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A Meskauskas  D Citavicius 《Gene》1992,111(1):135-139
The cDNA copies of M2-1, the larger heat-cleavage product of M2 double-stranded (ds) RNA, have been synthesized, cloned, sequenced and expressed in yeast. This sequence, in combination with the known terminal sequence of M2-1 dsRNA, identifies a translation reading frame for a 362-amino-acid protein of 38.7 kDa, similar in size to the one of several protein species produced from M2-1 dsRNA in vitro translation. The expression of this cDNA clone in yeast confers both killer and immunity phenotypes.  相似文献   

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The M species (medium sized) dsRNA (1.1–1.4 × 106 daltons) isolated from a toxin-producing yeast killer strain (K+R+) and three related, defective interfering (suppressive) S species dsRNAs of the yeast killer-associated cytoplasmic multicomponent viral-like particle system were analyzed by in vitro translation in a wheat germ cell-free protein synthesis system. Heat-denatured M species dsRNA programmed the synthesis of two major polypeptides, M-P1 (32,000 daltons) and M-P2 (30,000 daltons). M-P1 has been shown by the criteria of proteolytic peptide mapping and cross-antigenicity to contain the 12,000 dalton polypeptide corresponding to the in vivo produced killer toxin, thus establishing that it is the M species dsRNA which carries the toxin gene. An M species dsRNA obtained from a neutral strain (K?R+) also programmed the in vitro synthesis of a polypeptide identical in molecular weight to M-P1, thus indicating that the cytoplasmic determinant of the mutant neutral phenotype is either a simple point mutation in the dsRNA toxin gene or a mutation in a dsRNA gene which is required for functional toxin production. In vitro translation of each of the three different suppressive S dsRNAs resulted in the production of a polypeptide (S-P1) of approximately 8000 daltons instead of the 32,000 dalton M-P1 polypeptide programmed by M dsRNA. This result is consistent with the heteroduplex analysis of these dsRNAs by Fried and Fink (1978), which shows retention of M dsRNA ends, accompanied by large internal deletions in each of the S dsRNAs translated.  相似文献   

5.
The M2 double-stranded (ds) RNA species encodes toxin and resistance functions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains with the K2 killer specificity. RNA sequence analysis reveals the presence of a large open reading frame on the larger heat-cleavage product of M2 dsRNA, which is translated in vitro to yield a 28 kd polypeptide as a major product. The postulated translation initiator AUG triplet is located within a stem and loop structure near the 5' terminus of the positive strand, which also contains plausible 18S and 5.8S ribosomal RNA binding sites. These features may serve to regulate the translation of the K2 toxin precursor. The M1 (from type 1 yeast killers) and M2 dsRNA species lack extensive sequence homology, although specific features are shared, which may represent structural elements required for gene expression and replication.  相似文献   

6.
We have completely sequenced a defective interfering viral double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) from the Saccharomyces cerevisiae virus. This RNA (S14) is a simple internal deletion of its parental dsRNA, M1, of 1.9 kilobases. The 5' 964 bases of the M1 plus strand encode the type 1 killer toxin of the yeast. S14 is 793 base pairs (bp) long, with 253 bp from the 5' region of its parental plus strand and 540 bp from the 3' region. All three defective interfering RNAs derived from M1 that have been characterized so far preserve a large 3' region, which includes five repeats of a rotationally symmetrical 11-bp consensus sequence. This 11-bp sequence is not present in the 5' 1 kilobase of the parental RNA or in any of the sequenced regions of unrelated yeast viral dsRNAs, but it is present in the 3' region of the plus strand of another yeast viral dsRNA, M2, that encodes the type 2 killer toxin. The 3' region of 550 bases of the M1 plus strand, previously only partially sequenced, reveals no large open reading frames. Hence only about half of M1 appears to have a coding function.  相似文献   

