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1.
BACKGROUND: The dynamic rearrangements of RNA structure which occur during pre-mRNA splicing are thought to be mediated by members of the DExD/H-box family of RNA-dependent ATPases. Although three DExD/H-box splicing factors have recently been shown to unwind synthetic RNA duplexes in purified systems, in no case has the natural biological substrate been identified. A duplex RNA target of particular interest is the extensive base-pairing interaction between U4 and U6 small nuclear RNAs. Because these helices must be disrupted to activate the spliceosome for catalysis, this rearrangement is believed to be tightly regulated in vivo. RESULTS: We have immunopurified Brr2, a DEIH-box ATPase, in a native complex containing U1, U2, U5 and duplex U4/U6 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNPs). Addition of hydrolyzable ATP to this complex results in the disruption of U4/U6 base-pairing, and the release of free U4 and U6 snRNPs. A mutation in the helicase-like domain of Brr2 (brr2-1) prevents these RNA rearrangements. Notably, U4/U6 dissociation and release occur in the absence of exogenously added pre-mRNA. CONCLUSIONS: Disruption of U4/U6 base-pairing in native snRNPs requires ATP hydrolysis and Brr2. This is the first assignment of a DExD/H-box splicing factor to a specific biological unwinding event. The unwinding function of Brr2 can be antagonized by the annealing activity of Prp24. We propose the existence of a dynamic cycle, uncoupled from splicing, that interconverts free and base-paired U4/U6 snRNPs.  相似文献   

2.
The spliceosome removes introns from pre-messenger RNAs by a mechanism that entails extensive remodeling of RNA structure. The most conspicuous rearrangement involves disruption of 24 base pairs between U4 and U6 small nuclear RNAs (snRNAs). Here, the yeast RNA binding protein Prp24 is shown to reanneal these snRNAs. When Prp24 is absent, unpaired U4 and U6 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNPs) accumulate; with time, splicing becomes inhibited. Addition of purified Prp24 protein regenerates duplex U4/U6 snRNPs for new rounds of splicing. The reannealing reaction catalyzed by Prp24 proceeds more efficiently with snRNPs than with deproteinized snRNAs.  相似文献   

3.
Immunoaffinity-purified human 25S [U4/U6.U5] tri-snRNPs harbor a set of polypeptides, termed the tri-snRNP proteins, that are not present in Mono Q-purified 20S U5 snRNPs or 10S U4/U6 snRNPs and that are important for tri-snRNP complex formation (Behrens SE, Lührmann R, 1991, Genes & Dev 5:1439-1452). Biochemical and immunological characterization of HeLa [U4/U6.U5] tri-snRNPs led to the identification of two novel proteins with molecular weights of 61 and 63kD that are distinct from the previously described 15.5, 20, 27, 60, and 90kD tri-snRNP proteins. For the initial characterization of tri-snRNP proteins that interact directly with U4/U6 snRNPs, immunoaffinity chromatography with an antibody directed against the 60kD protein was performed. We demonstrate that the 60 and 90kD tri-snRNP proteins specifically associate with the U4/U6 snRNP at salt concentrations where the tri-snRNP complex has dissociated. The primary structures of the 60kD and 90kD proteins were determined by cloning and sequencing their respective cDNAs. The U4/U6-60kD protein possesses a C-terminal WD domain that contains seven WD repeats and thus belongs to the WD-protein family, whose best-characterized members include the Gbeta subunits of heterotrimeric G proteins. A database homology search revealed a significant degree of overall homology (57.8% similarity, 33.9% identity) between the human 60kD protein and the Saccharomyces cerevisiae U4/U6 snRNP protein Prp4p. Two additional, previously undetected WD repeats (with seven in total) were also identified in Prp4p, consistent with the possibility that 60kD/Prp4p, like beta-transducin, may adopt a propeller-like structure. The U4/U6-90kD protein was shown to exhibit significant homology, particularly in its C-terminal half, with the S. cerevisiae splicing factor Prp3p, which also associates with the yeast U4/U6 snRNP. Interestingly, U4/U6-90kD shares short regions of homology with E. coli RNase III, including a region encompassing its double-stranded RNA binding domain. Based on their structural similarity with essential splicing factors in yeast, the human U4/U6-60kD and 90kD proteins are likely also to play important roles in the mammalian splicing process.  相似文献   

