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1.
V. Doye  R. Wepf    E. C. Hurt 《The EMBO journal》1994,13(24):6062-6075
Temperature-sensitive nucleoporin nup49-316 mutant cells accumulate poly(A)+ RNA inside the nucleus when shifted to restrictive temperature. We performed a synthetic lethal screen with this mutant allele to identify further components of the mRNA export machinery. A synthetic lethal mutant slv21 was isolated, which exhibited a ts phenotype and showed nuclear accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA at 37 degrees C. The wild-type gene complementing slv21 was cloned and sequenced. It encodes a novel protein Nup133p which is located at the nuclear pore complex. NUP133 is not an essential gene, but cells in which NUP133 is disrupted grow slowly at permissive temperatures and stop growing at 37 degrees C. Concomitant with the growth inhibition, nup133- cells accumulate poly(A)+ RNA inside the nucleus whereas nuclear import of a karyophilic reporter protein is not altered. Strikingly, nup133- cells display extensive clustering of nuclear pore complexes at a few sites on the nuclear envelope. However, the nuclear pore clustering phenotype and intranuclear accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA are not obligatorily linked, since an amino-terminally truncated Nup133p allows normal poly(A)+ RNA export, but does not complement the clustering phenotype of nup133- cells.  相似文献   

2.
Pre-mRNA splicing mutants of Schizosaccharomyces pombe.   总被引:8,自引:1,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
J Potashkin  R Li    D Frendewey 《The EMBO journal》1989,8(2):551-559
A collection of temperature sensitive (ts-) mutants was prepared by chemical mutagenesis of a wild type Schizosaccharomyces pombe strain. To screen the ts- mutants for pre-mRNA splicing defects, an oligodeoxynucleotide that recognizes one of the introns of the beta-tubulin pre-mRNA was used as a probe in a Northern blot assay to detect accumulation of intron sequences. This screening procedure identified three pre-mRNA splicing mutants from 100 ts- strains. The three mutants are defective in an early step of the pre-mRNA splicing reaction; none accumulate intermediates. The precursors that accumulate at 37 degrees C are polyadenylated. Analysis of the splicing of another pre-mRNA showed that the mutations are not specific for beta-tubulin. The total RNA pattern in the three splicing mutants appears to be normal. In addition, the amounts of the spliceosomal snRNAs are not drastically changed compared to the wild type and splicing of pre-tRNAs is not blocked. Genetic analyses demonstrate that all three splicing mutations are tightly linked to the ts- growth defects and are recessive. Crosses among the mutants place them in three complementation groups. The mutants have been named prp1, prp2 and prp3.  相似文献   

3.
To identify components involved in nuclear protein import, we used a genetic selection to isolate mutants that mislocalized a nuclear-targeted protein. We identified temperature-sensitive mutants that accumulated several different nuclear proteins in the cytoplasm when shifted to the semipermissive temperature of 30 degrees C; these were termed npl (nuclear protein localization) mutants. We now present the properties of yeast strains bearing mutations in the NPL4 gene and report the cloning of the NPL4 gene and the characterization of the Np14 protein. The npl4-1 mutant was isolated by the previously described selection scheme. The second allele, npl4-2, was identified from an independently derived collection of temperature-sensitive mutants. The npl4-1 and npl4-2 strains accumulate nuclear-targeted proteins in the cytoplasm at the nonpermissive temperature consistent with a defect in nuclear protein import. Using an in vitro nuclear import assay, we show that nuclei prepared from temperature-shifted npl4 mutant cells are unable to import nuclear-targeted proteins, even in the presence of cytosol prepared from wild-type cells. In addition, npl4-2 cells accumulate poly(A)+ RNA in the nucleus at the nonpermissive temperature, consistent with a failure to export mRNA from the nucleus. The npl4-1 and npl4-2 cells also exhibit distinct, temperature-sensitive structural defects: npl4-1 cells project extra nuclear envelope into the cytoplasm, whereas npl4-2 cells from nuclear envelope herniations that appear to be filled with poly(A)+ RNA. The NPL4 gene encodes an essential M(r) 64,000 protein that is located at the nuclear periphery and localizes in a pattern similar to nuclear pore complex proteins. Taken together, these results indicate that this gene encodes a novel nuclear pore complex or nuclear pore complex-associated component required for nuclear membrane integrity and nuclear transport.  相似文献   

