Title: RNA Processing and Turnover Gerald Wilson, Ph'D' gwils001umaryland'edu
1RNA Processing and TurnoverGerald Wilson,
Ph.D.gwils001_at_umaryland.edu
2Major RNA processing mechanisms in eukaryotes
- ribosomal RNA (RNA polymerase I transcripts)
- (i) methylation
- (ii) nucleolytic cleavage
-
- messenger RNA (RNA polymerase II transcripts)
- (i) 5-capping
- (ii) 3-cleavage and polyadenylation
- (iii) removal of introns (nuclear splicing)
- transfer RNA (RNA polymerase III transcripts)
- (i) 5- and 3-cleavage
- (ii) CCA addition
- (iii) base modification
- (iv) tRNA splicing
3Major RNA processing mechanisms in prokaryotes
- ribosomal RNA
- (i) methylation
- (ii) nucleolytic cleavage
-
- messenger RNA
- no significant modification
- transfer RNA
- (i) 5- and 3-cleavage
- (ii) CCA addition
- (iii) base modification
4Messenger RNA processing in eukaryotes
- Nuclear splicing
- 5-capping
- 3-cleavage and polyadenylation
5Nuclear processing of RNA pol II transcripts
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1007
6Identification of introns by R-looping
Nelson Cox, 2000, p. 992
7Exonintron organization of the ovalbumin gene
Nelson Cox, 2000, p. 992
8General features of nuclear introns
9RNARNA interactions target snRNPs to 5-exon
junctions and internal branch site A residues
branch point
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1012
10Mechanism of nuclear splicing
adapted from Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1012
11The lariat is formed by transesterification
between the 5-end of the intron sequence and the
2-OH of the branch site adenosine
Alberts et al, 2002, p.318
12Mechanism of nuclear splicing
adapted from Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1012
13Other types of introns
- Group I and II introns
- found in some nuclear, mitochondrial, and
chloroplast genes coding for rRNA, mRNA, and
tRNA - no external source of energy (ie ATP) required
for intron excision - self-splicing (ie no protein enzymes required)
- transesterification reaction in Group I introns
initiated by a guanine nucleotide or nucleoside,
while in Group II, an internal branch site A is
used (generating a lariat product) - discovery of Group I and II introns provided
one of the first demonstrations of the existence
of catalytic RNA - tRNA introns
- endonucleases cleave RNA at both ends of the
intron - exons are ligated together after additional
ATP-dependent modifications
14The mRNA 5-cap structure
- Functions
- marks the 5-end of the first exon and aids in
the splicing process - essential for nucleo-cytoplasmic transport of
mRNAs through interaction with nuclear
cap-binding proteins - increases the efficiency of translation by
targeting formation of the preinitiation complex
(cytoplasmic cap-binding proteins) - protects the transcript from 5?3
exoribonucleolytic activities
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1008
15Enzymatic reactions required for mRNA 5-capping
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1008
16Sequence determinants of 3 mRNA processing
20-40 nucleotides apart
173 processing of mRNA in eukaryotes
(1) An enzyme complex recognizes the
polyadenylation signal (AAUAAA) and a less well
conserved G-U rich sequence located 20-40
nucleotides downstream. (2) An endonuclease
cleaves the primary transcript 10-30 nucleotides
downstream of the AAUAAA signal. (3) A series
of 80-250 A residues are added to the 3-end of
the cleaved transcript by polyadenylate
polymerase.
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1013
18Synthesis and processing of ovalbumin mRNA
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1013
19Differential RNA processing Multiple mRNAs from
a single gene
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1014
20Tissue-specific processing of the calcitonin
primary transcript
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1015
21RNA processing mutations associated with
b-thalessemia
Alberts et al, 2002, p. 325
22rRNA processing in eukaryotes
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1016
23rRNA processing in prokaryotes
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1015
24tRNA processing
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1016
25Modified bases present in tRNAs
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1017
26Schematic of a mature mRNA
Wilson, 2003
27Mechanisms of cytoplasmic mRNA turnover
Wilson, 2003
28Ribozymes
- RNA molecules capable of catalyzing biochemical
reactions - Earliest known examples
- RNase P
- Group I and II introns
- hammerhead ribozymes
- Principal reactions
- RNA transesterification
- RNA cleavage (hydrolysis of phosphodiester
bonds) - Substrate aligned into the active site using a
guide sequence which is complimentary to the
substrate - All ribozymes depend absolutely on the assumption
of correct 3-dimensional structure for activity
29Cleavage site of the hammerhead ribozyme
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1018
30Group I self-splicing rRNA intron from Tetrahymena
Features -internal guide sequence (yellow
box) -5 intronexon junction (red arrow) -3
intronexon junction (blue arrow) -complimentary
sequences near intronexon junctions (green
boxes)
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1018
31Group I self-splicing rRNA intron from
Tetrahymena (contd)
Guo et al. (2004) Mol. Cell 16, 351
32Nucleotidyl transfer activity of the L-19 IVS
Nelson Cox, 2005, p. 1019