7.
S Lolle  N Skipper  H Bussey    D Y Thomas 《The EMBO journal》1984,3(6):1383-1387
Two cDNA clones of the segment of Saccharomyces cerevisiae M1 double-stranded RNA, which codes for the yeast killer toxin, have been expressed in yeast using the expression vector pYT760. Toxin expression and secretion depended upon the presence of a yeast promoter. Transformants not only contain an authentic preprotoxin precursor, as determined by precipitation of intracellular proteins with antitoxin antisera, but also display an immunity phenotype. The evidence is that the immunity protein is part of the preprotoxin and may act by masking toxin binding sites. Neither cDNA clone had a complete 5' terminus and the preprotoxin translational start was missing. The promoter and the initiator ATG were supplied by the expression vector. One clone with a full-length preprotoxin but altered N-terminal amino acids gave a normal glycosylated intracellular precursor. A clone with an N-terminal nine amino acid deletion gave a precursor which was not glycosylated but toxin was still secreted.  相似文献   

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Mak mutants of yeast: mapping and characterization.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Killer strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae are those carrying a 1.5 x 10(6)-dalton double-stranded (ds) ribonucleic acid (RNA) (M) in virus-like particles and secreting a protein toxin. Most yeast (koller or not) also carry a 3 x 10(6)-dalton dsRNA (L). We have mapped mutations in eight of the chromosomal genes needed for maintaining M (mak genes). The mak genes are widely distributed on the yeast map, with no multigene complexes. We show that mutants defective in these and other mak genes lose M dsRNA, but not L dsRNA. The mak3-1 mutation results in markedly decreased cellular levels of L dsRNA, but mak3-1 stains do not lose L dsRNA completely. Mutation of mak16 results in temperature-sensitive growth, whereas mutations in mak13, mak15, mak17, mak20, mak22, and mak27 result in slow growth at any temperature. No effect of mak mutations on mating, meiosis, sporulation, germination, homothallism, or ultraviolet sensitivity has been found. The specificity of mak mutations is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The relatedness of several double-stranded RNAs (dsRNA's) present in the virus-like particles of yeast was examined by T1 fingerprint analysis. The dsRNA's examined were L, the dsRNA encoding the capsid polypeptide of yeast virus-like particles; M, which appears to code for a toxic polypeptide and for resistance to the effects of the toxin; and two S dsRNA's present in particles analogous to the defective interfering particles of animal viruses. S3, a dsRNA of 0.46 X 10(6) daltons, was derived entirely from M, a dsRNA of 1.2 X 10(6) daltons. S1, a dsRNA of 0.92 X 10(6) daltons, was a duplication of S3. This conclusion has also been reached independently by heteroduplex mapping techniques (H. M. Fried and G. R. Fink, personal communication). S1 and S3, at least in one yeast strain, were unstable in sequence, apparently due to the accumulation of sequence variants of the same molecular weight. L was a species of 3 X 10(6) daltons, unrelated in sequence to M, S1, or S3. S1, S3, and M had a 3' T1 dodecanucleotide in common.  相似文献   

12.
Protein kinase PKR is activated by double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) and phosphorylates translation initiation factor 2alpha to inhibit protein synthesis in virus-infected mammalian cells. PKR contains two dsRNA binding motifs (DRBMs I and II) required for activation by dsRNA. There is strong evidence that PKR activation requires dimerization, but the role of dsRNA in dimer formation is controversial. By making alanine substitutions predicted to remove increasing numbers of side chain contacts between the DRBMs and dsRNA, we found that dimerization of full-length PKR in yeast was impaired by the minimal combinations of mutations required to impair dsRNA binding in vitro. Mutation of Ala-67 to Glu in DRBM-I, reported to abolish dimerization without affecting dsRNA binding, destroyed both activities in our assays. By contrast, deletion of a second dimerization region that overlaps the kinase domain had no effect on PKR dimerization in yeast. Human PKR contains at least 15 autophosphorylation sites, but only Thr-446 and Thr-451 in the activation loop were found here to be critical for kinase activity in yeast. Using an antibody specific for phosphorylated Thr-451, we showed that Thr-451 phosphorylation is stimulated by dsRNA binding. Our results provide strong evidence that dsRNA binding is required for dimerization of full-length PKR molecules in vivo, leading to autophosphorylation in the activation loop and stimulation of the eIF2alpha kinase function of PKR.  相似文献   

