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Rnt1p, the only known Saccharomyces cerevisiae RNase III double-stranded RNA endonuclease, plays important roles in the processing of precursors of ribosomal RNAs and small nuclear and nucleolar RNAs and in the surveillance of unspliced pre-mRNAs. Specificity of cleavage by Rnt1p relies on the presence of RNA tetraloop structures with the consensus sequence AGNN at the top of the target dsRNA. The sequences of 79 fungal RNase III substrates were inspected to identify additional conserved sequence elements or antideterminants that may contribute to Rnt1p recognition of the double-stranded RNA. Surprisingly, U-A sequences at the base pair adjacent to the conserved terminal tetraloop (closing base pair) were found to be absent from all but one inspected sequence. Analysis of chemically modified variants of the closing base pair showed that the presence of exocyclic groups in the major groove of purines 3' to the last nucleotide of the tetraloop inhibits Rnt1p cleavage without strongly inhibiting Rnt1p binding. We propose that these groups interfere with the recognition of the RNA substrate by the catalytic domain of Rnt1p. These results identify exocyclic groups of purines in the major groove downstream of the tetraloop as a major antideterminant in S. cerevisiae RNase III activity, and suggest a rationale for their apparent counter selection in RNA processing sites. 相似文献
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Ribonuclease P (RNase P) is involved in regulation of noncoding RNA (ncRNA) expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A hidden-in-reading-frame antisense-1 (HRA1) RNA in S. cerevisiae, which belongs to a class of ncRNAs located in the antisense strand to verified protein coding regions, was cloned for further use in RNase P assays. Escherichia coli RNase P assays in vitro of HRA1 RNA show two cleavage sites, one major and one minor in terms of rates. The same result was observed with a partially purified S. cerevisiae RNase P activity, both at 30 degrees C and 37 degrees C. These latter cells are normally grown at 30 degrees C. Predictions of the secondary structure of HRA1 RNA in silico show the cleavage sites are canonical RNase P recognition sites. A relatively small amount of endogenous HRA1 RNA was identified by RT-PCR in yeast cells. The endogenous HRA1 RNA is increased in amount in strains that are deficient in RNase P activity. A deletion of 10 nucleotides in the HRA1 gene that does not overlap with the gene coding for a protein (DRS2) in the sense strand shows no defective growth in galactose or glucose. These data indicate that HRA1 RNA is a substrate for RNase P and does not appear as a direct consequence of separate regulatory effects of the enzyme on ncRNAs. 相似文献
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The RNase III family of double-stranded RNA-specific endonucleases is characterized by the presence of a highly conserved 9 amino acid stretch in their catalytic center known as the RNase III signature motif. We isolated the drosha gene, a new member of this family in Drosophila melanogaster. Characterization of this gene revealed the presence of two RNase III signature motifs in its sequence that may indicate that it is capable of forming an active catalytic center as a monomer. The drosha protein also contains an 825 amino acid N-terminus with an unknown function. A search for the known homologues of the drosha protein revealed that it has a similarity to two adjacent annotated genes identified during C. elegans genome sequencing. Analysis of the genomic region of these genes by the Fgenesh program and sequencing of the EST cDNA clone derived from it revealed that this region encodes only one gene. This newly identified gene in nematode genome shares a high similarity to Drosophila drosha throughout its entire protein sequence. A potential drosha homologue is also found among the deposited human cDNA sequences. A comparison of these drosha proteins to other members of the RNase III family indicates that they form a new group of proteins within this family. 相似文献
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Partial characterization of an RNA component that copurifies with Saccharomyces cerevisiae RNase P. 总被引:10,自引:4,他引:10 下载免费PDF全文
Saccharomyces cerevisiae cellular RNase P is composed of both protein and RNA components that are essential for activity. The isolated holoenzyme contains a highly structured RNA of 369 nucleotides that has extensive sequence similarities to the 286-nucleotide RNA associated with Schizosaccharomyces pombe RNase P but bears little resemblance to the analogous RNA sequences in procaryotes or S. cerevisiae mitochondria. Even so, the predicted secondary structure of S. cerevisiae RNA is strikingly similar to the bacterial phylogenetic consensus rather than to previously predicted structures of other eucaryotic RNase P RNAs. 相似文献
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Expression of double-stranded-RNA-specific RNase III of Escherichia coli is lethal to Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3 下载免费PDF全文
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
