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1.
DExH/D box proteins are molecular motors that utilize the energy derived from NTP hydrolysis to perform work — from helicases that remodel RNA to RNPases that alter RNA–protein complexes. Members of this class of proteins are uniquely placed along the RNA information highway to regulate the flow of genetic information. They have been implicated in a number of nodal points encompassing nuclear, cytoplasmic, and organellar RNA-based processes. The identification and characterization of three unique natural products that selectively inhibit the activity of eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF)4A (DDX2) has provided proof-of-principle that the activity of DExH/D box family members can be selectively targeted. Extending these achievements to other DExH/D box proteins is an important future challenge for drugging this family of proteins. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: The Biology of RNA helicases — Modulation for life.  相似文献   

2.
Remodeling of ribonucleoprotein complexes with DExH/D RNA helicases   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4  
The DExH/D protein family is the largest group of enzymes in eukaryotic RNA metabolism. DExH/D proteins are mainly known for their ability to unwind RNA duplexes in an ATP-dependent fashion. However, it has become clear in recent years that these DExH/D RNA helicases are also involved in the ATP-dependent remodeling of RNA–protein complexes. Here we review recent studies that highlight physiological roles of DExH/D proteins in the displacement of proteins from RNA. We further discuss work with simple RNA–protein complexes in vitro, which illuminates mechanisms by which DExH/D proteins remove proteins from RNA. Although we are only beginning to understand how DExH/D proteins remodel RNA–protein complexes, these studies have shown that an ‘RNA helicase’ does not per se require cofactors to displace proteins from RNA, that protein displacement does not necessarily involve RNA duplex unwinding, and that not all DExH/D proteins are able to disassemble the same range of ribonucleoproteins.  相似文献   

3.
DExH/D box proteins are required for the major transactions of RNA, including mRNA synthesis, pre-mRNA splicing, ribosome biogenesis, translation and RNA decay. In the popular imagination, DExH/D box proteins have become synonymous with 'RNA helicases', which are enzymes that unwind duplex RNAs in concert with the hydrolysis of nucleoside triphosphates (NTPs). But all DExH/D box proteins may not be RNA helicases and the energy of NTP hydrolysis by DExH/D box proteins may be harnessed for other purposes. Cellular RNAs are associated with proteins, often in large ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes. This review focuses on recent progress suggesting a role for DExH/D box proteins as 'RNPases' that use chemical energy to remodel the interactions of RNA and proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Discriminatory RNP remodeling by the DEAD-box protein DED1   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
DExH/D proteins catalyze NTP-driven rearrangements of RNA and RNA-protein complexes during most aspects of RNA metabolism. Although the vast majority of DExH/D proteins displays virtually no sequence-specificity when remodeling RNA complexes in vitro, the enzymes clearly distinguish between a large number of RNA and RNP complexes in a physiological context. It is unknown how this discrimination between potential substrates is achieved. Here we show one possible way by which a non-sequence specific DExH/D protein can discriminately remodel similar RNA complexes. We have measured in vitro the disassembly of model RNPs by two distinct DExH/D proteins, DED1 and NPH-II. Both enzymes displace the U1 snRNP from a tightly bound RNA in an active, ATP-dependent fashion. However, DED1 cannot actively displace the protein U1A from its binding site, whereas NPH-II can. The dissociation rate of U1A dictates the rate by which DED1 remodels RNA complexes with U1A bound. We further show that DED1 disassembles RNA complexes with slightly altered U1A binding sites at different rates, but only when U1A is bound to the RNA. These findings suggest that the "inability" to actively displace other proteins from RNA can provide non-sequence specific DExH/D proteins with the capacity to disassemble similar RNA complexes in a discriminatory fashion. In addition, our study illuminates possible mechanisms for protein displacement by DExH/D proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The exon junction complex (EJC) is a macromolecular complex deposited at splice junctions on mRNAs as a consequence of splicing. At the core of the EJC are four proteins: eIF4AIII, a member of the DExH/D-box family of NTP-dependent RNA binding proteins, Y14, Magoh, and MLN51. These proteins form a stable heterotetramer that remains bound to the mRNA throughout many different cellular environments. We have determined the three-dimensional (3D) structure of this EJC core using negative-stain random-conical tilt electron microscopy. This structure represents the first structure of a DExH/D-box protein in complex with its binding partners. The EJC core is a four-lobed complex with a central channel and dimensions consistent with its known RNA footprint of about ten nucleotides. Using known X-ray crystallographic structures and a model of three of the four components, we propose a model for complex assembly on RNA and explain how Y14:Magoh may influence eIF4AIII's RNA binding.  相似文献   

