首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
When U1 and U2 small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) purified by a procedure which preserves their immunoprecipitability by autoimmune antibodies (Hinterberger et al., J. Biol. Chem. 258:2604-2613, 1983), were submitted to extensive digestion with micrococcal nuclease, we found that their degradation pattern was sharply dependent upon magnesium concentration, indicating that they undergo a profound structural modification. At low Mg2+ (less than or equal to 5 mM), both particles only exhibit a core-resistant structure previously identified as being common to all but U6 snRNAs (Liautard et al., J. Mol. Biol. 162: 623-643, 1982). At high Mg2+ (greater than or equal to 7 mM), U1 and U2 snRNPs behave differently from one another. In U1 snRNP, most U1 snRNA sequence is protected, except for the 10 5'-terminal nucleotides presumably involved in splicing and a short sequence between nucleotides 102 and 108. Another region spanning nucleotides 60 to 79 is only weakly protected. This structural modification was demonstrated to be reversible. In U2 snRNP, the U2 snRNA sequence remains exposed in its 5' part up to nucleotide 92, and the 3'-terminal hairpin located outside the core structure becomes protected.  相似文献   

2.
A Woppmann  J Rinke    R Lührmann 《Nucleic acids research》1988,16(23):10985-11004
Protein-RNA interactions in small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (UsnRNPs) from HeLa cells were investigated by irradiation of purified nucleoplasmic snRNPs U1 to U6 with UV light at 254 nm. The cross-linked proteins were analyzed on one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis systems, and the existence of a stable cross-linkage was demonstrated by isolating protein-oligonucleotide complexes from snRNPs containing 32P-labelled snRNAs after exhaustive digestion with a mixture of RNases of different specificities. The primary target of the UV-light induced cross-linking reaction between protein and RNA was protein F. It was also found to be cross-linked to U1 snRNA in purified U1 snRNPs. Protein F is known to be one of the common snRNP proteins, which together with D, E and G protect a 15-25 nucleotide long stretch of snRNAs U1, U2, U4 and U5, the so-called domain A or Sm binding site against nuclease digestion (Liautard et al., 1982). It is therefore likely that the core-protein may bind directly and specifically to the common snRNA domain A, or else to a sub-region of this. The second protein which was demonstrated to be cross-linked to snRNA was the U1 specific protein 70K. Since it has been shown that binding of protein 70K to U1 RNP requires the presence of the 5' stem and loop of U1 RNA (Hamm et al., 1987) it is likely that the 70K protein directly interacts with a sub-region of the first stem loop structure.  相似文献   

3.
A small nuclear ribonucleoprotein, U1 snRNP, has been implicated in mRNA processing. In this investigation sites of protein binding on U1 RNA were mapped by nuclease protection and RNA sequencing. Partially purified human U1 snRNP was sequentially digested with Escherichia coli RNAase III and S1 nuclease. The resistant ribonucleoprotein fragments were deproteinized, preparatively hybridized to the U1 RNA--complementary DNA strand of a human U1 gene cloned in bacteriophage M13, and displayed by electrophoresis. The nuclease-resistant U1 RNA fragments were between 23 and 63 nucleotides in length. Most of these fragments were not obtained when protein-free U1 RNA was similarly digested, whereas others were obtained in low yield from U1 RNA and much higher yield from U1 snRNP. RNA sequencing of the fragments revealed that the protein-protected sites in U1 snRNP correspond to base-paired stems I and II, loop a, and portions of stems III and IV (secondary structure nomenclature of Branlant et al., 1981). Single, "bulged" pyrimidines are present within the protein-covered helical regions of stems I and III. Most interestingly, the single-stranded 5' end of U1 RNA, implicated in mRNA splicing, was also highly protected by protein. These results demonstrate that the great majority of U1 RNA is covered by protein in U1 snRNP. The association of protein with the 5' end of U1 RNA is in agreement with recent evidence that snRNP proteins potentiate the binding of this region of U1 RNA with pre-mRNA splice sites.  相似文献   

