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1.
The tRNA ligase protein of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is one of the components required for splicing of yeast tRNA precursors in vitro. We have purified this protein to near homogeneity using an affinity elution chromatographic step. Purified tRNA ligase is a 90-kDa protein that, in addition to catalyzing the ligation of tRNA half-molecules in the coupled splicing reaction, will also ligate an artificial substrate. Using this artificial substrate, we provide evidence for the existence of a previously predicted activated intermediate in the ligation reaction. The amino acid sequence of the amino-terminal end of the protein was determined, and we have used this information to isolate the structural gene from a library of yeast DNA. We prove that this DNA encodes the tRNA ligase protein by DNA sequencing and by demonstrating overproduction of the protein.  相似文献   

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We identified and partially purified a phosphatase from crude extracts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells that can catalyze the last step of tRNA splicing in vitro. This phosphatase can remove the 2'-phosphate left over at the splice junction after endonuclease has removed the intron and ligase has joined together the two half-molecules. We suggest that this phosphatase is responsible for the completion of tRNA splicing in vivo, based primarily on its specificity for the 2'-phosphate of spliced tRNA and on the resistance of the splice junction 2'-phosphate to a nonspecific phosphatase. Removal of the splice junction 2'-phosphate from the residue adjacent to the anticodon is likely necessary for efficient expression of spliced tRNA. The phosphatase appears to be composed of at least two components which, together with endonuclease and ligase, can be used to reconstitute the entire tRNA-splicing reaction.  相似文献   

4.
Splicing of tRNA precursors in Saccharomyces cerevisiae extracts proceeds in two steps; excision of the intervening sequence and ligation of the tRNA halves. The ability to resolve these two steps and the distinct physical properties of the endonuclease and ligase suggested that the splicing steps may not be concerted and that these two enzymes may act independently in vivo. A ligase competition assay was developed to examine whether the excision and ligation steps in tRNA splicing in vitro are concerted or independent. The ability of either yeast ligase or T4 ligase plus kinase to join the tRNA halves produced by endonuclease and the distinct structures of the reaction products provided the basis for the competition assay. In control reactions, joining of isolated tRNA halves formed by preincubation with endonuclease was measured. The ratio of yeast to T4 reaction products in these control assays reflected the ratio of the enzyme activities, as would be expected if each has equal access to the substrate. In splicing competition assays, endonuclease and pre-tRNA were added to ligase mixtures, and joining of the halves that were formed was measured. In these assays the products were predominantly those of the yeast ligase even when the T4 enzymes were present in excess. These results demonstrate preferential access of yeast ligase to the endonuclease products and provide evidence for the assembly of a functional tRNA splicing complex in vitro. This observation has important implications for the organization of the splicing components and of the gene expression pathway in vivo.  相似文献   

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Mechanism of action of a yeast RNA ligase in tRNA splicing   总被引:44,自引:0,他引:44  
The yeast endonuclease and ligase activities that carry out the splicing of tRNA precursors in vitro have been physically separated. The properties of a partially purified ligase fraction were examined. The ligase requires a divalent cation and a nucleoside triphosphate as cofactor. The product of ligation is a 2′-phosphomonoester, 3′,5′-phosphodiester linkage. The phosphate in the newly formed phosphodiester bond comes from the γ position of ATP, while the 2′ phosphate is derived from the RNA substrate. An adenylylated enzyme intermediate was identified by incorporation of label from α-32P-ATP. Adenylylation was reversed by pyrophosphate, releasing ATP, whereas ligation was accompanied by release of AMP. Polynucleotide kinase and cyclic phosphodiesterase activities copurify with the adenylylated protein and may be required for the tRNA splicing reaction.  相似文献   