4.
Assembly of spliceosomes involves a number of sequential steps in which small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNPs) and some non-snRNP proteins recognize the splice site sequences and undergo various conformational rearrangements. A number of important intermolecular RNA-RNA duplexes are formed transiently during the process of splice site recognition. Various steps in the assembly pathway are dependent upon ATP hydrolysis, either for protein phosphorylation or for the activity of helicases, which may modulate the RNA structures. Major efforts have been made to identify proteins that interact with specific regions of the pre-mRNA during the stages of spliceosome assembly and catalysis by site-specific UV cross-linking. However, UV cross-linking is often inefficient for the detection of proteins that interact with base-paired RNA. Here we have used the complementary approach of methylene blue-mediated photo-cross-linking to detect specifically proteins that interact with the duplexes formed between pre-mRNA and small nuclear RNA (snRNA). We have detected a novel cross-link between a 65-kDa protein (p65) and the 5' splice site. A range of data suggest that p65 cross-links to the transient duplex formed by U1 snRNA and the 5' splice site. Moreover, although p65 cross-linking requires only a 5' splice site within the pre-mRNA, it also requires ATP hydrolysis, suggesting that its detection reflects a very early ATP-dependent event during splicing.  相似文献   

5.
The human small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) U5 is biochemically the most complex of the snRNP particles, containing not only the Sm core proteins but also 10 particle-specific proteins. Several of these proteins have sequence motifs which suggest that they participate in conformational changes of RNA and protein. Together, the specific proteins comprise 85% of the mass of the U5 snRNP particle. Therefore, protein-protein interactions should be highly important for both the architecture and the function of this particle. We investigated protein-protein interactions using both native and recombinant U5-specific proteins. Native U5 proteins were obtained by dissociation of U5 snRNP particles with the chaotropic salt sodium thiocyanate. A stable, RNA-free complex containing the 116-kDa EF-2 homologue (116kD), the 200kD RNA unwindase, the 220kD protein, which is the orthologue of the yeast Prp8p protein, and the U5-40kD protein was detected by sedimentation analysis of the dissociated proteins. By cDNA cloning, we show that the 40kD protein is a novel WD-40 repeat protein and is thus likely to mediate regulated protein-protein interactions. Additional biochemical analyses demonstrated that the 220kD protein binds simultaneously to the 40- and the 116kD proteins and probably also to the 200kD protein. Since the 220kD protein is also known to contact both the pre-mRNA and the U5 snRNA, it is in a position to relay the functional state of the spliceosome to the other proteins in the complex and thus modulate their activity.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND: During pre-mRNA splicing, dynamic rearrangement of RNA secondary structure within the spliceosome is crucial for intron recognition and formation of the catalytic core. Splicing factors belonging to the DExD/DExH-box family of RNA-dependent ATPases are thought to have a central role in directing these rearrangements by unwinding RNA helices. Proof of this hypothesis has, however, been conspicuously lacking. RESULTS: Prp16 is a DEAH-box protein that functions in the second step of splicing in vitro. Using various RNA duplexes as substrate, we have shown that Prp16 has an ATP-dependent RNA unwinding activity. This activity is independent of sequence in either the single-stranded or duplexed regions of the RNA substrate. A mutation (prp16-1) near the ATP-binding motif of Prp16 inhibits both the RNA-dependent ATPase activity and the ATP-dependent RNA unwinding activity. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings provide strong biochemical evidence that Prp16 can disrupt a duplexed RNA structure on the spliceosome. Because the purified protein lacks sequence specificity in unwinding RNA duplexes, targeting of the unwinding activity of Prp16 in the spliceosome is likely to be determined by other interacting protein factors. The demonstration of unwinding activity will also help our understanding of how the fidelity of branchpoint recognition is controlled by Prp16.  相似文献   