4.
Immune precipitation assays with antibodies specific for 2,2,7-trimethylguanosine (m2,2,7(3)G) have been used to study the accessibility of the 5'-terminal m2,2,7(3)G-containing caps of eucaryotic small nuclear RNAs (snRNAs) either as naked RNAs or in intact small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNPs). The antibody selectively precipitates snRNA species U1a, U1b, U2, U4, and U5 from total deproteinized RNA isolated from Ehrlich ascites cells. Binding by the antibody occurs via the m2,2,7(3)G moiety of the snRNAs' caps, since complex formation with the antibody can be completely abolished by excess nucleoside m2,2,7(3)G. The specificity of the antibody is further demonstrated by the complete absence of reaction with deproteinized snRNA species U6, the 5' terminus of which does not contain m2,2,7(3)G. Most importantly, the cap structures of the snRNAs U1a, U1b, U2, U4, and U5 are also accessible for anti-m2,2,7(3)G IgGs when intact snRNPs are reacted with the antibody. In this case, snRNP species U6 is coprecipitated, suggesting that there are intermolecular interactions between this and other snRNPs. Our data demonstrate that the 5'-terminal regions of the above snRNAs are not protected by the snRNP proteins. This finding is of special interest for snRNP species U1, and is discussed in terms of a model which proposes that the 5'-terminal region of U1 participates in the proper alignment of splice junctions in eucaryotic pre-mRNAs (Lerner, M. R., Boyle, J.A., Mount, S.M., Wolin, S.L., and Steitz, J. A. (1980) Nature (Lond.) 283, 220-224).  相似文献   

5.
To understand how the U5 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) interacts with other spliceosome components, its structure and binding to the U4/U6 snRNP were analyzed. The interaction of the U5 snRNP with the U4/U6 snRNP was studied by separating the snRNPs in HeLa cell nuclear extracts on glycerol gradients. A complex running at 25S and containing U4, U5, and U6 but not U1 or U2 snRNAs was identified. In contrast to results with native gel electrophoresis to separate snRNPs, this U4/U5/U6 snRNP complex requires ATP to assemble from the individual snRNPs. The structure of the U5 RNA within the U5 snRNP and the U4/5/6 snRNP complexes was then compared. Oligonucleotide-targeted RNase H digestion identified one RNA sequence in the U5 snRNP capable of base pairing to other nucleic acid sequences. Chemical modification experiments identified this sequence as well as two other U5 RNA sequences as accessible to modification within the U5 RNP. One of these regions is a large loop in the U5 RNA secondary structure whose sequence is conserved from Saccharomyces cerevisiae to humans. Interestingly, no differences in modification of free U5 snRNP as compared to U5 in the U4/U5/U6 snRNP complex were observed, suggesting that recognition of specific RNA sequences in the U5 snRNP is not required for U4/U5/U6 snRNP assembly.  相似文献   

6.
Antibodies specific for N6-methyladenosine (m6A) were elicited in rabbits and used to study the accessibility in intact snRNPs of the m6A residues present in the snRNAs U2, U4 and U6. The antibody quantitatively precipitates snRNPs U2 and U4/U6 from total nucleoplasmic snRNPs U1-U6 isolated from HeLa cells, which demonstrates that the m6A residues of the respective snRNAs are not protected by snRNP proteins in the snRNP particles. While the anti-m6A IgG does not react at all with U5 RNPs lacking m6A, a significant amount of U1 RNPs was co-precipitated despite the fact that U1 RNA does not contain m6A either. Since anti-m6A IgG does not react with purified U1 RNPs and co-precipitation of U1 RNPs is dependent on the presence of U2 RNPs but not of U4/U6 RNPs, these data indicate an interaction between snRNPs U1 and U2 in vitro. The anti-m6A precipitation pattern described above was also observed with snRNPs isolation from mouse Ehrlich ascites tumor cells, indicating similar three-dimensional arrangements of snRNAs in homologous snRNP particles from different organisms.  相似文献   

7.
U1 snRNP2 isolated from HeLa cells and purified by centrifugation in cesium chloride contains a set of proteins that may be resolved into four/five polypeptides by gel electrophoresis. When this particle was submitted to extensive digestion with micrococcal nuclease, RNA fragments of about 25 nucleotides in length were obtained. Sequence analyses showed that these highly protected fragments were derived from the same region of the U1 molecule, spanning positions 119 to 143. At low concentrations of nuclease, a longer fragment, from nucleotide 119 to the 3′ OH end, was also detected. U1 core-resistant snRNP, isolated by high performance liquid chromatography, still contains all the protein components of the intact particle.When a less drastically purified U1 snRNP containing, beside the four/five polypeptides remaining after centrifugation in cesium chloride, a set of at least three polypeptides of larger size, was digested with the nuclease, no other protected RNA fragment was detected.When a mixture of U1, U2, U4, U5 and U6 snRNPs, which contains the same four/five polypeptides as U1 snRNP, was treated with micrococcal nuclease, protected fragments of snRNAs U2, U4 and U5 were found in addition to those derived from U1. No fragment derived from U6 was found.In all cases, the region of snRNA shielded from nuclease attack corresponds to a distinctive feature of the molecule. It is a single-stranded region, comprising the sequence A(U)nG with n ≥ 3, bordered by two double-stranded stems. One of these stems includes the 3′ terminus of the RNA, except in the case of U2, where there are two stems instead of one on the 3′ side of the single-stranded stretch. Although a comparable structural domain exists also in U6 snRNA, it does not contain the sequence A(U)nG which correlates well with the fact that no U6 snRNA fragment seems to resist micrococcal nuclease digestion.  相似文献   