13.
A full-length cDNA of the M1 double-stranded RNA killer preprotoxin coding region successfully directed the synthesis of secreted K1 toxin when expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae from a plasmid vector. Three protein species immunoreactive with antitoxin antiserum were detected intracellularly in transformants harboring this killer cDNA plasmid. These toxin precursor species were characterized by using secretory-defective hosts, by comparative electrophoretic mobilities, and by tunicamycin susceptibility. Such studies indicate that these three protein species represent intermediates generated by signal cleavage of the preprotoxin and its subsequent glycosylation and provide evidence that these events occur posttranslationally.  相似文献   

14.
The human double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-dependent protein kinase PKR inhibits protein synthesis by phosphorylating translation initiation factor 2α (eIF2α). Vaccinia virus E3L encodes a dsRNA binding protein that inhibits PKR in virus-infected cells, presumably by sequestering dsRNA activators. Expression of PKR in Saccharomyces cerevisiae inhibits protein synthesis by phosphorylation of eIF2α, dependent on its two dsRNA binding motifs (DRBMs). We found that expression of E3 in yeast overcomes the lethal effect of PKR in a manner requiring key residues (Lys-167 and Arg-168) needed for dsRNA binding by E3 in vitro. Unexpectedly, the N-terminal half of E3, and residue Trp-66 in particular, also is required for anti-PKR function. Because the E3 N-terminal region does not contribute to dsRNA binding in vitro, it appears that sequestering dsRNA is not the sole function of E3 needed for inhibition of PKR. This conclusion was supported by the fact that E3 activity was antagonized, not augmented, by overexpressing the catalytically defective PKR-K296R protein containing functional DRBMs. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments showed that a majority of PKR in yeast extracts was in a complex with E3, whose formation was completely dependent on the dsRNA binding activity of E3 and enhanced by the N-terminal half of E3. In yeast two-hybrid assays and in vitro protein binding experiments, segments of E3 and PKR containing their respective DRBMs interacted in a manner requiring E3 residues Lys-167 and Arg-168. We also detected interactions between PKR and the N-terminal half of E3 in the yeast two-hybrid and λ repressor dimerization assays. In the latter case, the N-terminal half of E3 interacted with the kinase domain of PKR, dependent on E3 residue Trp-66. We propose that effective inhibition of PKR in yeast requires formation of an E3-PKR-dsRNA complex, in which the N-terminal half of E3 physically interacts with the protein kinase domain of PKR.  相似文献   

15.
O Pines  H J Yoon    M Inouye 《Journal of bacteriology》1988,170(7):2989-2993
The gene for the double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-specific RNase III of Escherichia coli was expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae to examine the effects of this RNase activity on the yeast. Induction of the RNase III gene was found to cause abnormal cell morphology and cell death. Whereas double-stranded killer RNA is degraded by RNase III in vitro, killer RNA, rRNA, and some mRNAs were found to be stable in vivo after induction of RNase III. Variants selected for resistance to RNase III induction were isolated at a frequency of 4 X 10(-5) to 5 X 10(-5). Ten percent of these resistant strains had concomitantly lost the capacity to produce killer toxin and M dsRNA while retaining L dsRNA. The genetic alteration leading to RNase resistance was localized within the RNase III-coding region but not in the yeast chromosome. These results indicate that S. cerevisiae contains some essential RNA which is susceptible to E. coli RNase III.  相似文献   

16.
Zygocin, a monomeric protein toxin secreted by a virus-infected killer strain of the osmotolerant spoilage yeast Zygosaccharomyces bailii, kills a broad spectrum of human and phytopathogenic yeasts and filamentous fungi by disrupting cytoplasmic membrane function. The toxin is encoded by a double-stranded (ds)RNA killer virus (ZbV-M, for Z. bailii virus M) that stably persists within the yeast cell cytosol. In this study, the protein toxin was purified, its N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined, and a full-length cDNA copy of the 2.1 kb viral dsRNA genome was cloned and successfully expressed in a heterologous fungal system. Sequence analysis as well as zygocin expression in Schizosaccharomyces pombe indicated that the toxin is in vivo expressed as a 238-amino-acid preprotoxin precursor (pptox) consisting of a hydrophobic N-terminal secretion signal, followed by a potentially N-glycosylated pro-region and terminating in a classical Kex2p endopeptidase cleavage site that generates the N-terminus of the mature and biologically active protein toxin in a late Golgi compartment. Matrix-assisted laser desorption mass spectrometry further indicated that the secreted toxin is a monomeric 10.4 kDa protein lacking detectable post-translational modifications. Furthermore, we present additional evidence that in contrast with other viral antifungal toxins, zygocin immunity is not mediated by the toxin precursor itself and, therefore, heterologous pptox expression in a zygocin-sensitive host results in a suicidal phenotype. Final sequence comparisons emphasize the conserved pattern of functional elements present in dsRNA killer viruses that naturally infect phylogenetically distant hosts (Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Z. bailii) and reinforce models for the sequence elements that are in vivo required for viral RNA packaging and replication.  相似文献   