4.
Nucleocytoplasmic transport of mRNA is essential for eukaryotic gene expression. However, how mRNA is exported from the nucleus is mostly unknown. To elucidate the mechanisms of mRNA transport, we took a genetic approach to identify genes, the products of which play a role in that process. From about 1000 temperature -sensitive (ts- or cs-) mutants, we identified five ts- mutants that are defective in poly(A)+ RNA transport by using a situ hybridization with an oligo(dT)50 as a probe. These mutants accumulate poly(A)+ RNA in the nuclei when shifted to a nonpermissive temperature. All five mutations are tightly linked to the ts- growth defects, are recessive, and fall into four different groups designated as ptr 1-4 (poly(A)+ RNA transport). Interestingly, each group of mutants has a differential localization pattern of poly(A)+ RNA in the nuclei at the nonpermissive temperature, suggesting that they have defects at different steps of the mRNA transport pathway. Localization of a nucleoplasmin-green fluorescent protein fusion suggests that ptr2 and ptr3 have defects also in nuclear protein import. Among the isolated mutants, only ptr2 showed a defect in pre-mRNA splicing. We cloned the ptr2+ and ptr3+ genes and found that they encode Schizosaccharomyces pombe homologues of the mammalian RCC1, a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for RAN/TC4, and the ubiquitin-activating enzyme E1 involved in ubiquitin conjugation, respectively. The ptr3+ gene is essential for cell viability, and Ptr3p tagged with green fluorescent protein was localized in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm. This is the first report suggesting that the ubiquitin system plays a role in mRNA export.  相似文献   

5.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae the function of the RN A1 gene is believed to be required for the transport of newly synthesized mRNA from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. Nuclear poly(A)+ RNAs accumulate and cytoplasmic mRNAs decay after the temperature-sensitive (ts) rna1.1 mutant is shifted from 25 degrees C to 37 degrees C. In this study the 3' poly(A) upon poly(A)+ RNA synthesized after expression of rna1.1 was shown to be appreciably longer than the poly(A) normally present on yeast cytoplasmic mRNA. This increased poly(A) length is due to rna1.1, since it was found only in this mutant after a 25 degrees C to 37 degrees C heat shock, not an intragenic non-ts revertant of rna1.1, wild-type (RN A1+) cells or a RN A1+, rna2.1 mutant subjected to equivalent heat shocks. It may be an indication that the normal shortening of the poly(A) on mRNAs does not occur in the nucleus, but happens only with transport to the cytoplasm. Alterations in the mean size of poly(A) may be a relatively simple marker for mRNA transport defects.  相似文献   

6.
S. Urushivama  T. Tani    Y. Ohshima 《Genetics》1997,147(1):101-115
The prp (pre-mRNA processing) mutants of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe have a defect in pre-mRNA splicing and accumulate mRNA precursors at a restrictive temperature. One of the prp mutants, prp1-4, also has a defect in poly(A)(+) RNA transport. The prp1(+) gene encodes a protein of 906 amino acid residues that contains 19 repeats of 34 amino acids termed tetratrico peptide repeat (TPR) motifs, which were proposed to mediate protein-protein interactions. The amino acid sequence of Prp1p shares 29.6% identity and 50.6% similarity with that of the PRP6 protein of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which is a component of the U4/U6 snRNP required for spliceosome assembly. No functional complementation was observed between S. pombe prp1(+) and S. cerevisiae PRP6. We examined synthetic lethality of prp1-4 with the other known prp mutations in S. pombe. The results suggest that Prp1p interacts either physically or functionally with Prp4p, Prp6p and Prp13p. Interestingly, the prp1(+) gene was found to be identical with the zer1(+) gene that functions in cell cycle control. These results suggest that Prp1p/Zer1p is either directly or indirectly involved in cell cycle progression and/or poly(A)(+) RNA nuclear export, in addition to pre-mRNA splicing.  相似文献   