8.
Small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) containing U1 and U5 snRNAs from HeLa cells have been fractionated using a combination of isopycnic centrifugation in cesium chloride and ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose. The procedure is based on the extreme stability conferred upon snRNPs by Mg2+ enabling them to withstand the very high ionic strength that prevails in cesium chloride. U1 snRNP prepared by this method contains all nine major proteins (68K, A, B, B', C, D, E, F, G) corresponding to those previously identified by immunoprecipitation and is therefore precipitable by anti-RNP and anti-Sm antibodies. U5 snRNP purified in this way contains the common D to G proteins and is also enriched in a 25 X 10(3) Mr protein that may be U5 snRNP-specific. The core-resistant U5 snRNA sequence (nucleotide 84 to 3' OH) covered by D to G proteins is extended by only six nucleotides. A similar situation is seen in U4-U6 snRNP, which we have obtained in a sufficiently pure form to examine protected sequences. However, the core-resistant sequence of U4 (nucleotide 116 to 3' OH) in U4-U6 snRNP is extended by 37 nucleotides, suggesting that the protein composition of this particle could be more complex than that of U5 snRNP. The ribonucleoprotein organization of snRNPs is summarized and discussed in view of our current knowledge on snRNA sequences protected by proteins.  相似文献   

9.
We had previously reported the extensive purification of snRNPs (ribonucleoprotein complexes containing small nuclear RNAs) from HeLa hnRNP (ribonucleoprotein complexes containing the heterogenous nuclear RNA) by taking advantage of their ability to withstand centrifugation in cesium chloride containing 0.5% sarkosyl (C. BRUNEL et al 1981, Nucleic Acids Research, 9, 815–830). Such purified snRNPs contained the five nucleoplasmic snRNAs (U1, U2, U4, U5 and U6) and a very simple protein complement of 4–5 polypeptides between 10 and 14,000 daltons. The possible involvement of U1 in messenger RNA splicing makes it crucial to obtain in pure form the individual U1 snRNP, if an in vitro splicing system is to be reconstructed. The present work reports the purification of U1 snRNP and shows that it contains exactly the same polypeptides as the mixture of all five snRNPs suggesting that the specific function, if any, depends on the RNA moiety.  相似文献   

10.
The 5' ends of U1, U2, U3, U4, and U5 small nuclear RNAs (snRNA) are capped by a structure which contains N2,N2-7-trimethylguanosine (m2,2,7 G). m2,2,7 G was used as hapten to raise antibodies in rabbits, and these antibodies were linked to Sepharose. When deproteinized RNA was passed through this antibody column, these snRNA species were retained by the column. Conversely, 4 S, 5 S, 5.8 S, U6, and 7 S RNA, whose 5' termini do not contain m2,2,7 G, were not recognized. After a nuclear extract was loaded on the column, U1 RNA and some U2 RNA were retained. Therefore, the 5' ends of at least U1 RNA are accessible when this RNA species is in small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle (snRNP) form. This is of interest, since it has been proposed that the 5' terminus sequence of U1 RNA may hybridize with splice junctions in heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles (hnRNP) during mRNA splicing. The retention of m2,2,7 G-containing RNA species by these antibodies is not due to association of snRNAs or snRNPs with heterogeneous nuclear RNA (hnRNA) or hnRNP (and antibody recognition of 7-monomethylguanosine residues in hnRNA), since the reaction still occurs after removal of hnRNA or hnRNP by sucrose gradient centrifugation.  相似文献   

11.
Antibodies specific for 2,2,7-trimethylguanosine (m3G), which do not cross-react with m7G-capped RNA molecules were used to study, by immunofluorescence microscopy, the reactivity of the m3G-containing cap structures of the snRNAs U1 to U5 in situ. In interphase cells, immunofluorescent sites were restricted to the nucleus, whilst nucleoli were free of fluorescence. This indicates that the 5' terminal of most of the nucleoplasmic snRNAs are not protected by an m3G cap-recognizing protein and that the snRNA caps are not necessarily required for the binding of snRNPs to subnuclear structures. The snRNAs in the nucleoplasm appeared as distinct units in the light microscope, and this allowed the comparison of the distribution of snRNP proteins by double label studies with anti-RNP or anti-Sm antibodies within the same cell. The three antibody classes produced superimposable fluorescent patterns. Taking into account that the various IgGs react with antigenic sites on snRNAs or snRNP proteins not shared by all the snRNP species, these data suggest that U1 snRNP particles are distributed in the same way as the other snRNPs in the nucleus. Qualitatively the same results were obtained with DNase-treated nuclear matrices indicating that intact snRNPs are part of the nuclear matrix. Our data are consistent with proposals that the various snRNPs may be involved in processing of hnRNA and that this may take place at the nuclear matrix.  相似文献   

