Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to...

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Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are trimmed, modified Describe how trans-splicing and RNA editing occur in some protists or parasitic worms Describe how RNA interference (RNAi) uses ds RNA to degrade specific mRNA Figures: 1, 2*, 3, 4*, 5*, 7, 10, 13, 14, 17, 20, 29, 31, 33*, 36*, 37*, 38, 40, 45 Problems: 1, 2, 3, 5, 16, 17, 20, 22, 23; AQ 1 16-1

Transcript of Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to...

Page 1: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing

Student learning outcomes:• Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give

final products• Explain how tRNA precursors are trimmed, modified• Describe how trans-splicing and RNA editing

occur in some protists or parasitic worms• Describe how RNA interference (RNAi) uses ds

RNA to degrade specific mRNA• Figures: 1, 2*, 3, 4*, 5*, 7, 10, 13, 14, 17, 20, 29, 31, 33*,

36*, 37*, 38, 40, 45• Problems: 1, 2, 3, 5, 16, 17, 20, 22, 23; AQ 1

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Page 2: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

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16.1 Ribosomal RNA Processing

• mRNA in eukaryotes frequently requires splicing, but does not undergo any trimming from ends

• rRNA genes of both eukaryotes and bacteria are transcribed as larger precursors; must be processed to yield rRNAs of mature size

• Several different rRNA molecules are embedded in a long, precursor; each must be cut out

• No splicing occurs, only cutting – (except Tetrahymena)

Page 3: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

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Eukaryotic rRNA Processing

Fig. 1 transcription by pol I of Newt rRNA genes;Many rRNA from 1 gene

• Ribosomal RNAs made by pol I in nucleoli are precursors: process to release mature rRNAs

• Processing uses snoRNAs (snoRNPs)

• Order of RNAs in precursor: – 18S– 5.8S– 28S in all eukaryotes

Exact sizes of mature rRNAs vary among species

Page 4: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

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Processing of rRNA in Human Cells

1. 5’-end of 45S precursor RNA is removed to 41S

2. 41S precursor is cut in 2:– 20S precursor of 18S rRNA– 32S precursor of 5.8S, 28S

3. 3’-end of 20S precursor removed, yielding mature 18S rRNA

4. 32S precursor is cut to give 5.8S and 28S rRNA

5. 5.8S and 28S rRNA associate by base-pairing Fig. 2

Page 5: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

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Bacterial rRNA Processing• Multiple copies of genes for rRNAs• rRNA precursors contain tRNA, the 3 rRNAs• rRNAs are released by RNase III and RNase E:

– RNase III performs at least the initial cleavages that separate individual large rRNAs

– RNase E removes 5S rRNA from precursor

Page 6: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

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16.2 Transfer RNA Processing

• tRNAs made as long precursors in all cells – processed by removing RNA at both ends

• Nuclei of eukaryotes have precursors of single tRNA– Made by pol III

• Bacteria, precursor may contain one or more tRNA molecules or even rRNA– RNase III cleaves out individuals

Page 7: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

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RNase P Forms Mature 5’-Ends of tRNA

Fig. 5

• Extra nucleotides removed from 5’-ends of pre-tRNA by endonucleolytic cleavage catalyzed by RNase P

• RNase P has catalytic RNA subunit - M1 RNA– (bacteria and eukaryotic nuclei)

Norm Pace, Sid Altman

• Catalysis requires Mg++

• RNase P also has protein

Page 8: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

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RNases Form Mature 3’-Ends of tRNA

• 6 RNases contribute to final trimming:– Including RNase D, RNase BN

• RNase II and polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) remove most extra nucleotides to +2

• RNases PH and T remove last 2 nucleotides

Fig. 7

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16.3 Trans-Splicing

• Most splicing is cis-splicing: 2 or more exons from same gene

• trans-splicing - exons not part of same gene; may not even be on same chromosome– Trypanosome mRNA: trans-splicing between leader exon

(splice leader, SL) and one of many independent exons

• Trans-splicing in several organisms– Parasitic and free-living worms (C. elegans)– First discovered in trypanosomes

(5’ end of mRNA not match gene sequence; extra 35 nt shared with other mRNAs)

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Trans-Splicing Scheme

• Branchpoint A within half-intron attached to coding exon attacks junction between leader exon and its half-intron

• Creates Y-shaped intron-exon intermediate analogous to lariat intermediate

Fig. 10

Trypanosome and red blood cell

Page 11: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

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16.4 RNA Editing

• Pseudogenes - duplicate copies of genes, mutated, no longer function or not used

• Cryptogenes - incomplete genes

• Trypanosomatid mitochondria cryptogenes for COX II encode incomplete mRNA - must be edited before translated

• Editing occurs 3’5’ direction by successive actions of guide RNAs to insert/ delete Us

Fig. 13 minicircles regulate; maxicircles are mitochondrial genes

Page 12: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

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Mechanism of Editing

• Unedited transcripts found with edited versions of same mRNAs

• Editing occurs in poly(A) tails of mRNAs, that were added posttranscriptionally

• Partially edited transcripts isolated, always edited at their 3’-ends but not at 5’-ends

Fig. 14 example of edited section of Cox II

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Role of gRNA in Editing

Fig. 17

• Guide RNAs (gRNA) could direct insertion and deletion of UMPs in mRNA

• 5’-end of gRNA hybridizes to unedited region at 3’-border of editing pre-mRNA

• When editing is done, another gRNA could hybridize near 5’-end of newly edited region