7.
J R Maddock  J Roy    J L Woolford  Jr 《Nucleic acids research》1996,24(6):1037-1044
We have identified six new genes whose products are necessary for the splicing of nuclear pre-mRNA in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A collection of 426 temperature-sensitive yeast strains was generated by EMS mutagenesis. These mutants were screened for pre-mRNA splicing defects by an RNA gel blot assay, using the intron- containing CRY1 and ACT1 genes as hybridization probes. We identified 20 temperature-sensitive mutants defective in pre-mRNA splicing. Twelve appear to be allelic to the previously identified prp2, prp3, prp6, prp16/prp23, prp18, prp19 or prp26 mutations that cause defects in spliceosome assembly or the first or second step of splicing. One is allelic to SNR14 encoding U4 snRNA. Six new complementation groups, prp29-prp34, were identified. Each of these mutants accumulates unspliced pre-mRNA at 37 degrees C and thus is blocked in spliceosome assembly or early steps of pre-mRNA splicing before the first cleavage and ligation reaction. The prp29 mutation is suppressed by multicopy PRP2 and displays incomplete patterns of complementation with prp2 alleles, suggesting that the PRP29 gene product may interact with that of PRP2. There are now at least 42 different gene products, including the five spliceosomal snRNAs and 37 different proteins that are necessary for pre-mRNA splicing in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. However, the number of yeast genes identifiable by this approach has not yet been exhausted.  相似文献   

8.
The RCC1 gene of mammals encodes a guanine nucleotide release protein (GNRP). RCC1 and a homolog in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (MTR1/PRP20/SRM1) have previously been implicated in control of mRNA metabolism and export from the nucleus. We here demonstrate that a temperature-sensitive fission yeast mutant which has a mutation in a homologous gene, and two of three additional (mtr1/prp20/srm1) mutants accumulate nuclear poly(A)+ RNA at 37 degrees C. In S.cerevisiae, maturation of rRNA and tRNA is also inhibited at 37 degrees C. Nevertheless, studies with the corresponding BHK-21 cell mutant indicate that protein import into the nucleus continues. MTR1 homologs regulate RNA processing at a point which is distinct from their regulation of chromosome condensation since: (i) poly(A)+ RNA accumulation in the fission yeast mutant precedes chromosome condensation, and (ii) unlike chromosome condensation, accumulation of nuclear poly(A)+ RNA does not require p34cdc28 kinase activation or protein synthesis. Moreover, experiments involving inhibition of DNA synthesis indicate that the S.cerevisiae homolog does not govern cell cycle checkpoint control. Since RCC1p acts as GNRP for Ran, a small nuclear GTPase of the ras superfamily, we have identified two homologs of Ran in S.cerevisiae (CNR1 and CNR2). Only CNR1 is essential, but both code for proteins extremely similar to Ran and can suppress mtr1 mutations in allele-specific fashion. Thus, MTR1 and its homologs appear to act as GNRPs for a family of conserved GTPases in controlling RNA metabolism and transport. Their role in governing checkpoint control appears to be restricted to higher eukaryotes.  相似文献   