7.
The U1 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle (snRNP)-specific 70K and A proteins are known to bind directly to stem-loops of the U1 snRNA, whereas the U1-C protein does not bind to naked U1 snRNA, but depends on other U1 snRNP protein components for its association. Focusing on the U1-70K and U1-C proteins, protein-protein interactions contributing to the association of these particle-specific proteins with the U1 snRNP were studied. Immunoprecipitation of complexes formed after incubation of naked U1 snRNA or purified U1 snRNPs lacking their specific proteins (core U1 snRNP) with in vitro translated U1-C protein, revealed that both common snRNP proteins and the U1-70K protein are required for the association of U1-C with the U1 snRNP. Binding studies with various in vitro translated U1-70K mutants demonstrated that the U1-70K N-terminal domain is necessary and sufficient for the interaction of U1-C with core U1 snRNPs. Surprisingly, several N-terminal fragments of the U1-70K protein, which lacked the U1-70K RNP-80 motif and did not bind naked U1 RNA, associated stably with core U1 snRNPs. This suggests that a new U1-70K binding site is generated upon association of common U1 snRNP proteins with U1 RNA. The interaction between the N-terminal domain of U1-70K and the core RNP domain was specific for the U1 snRNP; stable binding was not observed with core U2 or U5 snRNPs, suggesting essential structural differences among snRNP core domains. Evidence for direct protein-protein interactions between U1-specific proteins and common snRNP proteins was supported by chemical crosslinking experiments using purified U1 snRNPs. Individual crosslinks between the U1-70K and the common D2 or B'/B protein, as well as between U1-C and B'/B, were detected. A model for the assembly of U1 snRNP is presented in which the complex of common proteins on the RNA backbone functions as a platform for the association of the U1-specific proteins.  相似文献   

8.
ATP-dependent RNA helicases from the DEAD box family of proteins are involved in a number of RNA processing and utilization events. An3 protein from Xenopus laevis is an RNA helicase of the DEAD box family of proteins. An3 is synthesized by a mRNA that is localized to one end of Xenopus laevis oocytes. An3 protein is found in the nucleus of ooctes, and more specifically, during the middle stages of oocyte development, with extra nucleoli that contain amplified copies of rRNA genes in the nucleolus. By expressing glutathione-S-transferase:An3 fusion proteins in E. coli, sufficient amounts of An3 protein were isolated to examine its enzymatic activities. ATPase activity, NTP substrate range and RNA helicase activity were tested. An3 protein ATPase activity was evident but not stimulated by any of a variety of RNA tested. An3 protein was able to resolve the duplex formed by an in vitro substrate, in the presence of ATP or dATP. An3 required both 3' and 5' single-stranded regions of RNA flanking the RNA duplex it resolves.  相似文献   

9.
Pre-mRNA splicing: the discovery of a new spliceosome doubles the challenge   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A rare class of pre-mRNA introns with non-canonical consensus sequences has been identified in metazoan genes. The novel, low-abundance spliceosome that excises these introns contains one small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) in common with the major spliceosome (U5) and four snRNPs that are distinct from, but structurally and functionally analogous to U1, U2 and U4-U6. The architecture of RNA components at the presumptive core of the AT-AC splicesome supports current models of the spliceosomal active center and raises tantalizing questions about spliceosome evolution.  相似文献   