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RNA Editing

• gRNAs provide A’s and G’s as templates for incorporation of U’s missing from mRNA;• Some G-U bp are used

Figs. 18, 20; mechanisms of insertion, deletion

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Mechanism of Removing, Adding U’s

• If gRNA is missing A or G to pair with U in mRNA– Then U is removed

• Mechanism of removing U’s involves– Cutting pre-mRNA just beyond U to be removed– Removal of U by exonuclease– Ligating two pieces of pre-mRNA together

• Adding U’s uses same first and last step• Middle step involves addition of one or more U’s

from UTP by TUTase (terminal uridyl transferase)

Page 16: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

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16.5 Posttranscriptional Control of Gene Expression

• Common form of posttranscriptional control of gene expression is control of mRNA stability

• Example: mammary gland tissue stimulated by prolactin -> increase synthesis of casein protein– Most increase in casein not due to increased rate of

transcription of the casein gene– Is increase in half-life of casein mRNA

Example: transferrin receptor mRNA stability and response to iron concentration

Page 17: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

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RNA Interference: posttranscriptional control

• RNAi - selective inhibition of expression of genes• Originally antisense RNA thought to block

translation by binding mRNA; sense strand also works, and dsRNA is best

Fig. 29 C. elegans.Inject antisense or ds RNA to mex-3; In situ hybridize embryos to mex-3 probe. a)Negative; No probe; b)Positive hybridize, no RNAic) Antisense mex-3d) ds RNA to mex-3

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RNA Interference

Fig. 33 Model

• RNA interference - cell encounters dsRNA from:– Virus, Transposon, ds RNA

• Trigger dsRNA degraded to 21-23 nt fragments (siRNAs, short interfering RNA) by Dicer, RNase III-like

• ds siRNA, with Dicer, Dicer-associated protein R2D2 form Complex B

• Complex B delivers siRNA to RISC loading complex (RLC)– Separates 2 strands of siRNA– Transfers guide strand to RNA-

induced silencing complex (RISC) that includes protein Argonaute2 (Ago2)

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• Guide strand of siRNA base-pairs with target mRNA in active site of PIWI domain of Ago2– Ago2 is RNase H-like enzyme

known as Slicer– Slicer cleaves target mRNA in

middle of region of base-pairing with siRNA

– Ago2 purified from an Archaeaon

ATP-dependent step -> cleaved RNA ejected from RISC,

RISC then accepts new molecule of mRNA for degradation

Page 20: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

16-20Fig. 36 Ago2 + siRNAs for 2 sites; RNAi requires Mg++Fig. 37 Assembly of the complexes

Specificity of RNAi, Complex B, RLC, RISC (Ago2)

Page 21: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

Physiological role, usefulness of RNAiPossible physiological role• Fight ds viruses• Prevent endogenous transposons• Silence transgenes

Usefulness to experimenters:• Tool to study basic principles –affect phenotype• Potential to silence oncogenes• ShRNAs provided long-lived research tool (short

hairpin RNAs)16-21

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Amplification of siRNA

• siRNA is amplified during RNAi when antisense siRNAs hybridize to target mRNA and prime synthesis of full-length antisense RNA by RdRP (RNA-dependent RNA polymerase)

• New dsRNA is digested by Dicer into new pieces of siRNA

Fig. 38

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RNAi is involved in Heterochromatin Formation in yeast

• Genes at yeast centromeres are heterochromatin and silenced; also silent mating-type regions

• Yeast mutant in genes for Dicer, Ago and RdR are defective in silencing genes near centromere

• Fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe has active transcription of reverse strand at outermost regions of centromere– Rare forward transcripts can base-pair with reverse

transcript to trigger RNAi– Recruits histone methyltransferase, methylates Lys-9 of H3– This recruits Swi6, causing heterochromatization

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RNAi is involved in Heterochromatin Formation in fission yeast near centromere

Rare forward transcript -> ds RNA, Dicer, Ago1 and RITS complex, methylation of histones, heterochromatin

Fig. 40

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Heterochromatin Formation in Plants and Mammals

• Formation of heterochromatin aided by DNA methylation

• methylation of C of CpG sequences attracts heterochromatization machinery

• Individual genes silenced in mammals by RNAi that targets gene’s control region rather than coding region (ex. X-inactivation)

• Silencing involves DNA methylation rather than mRNA destruction

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MicroRNAs (miRNAs) and Gene Silencing

• MicroRNAs - 18-25 nt RNAs produced by cleavage from 75-nt stem-loop precursor RNA

• Dicer RNase cleaves ds stem part of precursor to yield miRNA in ds form

• Single-stranded form of miRNAs joins Argonaute protein in RISC to control gene expression by base-pairing to mRNAs– In animals, miRNAs tend to base-pair imperfectly to 3’-

UTRs of target mRNAs -> inhibition of protein product accumulation of such mRNA

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Pathways to Gene Silencing by miRNAs

Fig. 45

Page 28: Chapt 16: Other RNA Processing Student learning outcomes: Explain how rRNA precursors are cleaved to give final products Explain how tRNA precursors are.

Review questions1. Draw structure of mammalian rRNA precursor, showing

locations of 3 mature rRNAs.

2. What is function of RNAseP? What is unusual about the enzyme?

3. What is the difference between cis- and trans-splicing?

5. Describe RNA editing. What is a cryptogene?

16. Present a model for mechanism of RNA interference

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