6.
The exon junction complex (EJC), a set of proteins deposited on mRNAs as a consequence of pre-mRNA splicing, is a key effector of downstream mRNA metabolism. We have identified eIF4AIII, a member of the eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4A family of RNA helicases (also known as DExH/D box proteins), as a novel EJC core component. Crosslinking and antibody inhibition studies suggest that eIF4AIII constitutes at least part of the platform anchoring other EJC components to spliced mRNAs. A nucleocytoplasmic shuttling protein, eIF4AIII associates in vitro and in vivo with two other EJC core factors, Y14 and Magoh. In mammalian cells, eIF4AIII is essential for nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). Finally, a model is proposed by which eIF4AIII represents a new functional class of DExH/D box proteins that act as RNA clamps or 'place holders' for the sequence-independent attachment of additional factors to RNAs.  相似文献   

7.
Almost all pre-miRNAs in eukaryotic cytoplasm are recognized and processed into double-stranded microRNAs by the endonuclease Dicer protein comprising of multiple domains. As a key player in the small RNA induced gene silencing pathway, the major domains of Dicer are conserved among different species with the exception of the N-terminal components. Human Dicer’s N-terminal domain has been shown to play an autoinhibitory function of the protein’s dicing activity. Such an auto-inhibition can be released when the human Dicer protein dimerizes with its partner protein, such as TRBP, PACT through the N-terminal DExH/D (ATPase-helicase) domain. The typical feature of a pre-miRNA contains a terminal loop and a stem duplex, which bind to human Dicer’s DExH/D (ATPase-helicase) domain and PAZ domain respectively during the dicing reaction. Here, we show that pre-miRNA’s terminal loop can regulate human Dicer’s enzymatic activity by interacting with the DExH/D (ATPase-helicase) domain. We found that various editing products of pre-miR-151 by the ADAR1P110 protein, an A-to-I editing enzyme that modifies pre-miRNAs sequence, have different terminal loop structures and different activity regulatory effects on human Dicer. Single particle electron microscopy reconstruction revealed that pre-miRNAs with different terminal loop structures induce human Dicer’s DExH/D (ATPase-helicase) domain into different conformational states, in correlation with their activity regulatory effects.  相似文献   

8.
Proteins of the DExH/D family are ATPases that can unwind duplex RNA in vitro. Individual members of this family coordinate many steps in ribonucleoprotein enzyme assembly and catalysis in vivo, but it is largely unknown how the action of these co-factors is specified and precisely timed. As a first step to address this question biochemically, we describe the development of a new protein-dependent group I intron splicing system that requires such an ATPase for coordinating successive steps in splicing. While genetic analysis in yeast has shown that at least five nuclear-encoded proteins are required for splicing of the mitochondrial aI5β group I intron, we show that efficient in vitro splicing of aI5β occurs with only two of these co-factors and, furthermore, they fulfill distinct functions in vitro. The Mrs1p protein stabilizes RNA structure and promotes the first step in splicing. In contrast, a DExH/D protein, Mss116p, acts after the first step and, utilizing ATP hydrolysis, specifically enhances the efficiency of exon ligation. An analysis of Mss116p variants with mutations that impair its RNA-stimulated ATP hydrolysis activity or reduce its ability to unwind duplexes show that the efficiency of ATP hydrolysis is a major determinant in promoting exon ligation. These observations suggest that Mss116p acts in aI5β splicing by catalyzing changes in the structure of the RNA/protein splicing intermediate that promote the second step. More broadly, these observations are consistent with a model in which the “functional-timing” of DExH/D-box protein action can be specified by a specific conformation of its substrate due to the “upstream” activity of other co-factors.  相似文献   