8.
Pre-tRNA splicing has been believed to occur in the nucleus. In yeast, the tRNA splicing endonuclease that cleaves the exon-intron junctions of pre-tRNAs consists of Sen54p, Sen2p, Sen34p, and Sen15p and was thought to be an integral membrane protein of the inner nuclear envelope. Here we show that the majority of Sen2p, Sen54p, and the endonuclease activity are not localized in the nucleus, but on the mitochondrial surface. The endonuclease is peripherally associated with the cytosolic surface of the outer mitochondrial membrane. A Sen54p derivative artificially fixed on the mitochondria as an integral membrane protein can functionally replace the authentic Sen54p, whereas mutant proteins defective in mitochondrial localization are not fully active. sen2 mutant cells accumulate unspliced pre-tRNAs in the cytosol under the restrictive conditions, and this export of the pre-tRNAs partly depends on Los1p, yeast exportin-t. It is difficult to explain these results from the view of tRNA splicing in the nucleus. We rather propose a new possibility that tRNA splicing occurs on the mitochondrial surface in yeast.  相似文献   

9.
tRNA splicing is essential in yeast and humans and presumably all eukaryotes. The first two steps of yeast tRNA splicing, excision of the intron by endonuclease and joining of the exons by tRNA ligase, leave a splice junction bearing a 2'-phosphate. Biochemical analysis suggests that removal of this phosphate in yeast is catalyzed by a highly specific 2'-phosphotransferase that transfers the phosphate to NAD to form ADP-ribose 1"-2" cyclic phosphate. 2'-Phosphotransferase catalytic activity is encoded by a single essential gene, TPT1, in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We show here that Tpt1 protein is responsible for the dephosphorylation step of tRNA splicing in vivo because, during nonpermissive growth, conditional lethal tpt1 mutants accumulate 2'-phosphorylated tRNAs from eight different tRNA species that are known to be spliced. We show also that several of these tRNAs are undermodified at the splice junction residue, which is always located at the hypermodified position one base 3' of the anticodon. This result is consistent with previous results indicating that modification of the hypermodified position occurs after intron excision in the tRNA processing pathway, and implies that modification normally follows the dephosphorylation step of tRNA splicing in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
We have previously shown that HeLa cells contain activities implicated in tRNA splicing in yeast, a ligase capable of joining tRNA half-molecules and an NAD-dependent activity capable of removing the 2'-phosphate created at the splice junction by the ligase (Zillmann, M., Gorovsky, M.A., and Phizicky, E.M. (1991) Mol. Cell. Biol. 11, 5410-5416). We show here that removal of the splice junction 2'-phosphate is, as in yeast, a 2'-phosphate-specific phosphotransfer reaction that produces the same, as yet unidentified, small molecule. This enzyme is highly specific for oligomeric substrates having internal 2'-phosphates. Oligomers bearing terminal 2'-phosphates are at least 50-fold less reactive and those bearing 5'- or 3'-terminal phosphates are at least 600-fold less reactive. The requirement for an internal 2'-phosphate can be satisfied by a substrate as small as a dimer.  相似文献   

11.
A synthetic substrate for tRNA splicing   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
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12.
N K Tanner  M M Hanna  J Abelson 《Biochemistry》1988,27(24):8852-8861
Yeast tRNA ligase, from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is one of the protein components that is involved in the splicing reaction of intron-containing yeast precursor tRNAs. It is an unusual protein because it has three distinct catalytic activities. It functions as a polynucleotide kinase, as a cyclic phosphodiesterase, and as an RNA ligase. We have studied the binding interactions between ligase and precursor tRNAs containing two photoreactive uridine analogues, 4-thiouridine and 5-bromouridine. When irradiated with long ultraviolet light, RNA containing these analogues can form specific covalent bonds with associated proteins. In this paper, we show that 4-thiouridine triphosphate and 5-bromouridine triphosphate were readily incorporated into a precursor tRNA(Phe) that was synthesized, in vitro, with bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase. The analogue-containing precursor tRNAs were authentic substrates for the two splicing enzymes that were tested (endonuclease and ligase), and they formed specific covalent bonds with ligase when they were irradiated with long-wavelength ultraviolet light. We have determined the position of three major cross-links and one minor cross-link on precursor tRNA(Phe) that were located within the intron and near the 3' splice site. On the basis of these data, we present a model for the in vivo splicing reaction of yeast precursor tRNAs.  相似文献   

