ions act as catalysts for dsRNA cleavage, while Mg-2 ions are involved in RNA binding.  相似文献   

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11.
RNase mitochondrial RNA processing (MRP) is a ribonucleoprotein endoribonuclease that is involved in RNA processing events in both the nucleus and the mitochondria. The MRP RNA is both structurally and evolutionarily related to RNase P, the ribonucleoprotein endoribonuclease that processes the 5'-end of tRNAs. Previous analysis of the RNase MRP RNA by phylogenetic analysis and chemical modification has revealed strikingly conserved secondary structural elements in all characterized RNase MRP RNAs. Utilizing successive constraint modeling and energy minimization I derived a three-dimensional model of the yeast RNase MRP RNA. The final model predicts several notable features. First, the enzyme appears to contain two separate structural domains, one that is highly conserved among all MRP and P RNAs and a second that is only conserved in MRP RNAs. Second, nearly all of the highly conserved nucleotides cluster in the first domain around a long-range interaction (LRI-I). This LRI-I is characterized by a ubiquitous uridine base, which points into a cleft between these two structural domains generating a potential active site for RNA cleavage. Third, helices III and IV (the yeast equivalent of the To-binding site) model as a long extended helix. This region is believed to be the binding site of shared proteins between RNase P and RNase MRP and would provide a necessary platform for binding these seven proteins. Indeed, several residues conserved between the yeast MRP and P RNAs cluster in the central region of these helixes. Lastly, characterized mutations in the MRP RNA localize in the model based on their severity. Those mutations with little or no effect on the activity of the enzyme localize to the periphery of the model, while the most severe mutations localize to the central portion of the molecule where they would be predicted to cause large structural defects. Press.  相似文献   

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13.
The inside-out mechanism of Dicers from budding yeasts   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Weinberg DE  Nakanishi K  Patel DJ  Bartel DP 《Cell》2011,146(2):262-276
The Dicer ribonuclease III (RNase III) enzymes process long double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) into small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) that direct RNA interference. Here, we describe the structure and activity of a catalytically active fragment of Kluyveromyces polysporus Dcr1, which represents the noncanonical Dicers found in budding yeasts. The crystal structure revealed a homodimer resembling that of bacterial RNase III but extended by a unique N-terminal domain, and it identified additional catalytic residues conserved throughout eukaryotic RNase III enzymes. Biochemical analyses showed that Dcr1 dimers bind cooperatively along the dsRNA substrate such that the distance between consecutive active sites determines the length of the siRNA products. Thus, unlike canonical Dicers, which successively remove siRNA duplexes from the dsRNA termini, budding-yeast Dicers initiate processing in the interior and work outward. The distinct mechanism of budding-yeast Dicers establishes a paradigm for natural molecular rulers and imparts substrate preferences with ramifications for biological function.  相似文献   

14.
Ribonuclease III (RNase III) enzymes occur ubiquitously in biology and are responsible for processing RNA precursors into functional RNAs that participate in protein synthesis, RNA interference and a range of other cellular activities. Members of the RNase III enzyme family, including Escherichia coli RNase III, Rnt1, Dicer and Drosha, share the ability to recognize and cleave double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), typically at specific positions or sequences. Recent biochemical and structural data have shed new light on how RNase III enzymes catalyze dsRNA hydrolysis and how substrate specificity is achieved. A major theme emerging from these studies is that accessory domains present in different RNase III enzymes are the key determinants of substrate selectivity, which in turn dictates the specialized biological function of each type of RNase III protein.  相似文献   

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Yeast Rnt1 is a member of the double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-specific RNase III family identified by conserved dsRNA binding (dsRBD) and nuclease domains. Comparative sequence analyses have revealed an additional N-terminal domain unique to the eukaryotic homologues of RNase III. The deletion of this domain from Rnt1 slowed growth and led to mild accumulation of unprocessed 25S pre-rRNA. In vitro, deletion of the N-terminal domain reduced the rate of RNA cleavage under physiological salt concentration. Size exclusion chromatography and cross-linking assays indicated that the N-terminal domain and the dsRBD self-interact to stabilize the Rnt1 homodimer. In addition, an interaction between the N-terminal domain and the dsRBD was identified by a two-hybrid assay. The results suggest that the eukaryotic N-terminal domain of Rnt1 ensures efficient dsRNA cleavage by mediating the assembly of optimum Rnt1-RNA ribonucleoprotein complex.  相似文献   

17.
Members of the RNase III family are found in all species examined with the exception of archaebacteria, where the functions of RNase III are carried out by the bulge-helix-bulge nuclease (BHB). In bacteria, RNase III contributes to the processing of many noncoding RNAs and directly cleaves several cellular and phage mRNAs. In eukaryotes, orthologs of RNase III participate in the biogenesis of many miRNAs and siRNAs, and this biogenesis initiates the degradation or translational repression of several mRNAs. However, the capacity of eukaryotic RNase IIIs to regulate gene expression by directly cleaving within the coding sequence of mRNAs remains speculative. Here we show that Rnt1p, a member of the RNase III family, selectively inhibits gene expression in baker's yeast by directly cleaving a stem-loop structure within the mRNA coding sequence. Analysis of mRNA expression upon the deletion of Rnt1p revealed an upregulation of the glucose-dependent repressor Mig2p. Mig2p mRNA became more stable upon the deletion of Rnt1p and resisted glucose-dependent degradation. In vitro, Rnt1p cleaved Mig2p mRNA and a silent mutation that disrupts Rnt1p signals blocked Mig2p mRNA degradation. These observations reveal a new RNase III-dependent mechanism of eukaryotic mRNA degradation.  相似文献   

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19.
RNase II and RNase R are the two E. coli exoribonucleases that belong to the RNase II super family of enzymes. They degrade RNA hydrolytically in the 3' to 5' direction in a processive and sequence independent manner. However, while RNase R is capable of degrading structured RNAs, the RNase II activity is impaired by dsRNAs. The final end-product of these two enzymes is also different, being 4 nt for RNase II and 2 nt for RNase R. RNase II and RNase R share structural properties, including 60% of amino acid sequence similarity and have a similar modular domain organization: two N-terminal cold shock domains (CSD1 and CSD2), one central RNB catalytic domain, and one C-terminal S1 domain. We have constructed hybrid proteins by swapping the domains between RNase II and RNase R to determine which are the responsible for the differences observed between RNase R and RNase II. The results obtained show that the S1 and RNB domains from RNase R in an RNase II context allow the degradation of double-stranded substrates and the appearance of the 2 nt long end-product. Moreover, the degradation of structured RNAs becomes tail-independent when the RNB domain from RNase R is no longer associated with the RNA binding domains (CSD and S1) of the genuine protein. Finally, we show that the RNase R C-terminal Lysine-rich region is involved in the degradation of double-stranded substrates in an RNase II context, probably by unwinding the substrate before it enters into the catalytic cavity.  相似文献   

20.
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