10.
Pre-mRNA splicing is an important regulatory step in the expression of most eukaryotic genes. In vitro studies have shown splicing to occur within 50-60 S multi-component ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes termed spliceosomes. Studies of mammalian cell nuclei have revealed larger complexes that sediment at 200 S in sucrose gradients, termed large nuclear RNP (lnRNP) particles. These particles contain all factors required for pre-mRNA splicing, including the spliceosomal U snRNPs and protein splicing factors. Electron microscopy has shown them to consist of four apparently similar substructures. In this study, mass measurements by scanning transmission electron microscopy of freeze-dried mammalian lnRNP preparations, both confirm the similarity between the lnRNP particles and reveal the mass uniformity of their subunits. Thus, the tetrameric lnRNP particle has a mass of 21.1(+/-1.6) MDa, while each repeating subunit has a mass of 4.8(+/-0.5) MDa, which is close to the estimated mass of the fully assembled 60 S spliceosome. The 1.9 MDa discrepancy between the lnRNP particle's mass and the cumulative masses of its four subunits may be attributed to an additional domain frequently observed in the micrographs. Notably, strands and loops of RNA were often seen emanating from lnRNP particles positively stained with uranyl formate. Our results support the idea that the nuclear splicing machine is a supraspliceosome complex. For clarity, we define spliceosomes devoid of pre-mRNA as spliceosome cores, and propose that the supraspliceosome is constructed from one pre-mRNA, four spliceosome cores, each composed mainly of U snRNPs, and additional proteins. In this way a frame is provided to juxtapose exons about to be spliced.  相似文献   

11.
We present here the first insights into the organization of proteins on the RNA in the U5 snRNP of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Photo-crosslinking with uniformly labeled U5 RNA in snRNPs reconstituted in vitro revealed five contacting proteins, Prp8p, Snu114p, p30, p16, and p10, contact by the three smaller proteins requiring an intact Sm site. Site-specific crosslinking showed that Snu114p contacts the 5' side of internal loop 1, whereas Prp8p interacts with five different regions of the 5' stem-loop, but not with the Sm site or 3' stem-loop. Both internal loops in the 5' domain are essential for Prp8p to associate with the snRNP, but the conserved loop 1 is not, although this is the region to which Prp8p crosslinks most strongly. The extensive contacts between Prp8p and the 5' stem-loop of U5 RNA support the hypothesis that, in spliceosomes, Prp8p stabilizes loop 1-exon interactions. Moreover, data showing that Prp8p contacts the exons even in the absence of loop 1 indicate that Prp8p may be the principal anchoring factor for exons in the spliceosome. This and the close proximity of the spliceosomal translocase, Snu114p, to U5 loop 1 and Prp8p support and extend the proposal that Snu114p mimics U5 loop 1 during a translocation event in the spliceosome.  相似文献   

12.
The elaborate and energy-intensive spliceosome assembly pathway belies the seemingly simple chemistry of pre-mRNA splicing. Prp38p was previously identified as a protein required in vivo and in vitro for the first pre-mRNA cleavage reaction catalyzed by the spliceosome. Here we show that Prp38p is a unique component of the U4/U6.U5 tri-small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) particle and is necessary for an essential step late in spliceosome maturation. Without Prp38p activity spliceosomes form, but arrest in a catalytically impaired state. Functional spliceosomes shed U4 snRNA before 5' splice-site cleavage. In contrast, Prp38p-defective spliceosomes retain U4 snRNA bound to its U6 snRNA base-pairing partner. Prp38p is the first tri-snRNP-specific protein shown to be dispensable for assembly, but required for conformational changes which lead to catalytic activation of the spliceosome.  相似文献   

13.
We present here the first insights into the organization of proteins on the RNA in the U5 snRNP of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Photo-crosslinking with uniformly labeled U5 RNA in snRNPs reconstituted in vitro revealed five contacting proteins, Prp8p, Snu114p, p30, p16, and p10, contact by the three smaller proteins requiring an intact Sm site. Site-specific crosslinking showed that Snu114p contacts the 5' side of internal loop 1, whereas Prp8p interacts with five different regions of the 5' stem-loop, but not with the Sm site or 3' stem-loop. Both internal loops in the 5' domain are essential for Prp8p to associate with the snRNP, but the conserved loop 1 is not, although this is the region to which Prp8p crosslinks most strongly. The extensive contacts between Prp8p and the 5' stem-loop of U5 RNA support the hypothesis that, in spliceosomes, Prp8p stabilizes loop 1-exon interactions. Moreover, data showing that Prp8p contacts the exons even in the absence of loop 1 indicate that Prp8p may be the principal anchoring factor for exons in the spliceosome. This and the close proximity of the spliceosomal translocase, Snu114p, to U5 loop 1 and Prp8p support and extend the proposal that Snu114p mimics U5 loop 1 during a translocation event in the spliceosome.  相似文献   