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Pre-tRNA splicing is an essential process in all eukaryotes. It requires the concerted action of an endonuclease to remove the intron and a ligase for joining the resulting tRNA halves as studied best in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Here, we report the first characterization of an RNA ligase protein and its gene from a higher eukaryotic organism that is an essential component of the pre-tRNA splicing process. Purification of tRNA ligase from wheat germ by successive column chromatographic steps has identified a protein of 125 kDa by its potentiality to covalently bind AMP, and by its ability to catalyse the ligation of tRNA halves and the circularization of linear introns. Peptide sequences obtained from the purified protein led to the elucidation of the corresponding proteins and their genes in Arabidopsis and Oryza databases. The plant tRNA ligases exhibit no overall sequence homologies to any known RNA ligases, however, they harbour a number of conserved motifs that indicate the presence of three intrinsic enzyme activities: an adenylyltransferase/ligase domain in the N-terminal region, a polynucleotide kinase in the centre and a cyclic phosphodiesterase domain at the C-terminal end. In vitro expression of the recombinant Arabidopsis tRNA ligase and functional analyses revealed all expected individual activities. Plant RNA ligases are active on a variety of substrates in vitro and are capable of inter- and intramolecular RNA joining. Hence, we conclude that their role in vivo might comprise yet unknown essential functions besides their involvement in pre-tRNA splicing.  相似文献   

15.
The subnuclear localization of tRNA ligase in yeast   总被引:27,自引:3,他引:24       下载免费PDF全文
Yeast tRNA ligase is an enzyme required for tRNA splicing. A study by indirect immune fluorescence shows that this enzyme is localized in the cell nucleus. At higher resolution, studies using indirect immune electron microscopy show this nuclear location to be primarily at the inner membrane of the nuclear envelope, most likely at the nuclear pore. There is a more diffuse, secondary location of ligase in a region of the nucleoplasm within 300 nm of the nuclear envelope. When the amount of ligase in the cell is increased, nuclear staining increases but staining of the nuclear envelope remains constant. This experiment indicates that there are a limited number of ligase sites at the nuclear envelope. Since the other tRNA splicing component, the endonuclease, has the characteristics of an integral membrane protein, we hypothesize that it constitutes the site for the interaction of ligase with the nuclear envelope.  相似文献   

16.
Splicing of tRNA precursors in extracts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae requires the action of two enzymes: a site specific endonuclease and a tRNA ligase. The tRNA ligase contains three distinct enzymatic activities: a polynucleotide kinase, a cyclic phosphodiesterase, and an RNA ligase. The polypeptide also has a high affinity pre-tRNA binding site based on its ability to form stable complexes with pre-tRNA substrates. To investigate the organization of functional enzymatic and binding elements within the polypeptide a series of defined tRNA ligase gene deletions were constructed and corresponding proteins were expressed in Escherichia coli as fusions with bacterial dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). The DHFR/ligase derivative proteins were then efficiently purified by affinity chromatography. The complete ligase fusion protein retained enzymatic and binding activities which were unaffected by the presence of the DHFR segment. Examination of tRNA ligase deletion derivatives revealed that the amino-terminal region was required for adenylylation, while the carboxyl-terminal region was sufficient for cyclic phosphodiesterase activity. Deletions within the central region affected kinase activity. Pre-tRNA binding activity was not strictly correlated with a distinct enzymatic domain. A DHFR/ligase-derived protein lacking kinase activity efficiently joined tRNA halves. We postulate that this variant utilizes a novel RNA ligation mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
M. Winey  M. R. Culbertson 《Genetics》1988,118(4):609-617
Two unlinked mutations that alter the enzyme activity of tRNA-splicing endonuclease have been identified in yeast. The sen1-1 mutation, which maps on chromosome 12, causes temperature-sensitive growth, reduced in vitro endonuclease activity, and in vivo accumulation of unspliced pre-tRNAs. The sen2-1 mutation does not confer a detectable growth defect, but causes a temperature-dependent reduction of in vitro endonuclease activity. Pre-tRNAs do not accumulate in sen2-1 strains. The in vitro enzyme activities of sen1-1 and sen2-1 complement in extracts from a heterozygous diploid, but fail to complement in mixed extracts from separate sen1-1 and sen2-1 haploid strains. These results suggest a direct role for SEN gene products in the enzymatic removal of introns from tRNA that is distinct from the role of other products known to affect tRNA splicing.  相似文献   