12.
U3 small nuclear ribonucleic acids (snRNA) and U3 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP), which are thought to be responsible for ribosomal RNA processing, are quantitated and localized during oocyte maturation, fertilization, and early embryogenesis in the mouse. On the basis of Northern blot and nuclease protection experiments, it is estimated that there are about 5 x 10(4) U3 snRNA molecules in an ovulated oocyte and in a two-cell embryo. This number then increases roughly 50-fold to 2.7 x 10(6) molecules per embryo by the blastocyst stage. At all stages of development U3 snRNP antigens colocalize with nucleoli, as defined by differential interference contrast microscopy and an antibody to a nucleolar epitope. The synthesis and distribution of U3 snRNA and U3 snRNP follow a pattern independent from other major U snRNPs and snRNAs.  相似文献   

13.
Precursor mRNA is complexed with proteins in the cell nucleus to form heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP), and these hnRNPs are found associated in vivo with small nuclear RNPs (snRNPs) for the processing of pre-mRNA. In order to better characterize the ATP-independent initial association of U1 snRNP with hnRNP, an important early event in assembly of the spliceosome complex, we have determined some of the components essential to an in vitro reassociation of U1 snRNP with hnRNP. U1 snRNP reassociated in vitro with 40S hnRNP particles from HeLa cells and, similar to the in vivo hnRNP/U1 snRNP association, the in vitro interaction was sensitive to high salt concentrations. U1 snRNP also associated with in vitro reconstituted hnRNP in which bacteriophage MS2 RNA, which lacks introns, was used as the RNA component. Purified snRNA alone would not associate with the MS2 RNA-reconstituted hnRNP, however, intact U1 snRNP did interact with protein-free MS2 RNA. This indicates that the U1 snRNP proteins are required for the hnRNP/U1 snRNP association, but hnRNP proteins are not. Thus, the initial, ATP-independent association of U1 snRNP with hnRNP seems to be mediated by U1 snRNP protein(s) associating with hnRNA without requiring a splice-site sequence. This complex may then be further stabilized by intron-specific interactions and hnRNP proteins, as well as by other snRNPs.  相似文献   

14.
A ribonucleoprotein complex whose RNA complement consists exclusively of small nuclear RNA species (snRNA) has been purified from particles containing heterogenous nuclear RNA (hnRNP) from HeLa cells. This was accomplished by taking advantage of their ability to band at a density of about 1.43 g/cm3 in plain cesium chloride as well as in cesium chloride gradients containing 0.5% sarkosyl without prior aldehyde fixation. After these two steps of equilibrium density centrifugation, these snRNPs were still largely contaminated by free proteins (and especially phosphoproteins). A final step of purification by velocity sedimentation in a sucrose gradient containing 0.5 M cesium chloride and 0.5% sarkosyl was efficient in completely eliminating all free proteins. U1, U2, U4, U5 and U6 species according to the nomenclature of Lerner et al. (Nature, (1980) 283, 220-224) were found in these purified snRNPs, while a significant part of U6 and a small amount of U2 were found in the bottom fraction. 5S species behaved entirely as free RNA and is presumably a contaminant of cytoplasmic origin. Electrophoresis of proteins from snRNP labeled in vivo with (35S) methionine, revealed four bands with migrations corresponding to molecular weights ranging between 10,000 and 14,000 daltons.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
The U1 small nuclear (sn)RNA participates in splicing of pre-mRNAs by recognizing and binding to 5′ splice sites at exon/intron boundaries. U1 snRNAs associate with 5′ splice sites in the form of ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNPs) that are comprised of the U1 snRNA and 10 core components, including U1A, U1-70K, U1C and the ‘Smith antigen’, or Sm, heptamer. The U1 snRNA is highly conserved across a wide range of taxa; however, a number of reports have identified the presence of expressed U1-like snRNAs in multiple species, including humans. While numerous U1-like molecules have been shown to be expressed, it is unclear whether these variant snRNAs have the capacity to form snRNPs and participate in splicing. The purpose of the present study was to further characterize biochemically the ability of previously identified human U1-like variants to form snRNPs and bind to U1 snRNP proteins. A bioinformatics analysis provided support for the existence of multiple expressed variants. In vitro gel shift assays, competition assays, and immunoprecipitations (IPs) revealed that the variants formed high molecular weight assemblies to varying degrees and associated with core U1 snRNP proteins to a lesser extent than the canonical U1 snRNA. Together, these data suggest that the human U1 snRNA variants analyzed here are unable to efficiently bind U1 snRNP proteins. The current work provides additional biochemical insights into the ability of the variants to assemble into snRNPs.  相似文献   

