Title: hnRNA Processing
1mRNA PROCESSING, hnRNPs AND snRNPs
- M.Prasad Naidu
- MSc Medical Biochemistry,
- Ph.D.Research Scholar
2mRNA PROCESSING, hnRNPs AND snRNPs
- Processing of mRNA
- hnRNP
- snRNP particles
- 5Capping
- 3Cleavage and polyadenylation
- Splicing
- Pre-mRNA methylation
3Processing of mRNA prokaryotes
- There is essentially no processing of prokaryotic
mRNA, it can start to be translated before it has
finished being transcribed. - Prokaryotic mRNA is degraded rapidly from the 5
end
4Processing of mRNA in eukaryotes
- In eukaryotes, mRNA is synthesized by RNA Pol II
as longer precursors (pre-mRNA), the population
of different RNA Pol II transcripts are called
heterogeneous nuclear RNA (hnRNA). - Among hnRNA, those processed to give mature mRNAs
are called pre-mRNAs
5- Pre-mRNA molecules are processed to mature mRNAs
by 5-capping, 3-cleavage and polyadenylation,
splicing and methylation.
6Eukaryotic mRNA processing overview
7hnRNP hnRNA proteins
- The hnRNA synthesized by RNA Pol II is mainly
pre-mRNA and rapidly becomes covered by proteins
to form heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein
(hnRNP) - The hnRNP proteins are though to help keep the
hnRNA in a single-stranded form and to assist in
the various RNA processing reactions
8snRNP particles snRNA proteins
- snRNAs are rich in the base uracil, which complex
with specific proteins to form snRNPs. - The most abundant snRNP are involved in pre-mRNA
splicing, U1,U2,U4,U5 and U6. - A large number of snRNP define methylation sites
in pre-rRNA.
9snRNP Particles
- snRNAs are synthesized in the nucleus by RNA Pol
II and have a normal 5-cap. - Exported to the cytoplasm where they associate
with the common core proteins and with other
specific proteins. - Their 5-cap gains two methyl groups and then
imported back into the nucleus where they
function in splicing.
105 Capping
- Very soon after RNA Pol II starts making a
transcript, and before the RNA chain is more then
20 -30 nt long, the 5-end is chemically
modified. - 7-methylguanosine is covalently to the 5 end of
pre-mRNA. - Linked 5 ? 5
- Occurs shortly after initiation
117-methylguanosine (m7G)
12Function of 5cap
- Protection from degradation
- Increased translational efficiency
- Transport to cytoplasm
- Splicing of first exon
133 Cleavage and polyadenylation
- In most pre-mRNAs, the mature 3-end of the
molecule is generated by cleavage followed by the
addition of a run, or tail, of A residues which
is called the poly(A) tail.
14- RNA polymerase II does not usually terminate at
distinct site - Pre-mRNA is cleaved 20 nucleotides downstream of
polyadenylation signal (AAUAAA) - 250 AMPs are then added to the 3 end
- Almost all mRNAs have poly(A) tail
15Function of poly(A) tail
- Increased mRNA stability
- Increased translational efficiency
- Splicing of last intron
AAAAAA
16Splicing
- the process of cutting the pre-mRNA to remove the
introns and joining together of the exons is
called splicing. - it takes place in the nucleus before the mature
mRNA can be exported to the cytoplasm.
17- Introns non-coding sequences
- Exons coding sequences
- RNA splicing removal of introns and joining of
exons - Splicing mechanism must be precise to maintain
open reading frame - Catalyzed by spliceosome (RNA protein)
18Biochemical steps of pre-mRNA splicing
Step 1 a cut is made at the 5'splice site,
separating the left exon and the right
intron-exon molecule. The right intron-exon
molecule forms a lariat, in which the 5'terminus
of the intron becomes linked by a 5'-2' bond to a
base within the intron. The target base is an A
in a sequence that is called the branch site
Step 2 cutting at the 3' splice site releases
the free intron in lariat form, while the right
exon is ligated (spliced) to the left exon.
19Lariat
C U R A Y
20Nuclear splicing occurs by two transesterification
reactions in which a free OH end attacks a
phosphodiester bond.
21Spliceosome
- Catalyzes pre-mRNA splicing in nucleus
- Composed of five snRNPs (U1, U2, U4, U5 and U6),
other splicing factors, and the pre-mRNA being
assembled - U1 binds to the 5 splice site, then U2 to the
branchpoint, then the tri-snRNP complex of U4, U5
and U6. As a result, the intron is looped out and
the 5- and 3 exon are brought into close
proximity. - U2 and U6 snRNA are able to catalyze the splicing
reaction.
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24Splicing cycle
25Pre-mRNA methylation
- The final modification or processing event that
many pre-mRNAs undergo is specific methylation of
certain bases. - The methylations seem to be largely conserved in
the mature mRNA.
26(No Transcript)
27ALTERNATIVE mRNA PROCESSING
- Alternative processing
- Alternative poly(A) sites
- Alternative splicing
- RNA editing
28Alternative processing
- Alternative mRNA processing is the conversion of
pre-mRNA species into more than one type of
mature mRNA. - Types of alternative RNA processing include
alternative (or differential) splicing and
alternative (or differential) poly(A) processing. -
29Alternative poly(A) sites
- Some pre-mRNAs contain more than one poly(A) site
and these may be used under different
circumstances to generate different mature mRNAs. - In one cell the stronger poly(A) site is used by
default, but in other cell a factor may prevent
stronger site from being used.
30Alternative splicing
- The generation of different mature mRNAs from a
particular type of gene transcript can occur by
varying the use of 5- and 3- splice sites in
four ways - By using different promoters
- By using different poly(A) sites
- By retaining certain introns
- By retaining or removing certain exons
31Alternative splicing
32Alternative splicing
33(A) A cassette exon can be either included in the
mRNA or excluded.
34(B) Mutually exclusive exons occur when two or
more adjacent cassette exons are spliced such
that only one exon in the group is included at a
time.
35(C, D) Alternative 5 and 3 splice sites allow
the lengthening or shortening of a particular
exon.
36(E, F) Alternative promoters and alternative
poly(A) sites switch the 59- or 39-most exons of
a transcript.
37(G) A retained intron can be excised from the
pre-mRNA or can be retained in the translated
mRNA.
38(H) A single pre-mRNA can exhibit multiple sites
of alternative splicing using different patterns
of inclusion.