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Virus-like particles containing the L (P1)-species of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) were isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and the translational activity of the virus-like particle-derived dsRNA was analyzed in the wheat germ cell-free system. Denaturation of the dsRNA immediately prior to in vitro translation resulted in the synthesis of one major and at least three minor polypeptides, whereas undenatured dsRNA, as expected, did not stimulate [35S]methionine incorporation into polypeptides, but actually slightly inhibited endogenous activity. The major in vitro translation product of the denatured L-dsRNA was shown to be identical with the major L-dsRNA containing virus-like particle capsid polypeptide on the basis of three criteria: co-electrophoresis on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels, immunoprecipitation, and tryptic peptide analysis. We have therefore established that the L-dsRNA genome encodes the major virus-like particle capsid polypeptide. This result adds considerable support to the hypothesis that the L-dsRNA genome acts as a helper genome to the smaller (1.6 x 10(6) dalton) M-dsRNA genome in killer strains of yeast by providing the M-dsRNA containing virus-like particles with their major coat protein.  相似文献   

19.
Zamore PD  Tuschl T  Sharp PA  Bartel DP 《Cell》2000,101(1):25-33
Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) directs the sequence-specific degradation of mRNA through a process known as RNA interference (RNAi). Using a recently developed Drosophila in vitro system, we examined the molecular mechanism underlying RNAi. We find that RNAi is ATP dependent yet uncoupled from mRNA translation. During the RNAi reaction, both strands of the dsRNA are processed to RNA segments 21-23 nucleotides in length. Processing of the dsRNA to the small RNA fragments does not require the targeted mRNA. The mRNA is cleaved only within the region of identity with the dsRNA. Cleavage occurs at sites 21-23 nucleotides apart, the same interval observed for the dsRNA itself, suggesting that the 21-23 nucleotide fragments from the dsRNA are guiding mRNA cleavage.  相似文献   

20.
Strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae harboring M1-dsRNA, the determinant of type 1 killer and immunity phenotypes, secrete a dimeric 19-kd toxin that kills sensitive yeast cells by the production of cation-permeable pores in the cytoplasmic membrane. The preprotoxin, an intracellular precursor to toxin, has the domain sequence delta-alpha-gamma-beta where alpha and beta are the 9.5-and 9.0-kd subunits of secreted toxin. Plasmids containing a partial cDNA copy of M1, in which alpha, gamma, and beta are fused to the PH05 promoter and signal peptide, have previously been shown to express phosphate-repressible toxin production and immunity. Here the construction of a complete DNA copy of the preprotoxin gene and its mutagenesis are described. Analysis of the expression of these mutants from the PH05 promoter elucidates the functions of the preprotoxin domains. delta acts as a leader peptide and efficiently mediates the secretion, glycosylation and maturation of killer toxin. Mutations within the beta subunit indicate it to be essential for binding of toxin to and killing of whole cells but unnecessary for the killing of spheroplasts. Mutations within the putative active site of alpha prevent killing of both cells and spheroplasts. The probable role of beta is therefore recognition and binding to the cell wall receptor whereas alpha is the active ionophore. Mutations within alpha causing loss of toxicity also cause loss of immunity, while the mutants described within gamma and beta retain partial or complete immunity. Expression of gamma without alpha or beta confers no phenotype. The immunity determinant may minimally consist of the alpha domain and the N-terminal portion of gamma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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