9.
To identify genes whose products play potential roles in the nucleocytoplasmic export of messenger RNA, we isolated temperature-sensitive strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and examined them by fluorescent in situ hybridization. With the use of a digoxigen-tagged oligo-(dT)50 probe, we identified those that showed nuclear accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA when cells were shifted to the nonpermissive temperature. We describe here the properties of yeast strains bearing the rat3-1 mutation (RAT-ribonucleic acid trafficking) and the cloning of the RAT3 gene. When cultured at the permissive temperature of 23 degrees C, fewer than 10% of cells carrying the rat3-1 allele showed nuclear accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA, whereas approximately 70% showed nuclear accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA, whereas approximately 70% showed nuclear accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA after a shift to 37 degrees C for 4 h. In wild-type cells, nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are distributed relatively evenly around the nuclear envelope. Both indirect immunofluorescence analysis and electron microscopy of rat3-1 cells indicated that NPCs were clustered into one or a few regions of the NE in mutant cells. Similar NPC clustering was seen in mutant cells cultured at temperatures between 15 degrees C and 37 degrees C. The RAT3 gene encodes an 1157-amino acid protein without similarity to other known proteins. It is essential for growth only at 37 degrees C. Cells carrying a disruption of the RAT3 gene were very similar to cells carrying the original rat3-1 mutation; they showed temperature-dependent nuclear accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA and exhibited constitutive clustering of NPCs. Epitope tagging of Rat3p demonstrated that it is located at the nuclear periphery and co-localizes with nuclear pore proteins recognized by the RL1 monoclonal antibody. We refer to this nucleoporin as Rat3p/Nup133p.  相似文献   

10.
Genetic analysis of murine hepatitis virus strain JHM.   总被引:7,自引:6,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
We performed a genetic analysis of 37 temperature-sensitive mutants of murine hepatitis virus strain JHM. Of our mutants, 32 did not induce murine hepatitis virus-specific RNA synthesis in infected cells at the restrictive temperature, 39 degrees C. By complementation testing we have identified at least seven nonoverlapping complementation groups. Six of the genes identified in this way are required for murine hepatitis virus-specific RNA synthesis. The seventh complementation group is made up of five mutants which induced virus-specific RNA synthesis at 39 degrees C.  相似文献   

11.
A screen for temperature-sensitive mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae defective in nucleocytoplasmic trafficking of poly(A)+ RNA has identified an allele of the NUP145 gene, which encodes an essential nucleoporin. NUP145 was previously identified by using a genetic synthetic lethal screen (E. Fabre, W. C. Boelens, C. Wimmer, I. W. Mattaj, and E. C. Hurt, Cell 78:275-289, 1994) and by using a monoclonal antibody which recognizes the GLFG family of vertebrate and yeast nucleoporins (S. R. Wente and G. Blobel, J. Cell Biol. 125:955-969, 1994). Cells carrying the new allele, nup145-10, grew at 23 and 30 degrees C but were unable to grow at 37 degrees C. Many cells displayed a modest accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA under permissive growth conditions, and all cells showed dramatic and rapid nuclear accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA following a shift to 37 degrees C. The mutant allele contains a nonsense codon which truncates the 1,317-amino-acid protein to 698 amino acids. This prompted us to examine the role of the carboxyl half of Nup145p. Several additional alleles that encode C-terminally truncated proteins or proteins containing internal deletions of portions of the carboxyl half of Nup145p were constructed. Analysis of these mutants indicates that some sequences between amino acids 698 and 1095 are essential for RNA export and for growth at 37 degrees C. In these strains, nuclear accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA and fragmentation of the nucleolus occurred rapidly following a shift to 37 degrees C. Constitutive defects in nuclear pore complex distribution and nuclear structure were also seen in these strains. Although cells lacking Nup145p grew extremely slowly at 23 degrees C and did not grow at 30 degrees C, efficient growth at 23 or 30 degrees C occurred as long as cells produced either the amino 58% or the carboxyl 53% of Nup145p. Strains carrying alleles of NUP145 lacking up to 200 amino acids from the carboxy terminus were viable at 37 degrees C but displayed nucleolar fragmentation and some nuclear accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA following a shift to 37 degrees C. Surprisingly, these strains grew efficiently at 37 degrees C in spite of a reduction in the level of synthesis of rRNAs to approximately 25% of the wild-type level.  相似文献   