9.
Mobile group II introns are site-specific retroelements that use a novel mobility mechanism in which the excised intron RNA inserts directly into a DNA target site and is then reverse transcribed by the associated intron-encoded protein. Because the DNA target site is recognized primarily by base-pairing of the intron RNA with only a small number of positions recognized by the protein, it has been possible to develop group II introns into a new type of gene targeting vector ("targetron"), which can be reprogrammed to insert into desired DNA targets simply by modifying the intron RNA. Here, we used databases of retargeted Lactococcus lactis Ll.LtrB group II introns and a compilation of nucleotide frequencies at active target sites to develop an algorithm that predicts optimal Ll.LtrB intron-insertion sites and designs primers for modifying the intron to insert into those sites. In a test of the algorithm, we designed one or two targetrons to disrupt each of 28 Escherichia coli genes encoding DExH/D-box and DNA helicase-related proteins and tested for the desired disruptants by PCR screening of 100 colonies. In 21 cases, we obtained disruptions at frequencies of 1-80% without selection, and in six other cases, where disruptants were not identified in the initial PCR screen, we readily obtained specific disruptions by using the same targetrons with a retrotransposition-activated selectable marker. Only one DExH/D-box protein gene, secA, which was known to be essential, did not give viable disruptants. The apparent dispensability of DExH/D-box proteins in E.coli contrasts with the situation in yeast, where the majority of such proteins are essential. The methods developed here should permit the rapid and efficient disruption of any bacterial gene, the computational analysis provides new insight into group II intron target site recognition, and the set of E.coli DExH/D-box protein and DNA helicase disruptants should be useful for analyzing the function of these proteins.  相似文献   

10.
DEAD, DEAH and DExH proteins are involved in almost every facet of RNA biochemistry. Members of these protein families exhibit an RNA-dependent ATPase activity and some possess an ATP-dependent RNA helicase activity. Although genetic studies have identified specific functions for certain DEx(D)/(H)proteins from which an RNA substrate can be reasonably inferred, only DbpA from Escherichia coli has been shown to exhibit significant RNA specificity in vitro. Here we describe the characterization of YxiN from Bacillus subtilis, the second DEx(D)/(H)protein to show significant RNA specificity as an isolated, homogenous protein. The ATPase activity of YxiN, like that of DbpA, is stimulated by a 154 nt fragment of 23S rRNA. YxiN has a 2 nM apparent binding constant for this fragment, yet its ATPase activity shows 1800-fold RNA specificity. Along with the conserved motifs shared among all DEAD proteins, YxiN and DbpA have a conserved C-terminal extension. This extension is highly conserved in several additional DEAD proteins. We propose that the C-terminus identifies a protein sub-family whose members bind 23S rRNA and that proteins of this family are likely to function in rRNA maturation/ribosome biogenesis or an unappreciated aspect of translation.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Helices in membrane spanning regions are more tightly packed than the helices in soluble proteins. Thus, we introduce a method that uses a simple scale of burial propensity and a new algorithm to predict transmembrane helical (TMH) segments and a positive-inside rule to predict amino-terminal orientation. The method (the topology predictor of transmembrane helical proteins using mean burial propensity [THUMBUP]) correctly predicted the topology of 55 of 73 proteins (or 75%) with known three-dimensional structures (the 3D helix database). This level of accuracy can be reached by MEMSAT 1.8 (a 200-parameter model-recognition method) and a new HMM-based method (a 111-parameter hidden Markov model, UMDHMM(TMHP)) if they were retrained with the 73-protein database. Thus, a method based on a physiochemical property can provide topology prediction as accurate as those methods based on more complicated statistical models and learning algorithms for the proteins with accurately known structures. Commonly used HMM-based methods and MEMSAT 1.8 were trained with a combination of the partial 3D helix database and a 1D helix database of TMH proteins in which topology information were obtained by gene fusion and other experimental techniques. These methods provide a significantly poorer prediction for the topology of TMH proteins in the 3D helix database. This suggests that the 1D helix database, because of its inaccuracy, should be avoided as either a training or testing database. A Web server of THUMBUP and UMDHMM(TMHP) is established for academic users at http://www.smbs.buffalo.edu/phys_bio/service.htm. The 3D helix database is also available from the same Web site.  相似文献   