18.
Small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNPs) from eucaryotic cells can be fractionated on affinity columns prepared with antibodies of high affinity for 2,2,7-trimethyl-guanosine (m3G), which is present in the 5'-terminal caps of the snRNAs. While the snRNPs U1, U2 and U5 are eluted with the nucleoside m3G in the presence of 0.1 M salt, the snRNP species U4 and U6 are only desorbed when the salt concentration is increased. The same fractionation pattern was likewise observed for snRNPs from HeLa or Ehrlich ascites tumor cells. Since U6 RNA lacks the m3G residue and its RNA does not react with anti-m3G, its co-chromatography with U4 RNP on anti-m3G affinity columns suggests either that discrete snRNPs U4 and U6 are intimately associated in nuclear extracts or that both RNAs are organized in one ribonucleoprotein particle. Further evidence for a U4/U6 RNP particle is obtained by sedimentation studies with purified snRNPs in sucrose gradients. Gel fractionation of RNAs shows identical distributions of snRNAs U4 and U6 in the gradient, and the U4/U6 RNP particle sediments faster than the snRNPs U1 or U2. Physical association between snRNPs U4 and U6 during sedimentation is shown by their co-precipitation with anti-m3G IgG from the gradient fractions. Finally, experimental evidence is provided that snRNAs U4 and U6 are associated by intermolecular base pairing in the U4/U6 RNP particle, as demonstrated by our finding that anti-m3G IgG co-precipitates U6 RNA with U4 RNA following phenolization of U4/U6 RNPs at 0 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The interaction of the U1-specific proteins 70k, A and C with U1 snRNP was studied by depleting gradually U1 snRNPs of the U1-specific proteins by Mono-Q chromatography at elevated temperatures (20-37 degrees C). U1 snRNP species were obtained which were selectively depleted of either protein C, A, C and A, or of all three U1-specific proteins C, A and 70k while retaining the common proteins B' to G. These various types of U1 snRNP particles were used to study the differential accessibility of defined regions of U1 RNA towards nucleases V1 and S1 dependent on the U1 snRNP protein composition. The data indicate that in the U1 snRNP protein 70k interacts with stem/loop A and protein A with stem/loop B of U1 RNA. The presence or absence of protein C did not affect the nuclease digestion patterns of U1 RNA. Our results suggest further that the binding of protein A to the U1 snRNP particle should be independent of proteins 70k and C. Mouse cells contain two U1 RNA species, U1a and U1b, which differ in the structure of stem/loop B, with U1a exhibiting the same stem/loop B sequence as U1 RNA from HeLa cells. When we used Mono Q chromatography to investigate possible structural differences in the two types of U1 snRNPs, we observed that protein A was always preferentially lost from U1b snRNP as compared to U1a snRNPs. This indicates that one consequence of the structural difference between U1a and U1b is a lowering of the strength of binding of protein A to U1b snRNP. The possible functional significance of this finding is discussed with respect to the fact that U1b RNA is preferentially expressed in embryonal cells.  相似文献   

20.
Spliceosome assembly during pre-mRNA splicing requires the correct positioning of the U1, U2, U4/U6, and U5 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNPs) on the precursor mRNA. The structure and integrity of these snRNPs are maintained in part by the association of the snRNAs with core snRNP (Sm) proteins. The Sm proteins also play a pivotal role in metazoan snRNP biogenesis. We have characterized a Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene, SMD3, that encodes the core snRNP protein Smd3. The Smd3 protein is required for pre-mRNA splicing in vivo. Depletion of this protein from yeast cells affects the levels of U snRNAs and their cap modification, indicating that Smd3 is required for snRNP biogenesis. Smd3 is structurally and functionally distinct from the previously described yeast core polypeptide Smd1. Although Smd3 and Smd1 are both associated with the spliceosomal snRNPs, overexpression of one cannot compensate for the loss of the other. Thus, these two proteins have distinct functions. A pool of Smd3 exists in the yeast cytoplasm. This is consistent with the possibility that snRNP assembly in S. cerevisiae, as in metazoans, is initiated in the cytoplasm from a pool of RNA-free core snRNP protein complexes.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号