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Publication
Journal: Cell
November/28/2019
Abstract
TLR8 is among the highest-expressed pattern-recognition receptors in the human myeloid compartment, yet its mode of action is poorly understood. TLR8 engages two distinct ligand binding sites to sense RNA degradation products, although it remains unclear how these ligands are formed in cellulo in the context of complex RNA molecule sensing. Here, we identified the lysosomal endoribonuclease RNase T2 as a non-redundant upstream component of TLR8-dependent RNA recognition. RNase T2 activity is required for rendering complex single-stranded, exogenous RNA molecules detectable for TLR8. This is due to RNase T2's preferential cleavage of single-stranded RNA molecules between purine and uridine residues, which critically contributes to the supply of catabolic uridine and the generation of purine-2',3'-cyclophosphate-terminated oligoribonucleotides. Thus-generated molecules constitute agonistic ligands for the first and second binding pocket of TLR8. Together, these results establish the identity and origin of the RNA-derived molecular pattern sensed by TLR8.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Virology
June/22/1981
Abstract
Late simian virus 40 (SV40) mRNA contains eight different cap structures which we have previously identified and mapped on the viral genome. As reported here, 5'-cap heterogeneity is a common feature to both the early and the late SV40 mRNA's. methyl-3H-labeled viral mRNA was purified from cells infected at 41 degrees C with SV40 mutant tsA209. Three different cap cores were identified: m7GpppGm, m7GpppCm, and m7GpppAm. An average of three to four m6A residues per mRNA molecule was found. RNase T2-resistant 32P-labeled early caps from tsA209-infected cells isolated and characterized. Six distinct cap I structures were identified: m7GpppCmpU (30%), m7GpppGmpC (24%), m7GpppAmpG (18%), m7GpppGmpU (13%), m7GpppGmpG (12%), and m7GpppAmpU (3%). A similar 5'-end heterogeneity was observed in early SV40 mRNA from BSC-1 cells infected with wild-type SV40 strain 777 in the presence of cytosine arabinoside and in the SV40 UV-transformed permissive line C-6. Five of these capped dinucleotides are complementary to DNA sequences at 0.66 map unit in a region previously identified by the primer extension method (Reddy et al., J. Virol. 30:279-296, 1979; Thompson et al., J. Virol. 31:437-438, 1979) as the 5' end of the early message. DNA sequences upstream from this region contain the TATTTAT (Hogness-Goldberg box), which is missing from upstream of the 5'-cap sites of late SV40 mRNA. Thus, 5'-end heterogeneity is not necessarily related to the presence or the absence of this putative transcriptional "initiation signal." When the possibility that SV40 5' caps represent transcriptional initiation sites is considered, the data also suggest that, on SV40 DNA, eucaryotic RNA polymerase II initiates transcription at multiple nucleotide sequences, including pyrimidines.
Publication
Journal: Genomics
September/1/1997
Abstract
We describe the cloning of a novel human gene belonging to the Rh/T2/S-glycoprotein class of extracellular ribonucleases. This gene is present in a single copy in the human genome and has been mapped to 6q27, a region of the human genome prone to rearrangements associated with several human malignancies. The predicted open reading frame of the human cDNA encodes a protein of 191 amino acids, and the pattern of expression is ubiquitous. Some of the sequence features of this gene, in particular those corresponding to the bipartite RNase motif of the active site, are perfectly conserved between distant species such as human and the plant Lycopersicon esculentum. No mammalian homologues have been described so far, and this report presents for the first time both the human and the mouse sequences of the corresponding members of this class of highly conserved extracellular ribonucleases.
Publication
Journal: Biochemistry
June/25/1995
Abstract
The backbone dynamics of Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI (RNase HI) in the picosecond to nanosecond time scale were characterized by a combination of measurements of 15N-NMR relaxation (T1, T2, and NOE), analyzed by a model-free approach, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulation in water. The MD simulations in water were carried out with long-range Coulomb interactions to avoid the artificial fluctuation caused by the cutoff approximation. The model-free analysis of the 15N-NMR relaxation indicated that RNase HI has a rotational correlation time of 10.9 ns at 27 degrees C. The generalized order parameter (S2) for the internal motions varied from 0.15 to 1.0, with an average value of 0.85, which is much larger than that of the RNase H domain of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (0.78). Large internal motions (small order parameters) were observed in the N-terminal region (Leu2-Lys3), the loop between beta-strands A and B (Cys13-Gly15), the turn between alpha-helix I and beta-strand D (Glu61, His62), the loop between beta-strand D and alpha-helix II (Asp70-Tyr71), the loop between alpha-helices III and IV (Ala93-Lys96), the loop between beta-strand E and alpha-helix V (Gly123-His127), and the C-terminal region (Gln152-Val155). The effective correlation time observed in these regions varied from 0.45 ns (Glu61, Lys96) to 2.2 ns (Leu14). The order parameters calculated from the MD agreed well with those from the NMR experiment, with a few exceptions. The distributions of most of the backbone N-H vectors obtained by MD are approximately consistent with the diffusion-in-a-cone model. These distributions, however, were elliptic, with a long axis perpendicular to the plane defined by the N-H and N-C alpha vectors. Distributions supporting the axial fluctuation model or the jump-between-two-cones model were also observed in the MD simulation.