18.
Akama K  Junker V  Beier H 《Gene》2000,257(2):177-185
tRNA splicing endonuclease is essential for the correct removal of introns from precursor tRNA molecules of Archaea and Eucarya. The only well-characterized eucaryotic enzyme until now is the endonuclease from yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae). This protein has a heterotetrameric structure. Two of the four subunits, i.e. Sen34 and Sen44, contain the active sites for cleavage at the 3'- and 5'-splice sites, respectively. We have identified three novel genes from Arabidopsis thaliana, encoding putative subunits of tRNA splicing endonuclease. They are designated as AtSen1, AtSen2, and AtpsSen1. Both genes AtSen1 and AtSen2 seem to be functionally active, as deduced from corresponding cDNA sequences. Comparison of the amino acid sequences of the these two Arabidopsis proteins revealed 72% identity. However, AtpsSen1 is more similar to AtSen1, but is very likely a pseudogene, as concluded from extended stretches of deletions and the presence of in-frame stop codons. All putative proteins contain a conserved domain at their C-terminus common to counterparts from other organisms. Interestingly, they are more similar to the yeast catalytic subunit Sen44 than to Sen34. Southern analysis with various probes revealed that each gene is present as single copies in the nuclear genome. The evolutionary implications of these findings are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Yeast and human Clp1 proteins are homologous components of the mRNA 3′-cleavage-polyadenylation machinery. Recent studies highlighting an association of human Clp1 (hClp1) with tRNA splicing endonuclease and an intrinsic RNA-specific 5′-OH polynucleotide kinase activity of hClp1 have prompted speculation that Clp1 might play a catalytic role in tRNA splicing in animal cells. Here, we show that expression of hClp1 in budding yeast can complement conditional and lethal mutations in the essential 5′-OH RNA kinase module of yeast or plant tRNA ligases. The tRNA splicing activity of hClp1 in yeast is abolished by mutations in the kinase active site. In contrast, overexpression of yeast Clp1 (yClp1) cannot rescue kinase-defective tRNA ligase mutants, and, unlike hClp1, the purified recombinant yClp1 protein has no detectable RNA kinase activity in vitro. Mutations of the yClp1 ATP-binding site do not affect yeast viability. These findings, and the fact that hClp1 cannot complement growth of a yeast clp1Δ strain, indicate that yeast and human Clp1 proteins are not functional orthologs, despite their structural similarity. Although hClp1 can perform the 5′-end-healing step of a yeast-type tRNA splicing pathway in vivo, it is uncertain whether its kinase activity is necessary for tRNA splicing in human cells, given that other mammalian counterparts of yeast-type tRNA repair enzymes are nonessential in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
It has been proposed that yeast and Xenopus splicing endonucleases initially recognize features in the mature tRNA domain common to all tRNA species and that the sequence and structure of the intron are only minor determinants of splice-site selection. In accordance with this postulation, we show that yeast endonuclease splices heterologous pre-tRNA(Tyr) species from vertebrates and plants which differ in their mature domains and intron secondary structures. In contrast, wheat germ splicing endonuclease displays a pronounced preference for homologous pre-tRNA species; an extensive study of heterologous substrates revealed that neither yeast pre-tRNA species specific for leucine, serine, phenylalanine and tyrosine nor human and Xenopus pre-tRNA(Tyr) species were spliced. In order to identify the elements essential for pre-tRNA splicing in plants, we constructed chimeric genes coding for tRNA precursors with a plant intron secondary structure and with mature tRNA(Tyr) domains from yeast and Xenopus, respectively. The chimeric pre-tRNA comprising the mature tRNA(Tyr) domain from Xenopus was spliced efficiently in wheat germ extract, whereas the chimeric construct containing the mature tRNA(Tyr) domain from yeast was not spliced at all. These data indicate that intron secondary structure contributes to the specificity of plant splicing endonuclease and that unique features of the mature tRNA domain play a dominant role in enzyme-substrate recognition. We further investigated the influence of specific nucleotides in the mature domain on splicing by generating a number of mutated pre-tRNA species. Our results suggest that nucleotides located in the D stem, i.e. in the center of the pre-tRNA molecule, are recognition points for plant splicing endonuclease.  相似文献   

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