13.
The UAB Proteomics Database   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
SUMMARY: The University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Proteomics Database (UPD) (http://www.uab.edu/proteinmenu) was created to provide a repository for the storage and linkage of two-dimensional (2D) gel images and the associated information obtained through mass spectrometry analysis of the proteins excised from the 2D gels in a manner similar to the SWISS-2DPAGE database and the Stanford Microarray Database. This was accomplished through the development of a web interface, a relational database, image maps and hyperlinks stored in the database. In addition to the internally generated data, UPD provides links to the National Center for Biotechnology Information via accession number hyperlinks. UPD currently contains information on 44 individual proteins derived from four experiments conducted by four UAB faculty members. Images of the gels from which each of these proteins was isolated are accessed by hyperlinks embedded in the database. AVAILABILITY: The UAB Proteomics Database can be accessed at http://www.uab.edu/proteinmenu.  相似文献   

14.
Mitochondria are semiautonomous organelles which contain their own genome. Both maintenance and expression of mitochondrial DNA require activity of RNA and DNA helicases. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae the nuclear genome encodes four DExH/D superfamily members (MSS116, SUV3, MRH4, IRC3) that act as helicases and/or RNA chaperones. Their activity is necessary for mitochondrial RNA splicing, degradation, translation and genome maintenance. In humans the ortholog of SUV3 (hSUV3, SUPV3L1) so far is the best described mitochondrial RNA helicase. The enzyme, together with the matrix-localized pool of PNPase (PNPT1), forms an RNA-degrading complex called the mitochondrial degradosome, which localizes to distinct structures (D-foci). Global regulation of mitochondrially encoded genes can be achieved by changing mitochondrial DNA copy number. This way the proteins involved in its replication, like the Twinkle helicase (c10orf2), can indirectly regulate gene expression. Here, we describe yeast and human mitochondrial helicases that are directly involved in mitochondrial RNA metabolism, and present other helicases that participate in mitochondrial DNA replication and maintenance. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: The Biology of RNA helicases — Modulation for life.  相似文献   

15.
Telomeres and centromere are two essential features of all eukaryotic chromosomes. They provide function that is necessary for the stability of chromosomes. We developed a comprehensive database named TeCK, which covers a gamut of sequence and other related information about telomeric patterns, telomere repeat sequences, centromere sequences and centromeric patterns present in chromosomes. It also contains information about telomerase ribo-nucleoprotein complexes, centromere binding protein and centromere DNA-binding protein complexes. The database also includes a collection of all kinetochore-associated proteins including inner, outer and central kinetochore proteins. The database can be searched using a user-friendly web interface. AVAILABILITY: http://www.bioinfosastra.com/services/teck/index.html.  相似文献   

16.
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a major cause of acute and chronic liver diseases. During the HBV life cycle, HBV hijacks various host factors to assist viral replication. In this research, we find that the HBV regulatory protein X (HBx) can induce the upregulation of DExH‐box RNA helicase 9 (DHX9) expression by repressing proteasome‐dependent degradation mediated by MDM2. Furthermore, we demonstrate that DHX9 contributes to viral DNA replication in dependence on its helicase activity and nuclear localization. In addition, the promotion of viral DNA replication by DHX9 is dependent on its interaction with Nup98. Our findings reveal that HBx‐mediated DHX9 upregulation is essential for HBV DNA replication.  相似文献   

17.
Vaccinia virus nucleoside triphosphate phosphohydrolase II (NPH-II), a 3'-to-5' RNA helicase, displays sequence similarity to members of the DExH family of nucleic acid-dependent nucleoside triphosphatases (NTPases). The contributions of the conserved GxGKT and DExH motifs to enzyme activity were assessed by alanine scanning mutagenesis. Histidine-tagged versions of NPH-II were expressed in vaccinia virus-infected BSC40 cells and purified by nickel affinity and conventional fractionation steps. Wild-type His-NPH-II was indistinguishable from native NPH-II with respect to RNA helicase, RNA binding, and nucleic acid-stimulated NTPase activities. The K-191-->A (K191A), D296A, and E297A mutant proteins bound RNA as well as wild-type His-NPH-II did, but they were severely defective in NTPase and helicase functions. The H299A mutant was active in RNA binding and NTP hydrolysis but was defective in duplex unwinding. Whereas the NTPase of wild-type NPH-II was stimulated > 10-fold by polynucleotide cofactors, the NTPase of the H299A mutant was nucleic acid independent. Because the specific NTPase activity of the H299A mutant in the absence of nucleic acid was near that of wild-type enzyme in the presence of DNA or RNA and because the Km for ATP was unaltered by the H299A substitution, we regard this mutation as a "gain-of-function" mutation and suggest that the histidine residue in the DExH box is required to couple the NTPase and helicase activities.  相似文献   