14.
We have previously shown that the yeast PRP19 protein is associated with the spliceosome during the splicing reaction by immunoprecipitation studies with anti-PRP19 antibody. We have extended such studies by using extracts depleted of specific splicing factors to investigate the step of the spliceosome assembly process that PRP19 is involved in. PRP19 was not associated with the splicing complexes formed in U2- or U6-depleted extracts but was associated with the splicing complex formed in heat-inactivated prp2 extracts. This finding indicates that PRP19 becomes associated with the splicing complexes after or concomitant with binding of the U6 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle (snRNP) to the precursor RNA and before formation of the functional spliceosome. We further analyzed whether PRP19 is an integral component of snRNPs. We have constructed a strain in which an epitope of nine amino acid residues recognized by a well-characterized monoclonal antibody, 12CA5, is linked to the carboxyl terminus of the wild-type PRP19 protein. Immunoprecipitation of the splicing extracts with anti-PRP19 antibody or precipitation of the extracts prepared from the epitope-tagged strain with the 12CA5 antibody did not precipitate significant amounts of snRNAs. Addition of micrococcal nuclease-treated extracts to the PRP19-depleted extract restored its splicing activity. These results indicate that PRP19 is not tightly associated with any of the snRNAs required for the splicing reaction. No non-snRNP protein factor has been demonstrated to participate in either step of the spliceosome assembly pathway that PRP19 might be involved in. Thus, PRP19 represents a novel splicing factor.  相似文献   

15.
16.
We have identified a human splicing factor required for the second step of pre-mRNA splicing. This new protein, hPrp18, is 30% identical to the yeast splicing factor Prp18. In HeLa cell extracts immunodepleted of hPrp18, the second step of pre-mRNA splicing is abolished. Splicing activity is restored by the addition of recombinant hPrp18, demonstrating that hPrp18 is required for the second step. The hPrp18 protein is bound tightly to the spliceosome only during the second step of splicing. hPrp18 is required for the splicing of several pre-mRNAs, making it the first general second-step splicing factor found in humans. Splicing activity can be restored to hPrp18-depleted HeLa cell extracts by yeast Prp18, showing that important functional regions of the proteins have been conserved. A 90-amino-acid region near the carboxyl terminus of hPrp18 is strongly homologous to yeast Prp18 and is also conserved in rice and nematodes. The homology identifies one region important for the function of both proteins and may define a new protein motif. In contrast to yeast Prp18, hPrp18 is not stably associated with any of the snRNPs. A 55-kD protein that cross-reacts with antibodies against hPrp18 is a constituent of the U4/U6 and U4/U6 x U5 snRNP particles.  相似文献   