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Yeast nuclear RNA polymerase III was purified by batch adsorption to phosphocellulose, followed by ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex and affinity chromatography on DNA-Sepharose. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the purified enzyme showed a single protein band which contained polymerase activity. The molecular weight estimated by sedimentation velocity centrifugation in a glycerol gradient was 380 000. Enzyme activity was inhibited 50% at 0.1 mM 1,10-phenanthroline and 100% of 1.0 mM, but was restored when 1,10-phenanthroline was removed by dialysis. Enzyme activity was not inhibited by 7,8-benzoquinoline, a nonchelating structural analogue of 1,10-phenanthroline. These results strongly suggest that inhibition of enzyme activity occurs by the formation of a reversible enzyme-zinc-phenanthroline ternary complex. The zinc content, measured by atomic absorption spectroscopy, was 2 g-atoms per mol of enzyme. Zinc was not removed from the enzyme by gel filtration on Sephadex G-25, by passage through Chelex-100 resin, or by dialysis against buffer containing 1,10-phenanthroline. Enzyme-bound zinc was removed by dialysis after denaturation of the enzyme with heat and sodium dodecyl sulfate. Enzyme-bound zinc did not exchange with free zinc. These results establish yeast nuclear RNA polymerase III as a zinc metalloenzyme. 相似文献
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The GAAA tetraloop receptor is an 11-nucleotide RNA sequence that participates in the tertiary folding of a variety of large catalytic RNAs by providing a specific binding site for GAAA tetraloops. Here we report the solution structure of the isolated tetraloop receptor as solved by multidimensional, heteronuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The internal loop of the tetraloop receptor has three adenosines stacked in a cross-strand or zipper-like fashion. This arrangement produces a high degree of base stacking within the asymmetric internal loop without extrahelical bases or kinking the helix. Additional interactions within the internal loop include a U. U mismatch pair and a G.U wobble pair. A comparison with the crystal structure of the receptor RNA bound to its tetraloop shows that a conformational change has to occur upon tetraloop binding, which is in good agreement with previous biochemical data. A model for an alternative binding site within the receptor is proposed based on the NMR structure, phylogenetic data and previous crystallographic structures of tetraloop interactions. 相似文献
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G M Rubin 《European journal of biochemistry》1974,41(1):197-202
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The 340-nucleotide RNA component of Saccharomyces cerevisiae RNase MRP is encoded by the single-copy essential gene, NME1. To gain additional insight into the proposed structure and functions of this endoribonuclease, we have extensively mutagenized the NME1 gene and characterized yeast strains expressing mutated forms of the RNA using a gene shuffle technique. Strains expressing each of 26 independent mutations in the RNase MRP RNA gene were characterized for their ability to grow at various temperatures and on various carbon sources, stability of the RNase MRP RNA and processing of the 5.8S rRNA (a nuclear function of RNase MRP). 11 of the mutations resulted in a lethal phenotype, six displayed temperature-conditional lethality, and several preferred a non-fermentable carbon source for growth. In those mutants that exhibited altered growth phenotypes, the severity of the growth defect was directly proportional to the severity of the 5.8S rRNA processing defect in the nucleus. Together this analysis has defined essential regions of the RNase MRP RNA and provides evidence that is consistent with the proposed function of the RNase MRP enzyme. 相似文献
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Substrate recognition by a eukaryotic RNase III: the double-stranded RNA-binding domain of Rnt1p selectively binds RNA containing a 5'-AGNN-3' tetraloop 下载免费PDF全文
Rnt1p is an RNase III homolog from budding yeast, required for processing snRNAs, snoRNAs, and rRNA. Numerous Rnt1p RNA substrates share potential to form a duplex structure with a terminal four-base loop with the sequence AGNN. Using a synthetic RNA modeled after the 25S rRNA 3' ETS cleavage site we find that the AGNN loop is an important determinant of substrate selectivity. When this loop sequence is altered, the rate of Rnt1p cleavage is reduced. The reduction in cleavage rate can be attributed to reduced binding of the mutant substrate as measured by a gel-shift assay. Deletion of the nonconserved N-terminal domain of Rnt1p does not affect cleavage site choice or the ability of the enzyme to distinguish substrates that contain the AGNN loop, indicating that this region is not required for selective cleavage. Strikingly, a recombinant fragment of Rnt1p containing little more than the dsRBD is able to discriminate between wild-type and mutant loop sequences in a binding assay. We propose that a major determinant of AGNN loop recognition by Rnt1p is present in its dsRBD. 相似文献