Signature amino acids enable the archaeal L7Ae box C/D RNP core protein to recognize and bind the K-loop RNA motif |
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Authors: | Keith T. Gagnon Xinxin Zhang Guosheng Qu Shyamasri Biswas Jimmy Suryadi Bernard A. Brown II E. Stuart Maxwell |
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Affiliation: | 1.Department of Molecular and Structural Biochemistry, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695, USA;2.Department of Chemistry, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27109, USA |
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Abstract: | The archaeal L7Ae and eukaryotic 15.5kD protein homologs are members of the L7Ae/15.5kD protein family that characteristically recognize K-turn motifs found in both archaeal and eukaryotic RNAs. In Archaea, the L7Ae protein uniquely binds the K-loop motif found in box C/D and H/ACA sRNAs, whereas the eukaryotic 15.5kD homolog is unable to recognize this variant K-turn RNA. Comparative sequence and structural analyses, coupled with amino acid replacement experiments, have demonstrated that five amino acids enable the archaeal L7Ae core protein to recognize and bind the K-loop motif. These signature residues are highly conserved in the archaeal L7Ae and eukaryotic 15.5kD homologs, but differ between the two domains of life. Interestingly, loss of K-loop binding by archaeal L7Ae does not disrupt C′/D′ RNP formation or RNA-guided nucleotide modification. L7Ae is still incorporated into the C′/D′ RNP despite its inability to bind the K-loop, thus indicating the importance of protein–protein interactions for RNP assembly and function. Finally, these five signature amino acids are distinct for each of the L7Ae/L30 family members, suggesting an evolutionary continuum of these RNA-binding proteins for recognition of the various K-turn motifs contained in their cognate RNAs. |
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Keywords: | box C/D snoRNA, snoRNP, kink-turn, L7Ae/L30 proteins, RNA– protein interaction |
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