17.
In mammalian cells, base pairing between the U2 and U6 small nuclear RNAs is required during pre-RNA splicing. We show by psoralen crosslinking of HeLa nuclear extract that U2.U6 base pairing occurs within abundant ribonucleoprotein complexes that sediment at > 150 S in glycerol gradients. All of the spliceosomal RNAs (U1, U2, U4, U5, and U6) cosediment with these large complexes, suggesting that they may be related to small nuclear RNA-containing structures called speckles/coiled bodies or snurposomes, which have been visualized in mammalian or amphibian nuclei, respectively. In contrast to nuclear extract, S100 extract, which is splicing-defective and lacks the > 150S complexes, does not contain base-paired U2.U6. However, U2.U6 base pairs form in S100 extract that has been made splicing-competent by supplementation with Ser/Arg-rich (SR) proteins, ATP, and an adenovirus splicing substrate. During splicing in supplemented S100 extract, U2.U6 base pairing precedes the appearance of splicing intermediates and occurs initially in an approximately 60S spliceosome complex but also in progressively larger (100-300 S) complexes. Possible functional relationships between the 60S spliceosome and the > 150S complexes are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNP) U1, U2, U4, and U5 contain a common set of eight Sm proteins that bind to the conserved single-stranded 5'-PuAU3-6GPu-3' (Sm binding site) region of their constituent U snRNA (small nuclear RNA), forming the Sm core RNP. Using native and in vitro reconstituted U1 snRNPs, accessibility of the RNA within the Sm core RNP to chemical structure probes was analyzed. Hydroxyl radical footprinting of in vitro reconstituted U1 snRNP demonstrated that riboses within a large continuous RNA region, including the Sm binding site, were protected. This protection was dependent on the binding of the Sm proteins. In contrast with the riboses, the phosphate groups within the Sm core site were accessible to modifying reagents. The invariant adenosine residue at the 5' end, as well as an adenosine two nucleotides downstream of the Sm binding site, showed an unexpected reactivity with dimethyl sulfate. This novel reactivity could be attributed to N7-methylation of the adenosine and was not observed in naked RNA, indicating that it is an intrinsic property of the RNA- protein interactions within the Sm core RNP. Further, this reactivity was observed concomitantly with formation of the Sm subcore intermediate during Sm core RNP assembly. As the Sm subcore can be viewed as the commitment complex in this assembly pathway, these results suggest that the peculiar reactivity of the Sm site adenosine bases may be diagnostic for proper assembly of the Sm core RNP. Consistent with this idea, a strong correlation was found between the unusual N7-A methylation sensitivity of the Sm core RNP and its ability to be imported into the nucleus of Xenopus laevis oocytes.  相似文献   

19.
In trypanosomes all mRNAs are generated through trans mRNA splicing, requiring the functions of the small nuclear RNAs U2, U4 and U6. In the absence of conventional cis mRNA splicing, the structure and function of a U5-analogous snRNP in trypanosomes has remained an open question. In cis splicing, a U5 snRNP-specific protein component called PRP8 in yeast and p220 in man is a highly conserved, essential splicing factor involved in splice-site recognition and selection. We have cloned and sequenced a genomic region from Trypanosoma brucei, that contains a PRP8/p220-homologous gene (p277) coding for a 277 kDa protein. Using an antibody against a C-terminal region of the trypanosomal p277 protein, a small RNA of approximately 65 nucleotides could be specifically co-immunoprecipitated that appears to be identical with a U5 RNA (SLA2 RNA) recently identified by Dungan et al. (1996). Based on sedimentation, immunoprecipitation and Western blot analyses we conclude that this RNA is part of a stable ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex and associated not only with the p277 protein, but also with the common proteins present in the other trans-spliceosomal snRNPs. Together these results demonstrate that a U5-analogous RNP exists in trypanosomes and suggest that basic functions of the U5 snRNP are conserved between cis and trans splicing.  相似文献   

20.
The Bloom's syndrome helicase unwinds G4 DNA   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
BLM, the gene that is defective in Bloom's syndrome, encodes a protein homologous to RecQ subfamily helicases that functions as a 3'-5' DNA helicase in vitro. We now report that the BLM helicase can unwind G4 DNA. The BLM G4 DNA unwinding activity is ATP-dependent and requires a short 3' region of single-stranded DNA. Strikingly, G4 DNA is a preferred substrate of the BLM helicase, as measured both by efficiency of unwinding and by competition. These results suggest that G4 DNA may be a natural substrate of BLM in vivo and that the failure to unwind G4 DNA may cause the genomic instability and increased frequency of sister chromatid exchange characteristic of Bloom's syndrome.  相似文献   

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