Publication
Journal: Microbiology
April/8/2009
Abstract
Type II protein secretion plays a role in a wide variety of functions that are important for the ecology and pathogenesis of Legionella pneumophila. Perhaps most dramatic is the critical role that this secretion pathway has in L. pneumophila intracellular infection of aquatic protozoa. Recently, we showed that virulent L. pneumophila strain 130b secretes RNase activity through its type II secretion system. We now report the cloning and mutational analysis of the gene (srnA) encoding that novel type of secreted activity. The SrnA protein was defined as being a member of the T2 family of secreted RNases. Supernatants from mutants inactivated for srnA completely lacked RNase activity, indicating that SrnA is the major secreted RNase of L. pneumophila. Although srnA mutants grew normally in bacteriological media and human U937 cell macrophages, they were impaired in their ability to grow within Hartmannella vermiformis amoebae. This finding represents the second identification of a L. pneumophila type II effector being necessary for optimal intracellular infection of amoebae, with the first being the ProA zinc metalloprotease. Newly constructed srnA proA double mutants displayed an even larger infection defect that appeared to be the additive result of losing both SrnA and ProA. Overall, these data represent the first demonstration of a secreted RNase promoting an intracellular infection event, and support our long-standing hypothesis that the infection defects of L. pneumophila type II secretion mutants are due to the loss of multiple secreted effectors.
Publication
Journal: Microbiology
July/30/2003
Abstract
Deficiencies in the MutS protein disrupt methyl-directed mismatch repair (MMR), generating a mutator phenotype typified by high mutation rates and promiscuous recombination. How such deficiencies might arise in the natural environment was determined by analysing pathogenic strains of Escherichia coli. Quantitative Western immunoblotting showed that the amount of MutS in a wild-type strain of the enterohaemorrhagic pathogen E. coli O157 : H7 decreased about 26-fold in stationary-phase cells as compared with the amount present during exponential-phase growth. The depletion of MutS in O157 : H7 is significantly greater than that observed for a laboratory-attenuated E. coli K-12 strain. In the case of stable mutators, mutS defects in strains identified among natural isolates were analysed, including two E. coli O157 : H7 strains, a diarrhoeagenic E. coli O55 : H7 strain, and a uropathogenic strain from the E. coli reference (ECOR) collection. No MutS could be detected in the four strains by Western immunoblot analyses. RNase T2 protection assays showed that the strains were either deficient in mutS transcripts or produced transcripts truncated at the 3' end. Nucleotide sequence analysis revealed extensive deletions in the mutS region of three strains, ranging from 7.5 to 17.3 kb relative to E. coli K-12 sequence, while the ECOR mutator contained a premature stop codon in addition to other nucleotide changes in the mutS coding sequence. These results provide insights into the status of the mutS gene and its product in pathogenic strains of E. coli.
Publication
Journal: PLoS ONE
November/1/2011
Abstract
Self-incompatibility (SI) is widespread in the angiosperms, but identifying the biochemical components of SI mechanisms has proven to be difficult in most lineages. Coffea (coffee; Rubiaceae) is a genus of old-world tropical understory trees in which the vast majority of diploid species utilize a mechanism of gametophytic self-incompatibility (GSI). The S-RNase GSI system was one of the first SI mechanisms to be biochemically characterized, and likely represents the ancestral Eudicot condition as evidenced by its functional characterization in both asterid (Solanaceae, Plantaginaceae) and rosid (Rosaceae) lineages. The S-RNase GSI mechanism employs the activity of class III RNase T2 proteins to terminate the growth of "self" pollen tubes. Here, we investigate the mechanism of Coffea GSI and specifically examine the potential for homology to S-RNase GSI by sequencing class III RNase T2 genes in populations of 14 African and Madagascan Coffea species and the closely related self-compatible species Psilanthus ebracteolatus. Phylogenetic analyses of these sequences aligned to a diverse sample of plant RNase T2 genes show that the Coffea genome contains at least three class III RNase T2 genes. Patterns of tissue-specific gene expression identify one of these RNase T2 genes as the putative Coffea S-RNase gene. We show that populations of SI Coffea are remarkably polymorphic for putative S-RNase alleles, and exhibit a persistent pattern of trans-specific polymorphism characteristic of all S-RNase genes previously isolated from GSI Eudicot lineages. We thus conclude that Coffea GSI is most likely homologous to the classic Eudicot S-RNase system, which was retained since the divergence of the Rubiaceae lineage from an ancient SI Eudicot ancestor, nearly 90 million years ago.
