Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2....

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Post-transcriptional events III: ot hers Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) Processing of tRNA Trans-splicing RNA editing Post-transcriptional control of gene expression
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Transcript of Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2....

Page 1: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Post-transcriptional events III: others

1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic)2. Processing of tRNA3. Trans-splicing4. RNA editing5. Post-transcriptional control of gene expression

Page 2: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

• Ribosomal RNA processing– gene repeat, cluster;

nucleolus

– non-transcribed spacer (NTS)

– transcribed spacers

– Oscar Miller et al.; newt nucleolus, Christmas tree

transcription of rRNA precusor genes (cluster)

Page 3: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Processing scheme of 45S human rRNA precusor1964, R. Perry, pulse-chase experiment

Eukaryotic rRNA processing

Page 4: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Isolation of 45S rRNA processing intermediates from poliovirus-infected Hela cells

• Weinberg and Penman (1970), 32P-phosphate and 3H-methionine, gel electrophoresis, slice,

Page 5: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Electron microscopy of human rRNA processing intermediates, P. Wellauer and I. Dawid (1973)

Page 6: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Methyl groups as signal for processingMethylation at 2’OH; 110 CH3-group in 45 S; all preserved in final products

Page 7: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Processing bacterial rRNA precursors

tRNA

Mutation of the RNase III, 30S accumulates

30 S

Page 8: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

• How does the processing apparatus determine what to remove and what to save?

– Pattern of methylation, 2’OH

– 110 methyl groups in 45S rRNA (Hela cells), preserved in mature rRNA

• rRNAs are made in eukaryotic cells as precursors that must be processed to release the mature rRNAs. The order of RNAs in precusor is 18S, 5.8S, 28S in all eukaryotes.

• Prokarytoic rRNA precursors contain tRNAs as well as all three rRNAs. The rRNAs are released from their precuosrs by RNase III and RNase E

Page 9: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Transfer RNA processing

• Forming mature 5’ends

RNase P action

Page 10: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

The M1 RNA of E.coli RNase P has enzymatic activity

Tyr: mature tRNA; 5’-Tyr: cleaved 5’ fragment;RNase P has no effect on 4.5 S RNA precursor

Altman, Pace and others RNase P: protein + M1 RNA

5‘-Tyr

Page 11: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Eucaryotic RNase P also has an RNA part and it has the enzymatic activity.Spinach chloroplast RNase P appears not to have an RNA part.

Page 12: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Forming mature 3’ends.

Li and Deutscher(1994)

Substrate for in vitro assay of tRNA 3’end maturation

RNase D, RNase BN, RNase T, RNase PH, RNase II, RNPase (Polynucleotide phosphorylase)

Page 13: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Role of RNase D, RNase BN, RNase T, RNase PH, RNase II, polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase)

Assay for maturation of tRNATyr su3+

Wild-type RNase PH+,PNPase+

Page 14: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Effect of RNase mutation on maturation of tRNAtyr su3+ 3’end.

RNase T, RNase PH

Page 15: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Effect of RNase II and PNPasemutations on maturation of tRNAtyr su3+ 3’end.

Page 16: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

• RNase II and polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNP) cooperate to remove most of the extra nucleotides at the ends of a tRNA precursor, but stop at the +2 state with two extra nucleotides remaining;

• RNase PH and T are most active in removing the last two nucleotides from the tRNA with RNase T being the major participants in removing the very last nucleotide.

Page 17: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Trans-splicing vs. Cis-splicing

Some organisms that trans-splice

trypanosome

Schistosoma mansoni

Ascaris lumbricoides

Euglena

Page 18: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

• Piet Borst and coworkers (1982), trypanosome a surface coat protein mRNA and gene 5’end no match, extra 35 nt in mRNA.

• More mRNAs discovered to have the extra 35 nt, called the spliced leader (SL)

• none of the genes encode the SL

• SL is encoded by a gene repeat 200X, The gene encodes SL plus 100 nt (an intron -like; with 5’ splice sequence)

Page 19: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

• Two hypothesis for joining the SL to the coding region of an mRNA

Page 20: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Trans-splicing scheme for a trypanosome

Page 21: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

SL half-itron is associated withpoly (A) RNA

Agabian et al

artifact5‘3’

Page 22: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Treating hypothetical splicing intermediates with debranching enzyme

Page 23: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Release of the SL halfintron from a larger RNAby debranching enzyme

Page 24: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Trypanosome coding regions, including genes encoding rRNAs and tRNAs, are arranged in long, multicistronic transcription units governs by a single promoter

Page 25: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

Trypanosome mRNAs are formed by trans-splicing between a short leader exon and any one of many independent coding exon

1. mRNAs of Trypanosomes have poly(A) tails.2. However, the genes of the parasites lack of polyadenylation signals.

Page 26: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

LeBowitz et al.

Deletions around thesplicing site in anintergenic region fromLeishmania

Ullu and colleaguesAlteration of the pyrimidine-rich region of the intergenic region affects both splicing of the down stream gene and polyadenylation of the upstream gene

Page 27: Post-transcriptional events III: others 1. Processing of rRNA (eucaryotic and procaryotic) 2. Processing of tRNA 3. Trans-splicing 4. RNA editing 5. Post-transcriptional.

• Polyadenylation in trypanosomes depends on trans-splicing of the downstream coding region to an SL.

• The pyrimidine-rich tract just upstream of the splice site governs both splicing of the downstream gene and polyadenylation of the gene just upstream.

• All the genes in a transcription unit are transcribed equally, yet the amounts of the various mRNAs derived from the transcription unit vary. Control at splicing and polyadenylation level

Summary