12.
13.
We have previously isolated three synthetic lethal mutants from Schizosaccharomyces pombe in order to identify mutations in the genes that are functionally linked to spmex67 with respect to mRNA export. A novel rsm1 gene was isolated by complementation of the growth defect in one of the synthetic lethal mutants, SLMexl. The rsm1 gene contains no introns and encodes a 296 amino-acid-long protein with the RING finger domain, a C3HC4 in the N-terminal half. The deltarsm1 null mutant is viable, but it showed a slight poly(A)+ RNA accumulation in the nucleus. Also, the combination of deltarsm1 and deltaspmex67 mutations confers synthetic lethality that is accompanied by the severe poly(A)+ RNA export defect. These results suggest that rsm1 is involved in mRNA export from the nucleus.  相似文献   

14.
15.
《The Journal of cell biology》1995,131(6):1677-1697
To identify genes involved in the export of messenger RNA from the nucleus to the cytoplasm, we used an in situ hybridization assay to screen temperature-sensitive strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This identified those which accumulated poly(A)+ RNA in their nuclei when shifted to the non-permissive temperature of 37 degrees C. We describe here the properties of yeast strains carrying mutations in the RAT2 gene (RAT - ribonucleic acid trafficking) and the cloning of the RAT2 gene. Only a low percentage of cells carrying the rat2-1 allele showed nuclear accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA when cultured at 15 degrees or 23 degrees C, but within 4 h of a shift to the nonpermissive temperature of 37 degrees C, poly(A)+ RNA accumulated within the nuclei of approximately 80% of cells. No defect was seen in the nuclear import of a reporter protein bearing a nuclear localization signal. Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are distributed relatively evenly around the nuclear envelope in wild-type cells. In cells carrying either the rat2-1 or rat2-2 allele, NPCs were clustered together into one or a few regions of the nuclear envelope. This clustering was a constitutive property of mutant cells. NPCs remained clustered in crude nuclei isolated from mutant cells, indicating that these clusters are not able to redistribute around the nuclear envelope when nuclei are separated from cytoplasmic components. Electron microscopy revealed that these clusters were frequently found in a protuberance of the nuclear envelope and were often located close to the spindle pole body. The RAT2 gene encodes a 120-kD protein without similarity to other known proteins. It was essential for growth only at 37 degrees C, but the growth defect at high temperature could be suppressed by growth of mutant cells in the presence of high osmolarity media containing 1.0 M sorbitol or 0.9 M NaCl. The phenotypes seen in cells carrying a disruption of the RAT2 gene were very similar to those seen with the rat2-1 and rat2-2 alleles. Epitope tagging was used to show that Rat2p is located at the nuclear periphery and co-localizes with yeast NPC proteins recognized by the RL1 monoclonal antibody. The rat2-1 allele was synthetically lethal with both the rat3-1/nup133-1 and rat7- 1/nup159-1 alleles. These results indicate that the product of this gene is a nucleoporin which we refer to as Rat2p/Nup120p.  相似文献   

16.
The prototype member of the complementation group II temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of vesicular stomatitis virus, ts II 052, has been investigated. In ts II 052-infected HeLa cells at the restrictive temperature (39.5 degrees C), reduced viral RNA synthesis was observed by comparison with infections conducted at the permissive temperature (30 degrees C). It was found that for an infection conducted at 39.5 degrees C, no 38S RNA or intracytoplasmic nucleocapsids were present. For nucleocapsids isolated from ts II 052 purified virions or from ts II 052-infected cells at 30 degrees C, the RNA was sensitive to pancreatic RNase after an exposure at 39.5 degrees C in contrast to the resistance observed for wild-type virus. The nucleocapsid stability of wild-type virus when heated to 63 degrees C or submitted to varying pH was not found in nucleocapsids extracted from ts II 052 purified virions. The data suggest that for ts II 052 there is an altered relationship between the viral 38S RNA and the nucleocapsid protein(s) by comparison with wild-type virus. Such results argue for the complementation group II gene product being N protein, so that the ts defect in ts II 052 represents an altered N protein.  相似文献   