18.
Protein identification has been greatly facilitated by database searches against protein sequences derived from product ion spectra of peptides. This approach is primarily based on the use of fragment ion mass information contained in a MS/MS spectrum. Unambiguous protein identification from a spectrum with low sequence coverage or poor spectral quality can be a major challenge. We present a two-dimensional (2D) mass spectrometric method in which the numbers of nitrogen atoms in the molecular ion and the fragment ions are used to provide additional discriminating power for much improved protein identification and de novo peptide sequencing. The nitrogen number is determined by analyzing the mass difference of corresponding peak pairs in overlaid spectra of (15)N-labeled and unlabeled peptides. These peptides are produced by enzymatic or chemical cleavage of proteins from cells grown in (15)N-enriched and normal media, respectively. It is demonstrated that, using 2D information, i.e., m/z and its associated nitrogen number, this method can, not only confirm protein identification results generated by MS/MS database searching, but also identify peptides that are not possible to identify by database searching alone. Examples are presented of analyzing Escherichia coli K12 extracts that yielded relatively poor MS/MS spectra, presumably from the digests of low abundance proteins, which can still give positive protein identification using this method. Additionally, this 2D MS method can facilitate spectral interpretation for de novo peptide sequencing and identification of posttranslational or other chemical modifications. We envision that this method should be particularly useful for proteome expression profiling of organelles or cells that can be grown in (15)N-enriched media.  相似文献   

19.
Fang C  Yi Z  Liu F  Lan S  Wang J  Lu H  Yang P  Yuan Z 《Proteomics》2006,6(2):519-527
Chronic infection by hepatitis C virus (HCV) is closely correlated with serious liver diseases. Although considerable progress has been made during recent years, the mechanism of replication and pathogenesis of HCV infection are still elusive. We have applied proteomic techniques in this work to globally analyze the protein expression profiles of a human liver cell lines Huh7 in absence and presence of HCV replication, aiming at elucidating the components of HCV replication and the cellular responses to HCV replication. The protein mixtures of three subcellular fractions from Huh7 and Huh7-HCV were separated by 2-DE under various pH gradients. Differentially expressed spots were identified by MALDI-TOF MS, followed by database searching. A total of 179 comparative proteins were identified unambiguously, including proteins associated with host cytoskeleton, intracellular traffic, oxidative and ER stress, proteasome degradation, translation, apoptosis, proliferation, etc. Host proteins known to interact with HCV proteins, such as HSP27, alpha-actinin, nucleolin and eukaryotic initiation factor 4A-I, were elevated in Huh7-HCV cells. Our study provides the global information of proteomic alteration of Huh7 cells in the presence of HCV replication and the clues for further understanding of the mechanism of HCV replication and pathogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
Members of the DExH/D family of proteins, a subset of helicase superfamily 2 (SF2), are involved in virtually all aspects of RNA metabolism. NPH-II, a prototypical member of this protein family, exhibits robust RNA helicase activity in vitro. Using a series of modified substrates to explore the unwinding mechanism of NPH-II, we observed that the helicase tracks exclusively on the loading strand, where it requires covalent continuity and specifically recognizes the ribose-phosphate backbone. NPH-II unwinding was unaffected by lesions and nicks on the top strand, which has a minimal role in substrate recognition. NPH-II required physical continuity of phosphodiester linkages on the loading strand, although abasic regions were tolerated. These findings suggest that SF2 helicases are mechanistically distinct from other helicase families that can tolerate breaks in the loading strand and for which bases are the primary recognition determinant.  相似文献   

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