17.
《The Journal of cell biology》1995,130(6):1275-1281
We have isolated and characterized the gene encoding a novel essential nucleoporin of 82 kD, termed NUP82. Indirect immunofluorescence of cells containing an epitope tagged copy of the NUP82 localized it to the nuclear pore complex (NPC). Primary structure analysis indicates that the COOH-terminal 195 amino acids contain a putative coiled-coil domain. Deletion of the COOH-terminal 87 amino acids of this domain causes slower cell growth; deletion of the COOH-terminal 108 amino acids results in slower growth at 30 degrees C and lethality at 37 degrees C. Cells in which the last 108 amino acids of NUP82 have been deleted, when shifted to 37 degrees C, do not display any gross morphological defects in their nuclear pore complexes or nuclear envelopes. They do, however, accumulate poly(A)+ RNA in their nuclei at 37 degrees C. We propose that NUP82 acts as a linker to tether nucleoporins directly involved in nuclear transport to pore scaffolding via its coiled-coil domain.  相似文献   

18.
Three temperature-sensitive morphological mutants of Wangiella dermatitidis were isolated and characterized. The mutants grew in the yeastlike morphology at the permissive temperature (25 degrees C) but expressed a multicellular (Mc) phenotype at the restrictive temperature (37 degrees C). Cultures of Mc 2 and 3 incubated at the restrictive temperature showed rapid reductions in the percentage of budded cells in the population. In contrast, budding continued for several generations in cultures of Mc 1. Incubation of cultures of Mc 2 and 3 at the restrictive temperature for 48 h resulted in nearly total conversion of yeastlike cells to the multicellular form; about 50% of the cells of Mc 1 had converted to multicellular forms after 48 h at the restrictive temperature. Studies using radiolabeled compounds documented that DNA, RNA, and protein synthesis continued at the restrictive temperature. The results suggest that multicellularity is the result of inhibition of bud emergence and cell separation without inhibition of growth nuclear division, and cytokinesis.  相似文献   

19.
Specific single stranded DNA probes have been obtained for both influenza virion RNA (vRNA) and complementary RNA (cRNA) by cloning a hemagglutinin gene fragment in the single stranded DNA phase M13. These probes were used for hybridization with the total labeled RNA from cytoplasmic extracts of infected cells. MDCK cells were infected with temperature-sensitive mutants of influenza HK/68 and the production of the virus specific RNA species was analysed at both permissive and restrictive temperatures. Results show that two NP mutants which undergo intracistronic complementation exhibit two different phenotypes at the non permissive temperature: ts2C is poly A cRNA and vRNA negative whereas ts463 is RNA positive. Two mutants of P genes were also analysed and we discuss the relationship existing between the synthesis of the three RNA species especially between poly A and non poly A cRNA.  相似文献   

20.
Speckles are subnuclear domains where pre-mRNA splicing factors accumulate in the interchromatin space. To investigate the dynamics of mRNAs at speckles, fluorescently labeled Drosophila Fushitarazu (ftz) pre-mRNAs were microinjected into the nuclei of Cos7 cells and the dissociation kinetics of pre-mRNAs from speckles was analyzed using photobleaching techniques. The microinjected ftz pre-mRNAs accumulated in speckles in an intron-dependent manner and were spliced and exported to the cytoplasm with a half-time of about 10 min. Dissociation of the accumulated pre-mRNAs in speckles exhibited rapid diffusion and slow-dissociation of about 100 s. The slow-dissociation required metabolic energy of ATP. Two types of splice-defective mutated mRNAs dissociated from the speckle with a time constant similar to that of wild-type mRNA, indicating that slow-dissociation was not coupled to the splicing reaction. Furthermore, some pre-mRNAs shuttled between speckles and nucleoplasm, suggesting that pre-mRNAs repeatedly associated with and dissociated from speckles until introns were removed. Next, endogenous poly(A)+ RNA was visualized by injecting Cy3-labeled 2'O-methyl oligo(U)22 probes. Some poly(A)+ RNA distributed diffusely within the nucleus, but some of them accumulated in speckles and dissociated at time constant of about 100 s.  相似文献   

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