Publication
Journal: Molecular Biology of the Cell
April/18/2012
Abstract
RNase T2 enzymes are produced by a wide range of organisms and have been implicated to function in diverse cellular processes, including stress-induced anticodon loop cleavage of mature tRNAs to generate tRNA halves. Here we describe a family of eight RNase T2 genes (RNT2A-RNT2H) in the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila. We constructed strains lacking individual or combinations of these RNT2 genes that were viable but had distinct cellular and molecular phenotypes. In strains lacking only one Rnt2 protein or lacking a subfamily of three catalytically inactive Rnt2 proteins, starvation-induced tRNA fragments continued to accumulate, with only a minor change in fragment profile in one strain. We therefore generated strains lacking pairwise combinations of the top three candidates for Rnt2 tRNases. Each of these strains showed a distinct starvation-specific profile of tRNA and rRNA fragment accumulation. These results, the delineation of a broadened range of conditions that induce the accumulation of tRNA halves, and the demonstration of a predominantly ribonucleoprotein-free state of tRNA halves in cell extract suggest that ciliate tRNA halves are degradation intermediates in an autophagy pathway induced by growth arrest that functions to recycle idle protein synthesis machinery.
Publication
Journal: BMC Evolutionary Biology
August/13/2009
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Members of the Ribonuclease (RNase) T2 family are common models for enzymological studies, and their evolution has been well characterized in plants. This family of acidic RNases is widespread, with members in almost all organisms including plants, animals, fungi, bacteria and even some viruses. While several biological functions have been proposed for these enzymes in plants, their role in animals is unknown. Interestingly, in vertebrates most of the biological roles of plant RNase T2 proteins are carried out by members of a different family, RNase A. Still, RNase T2 proteins are conserved in these animals
RESULTS
As a first step to shed light on the role of animal RNase T2 enzymes, and to understand the evolution of these proteins while co-existing with the RNase A family, we characterized RNase Dre1 and RNase Dre2, the two RNase T2 genes present in the zebrafish (Danio rerio) genome. These genes are expressed in most tissues examined, including high expression in all stages of embryonic development, and their expression corresponds well with the presence of acidic RNase activities in every tissue analyzed. Embryo expression seems to be a conserved characteristic of members of this family, as other plant and animal RNase T2 genes show similar high expression during embryo development. While plant RNase T2 proteins and the vertebrate RNase A family show evidences of radiation and gene sorting, vertebrate RNase T2 proteins form a monophyletic group, but there is also another monophyletic group defining a fish-specific RNase T2 clade.
CONCLUSIONS
Based on gene expression and phylogenetic analyses we propose that RNase T2 enzymes carry out a housekeeping function. This conserved biological role probably kept RNase T2 enzymes in animal genomes in spite of the presence of RNases A. A hypothetical role during embryo development is also discussed.
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
July/24/2013
Abstract
In recent years, the role played by the stromal microenvironment has been given growing attention in order to achieve a full understanding of cancer initiation and progression. Because cancer is a tissue-based disease, the integrity of tissue architecture is a major constraint toward cancer growth. Indeed, a large contribution of the natural resistance to cancer stems from stromal microenvironment components, the dysregulation of which can facilitate cancer occurrence. For instance, recent experimental evidence has highlighted the involvement of stromal cells in ovarian carcinogenesis, as epitomized by ovarian xenografts obtained by a double KO of the murine Dicer and Pten genes. Likewise, we reported the role of an ancient extracellular RNase, called Ribonuclease T2 (RNASET2), within the ovarian stromal microenvironment. Indeed, hyperexpression of RNASET2 is able to control tumorigenesis by recruiting macrophages (mostly of the anticancer M1 subtype) at the tumor sites. We present biological data obtained by RNASET2 silencing in the poorly tumorigenetic and highly RNASET2-expressing human OVCAR3 cell line. RNASET2 knockdown was shown to stimulate in vivo tumor growth early after microinjection of OVCAR3 cells in nude mice. Moreover, we have investigated by molecular profiling the in vivo expression signature of human and mouse cell xenografts and disclosed the activation of pathways related to activation of the innate immune response and modulation of ECM components. Finally, we provide evidence for a role of RNASET2 in triggering an in vitro chemotactic response in macrophages. These results further highlight the critical role played by the microenvironment in RNASET2-mediated ovarian tumor suppression, which could eventually contribute to better clarify the pathogenesis of this disease.
Publication
Journal: Nucleic Acids Research
November/12/1984
Abstract
We describe the use of an enzymic probe of RNA structure, T2 ribonuclease, to detect alterations of RNA conformation induced by changes in Mg2+ ion concentration and pH. T2 RNase is shown to possess single-strand specificity similar to S1 nuclease. In contrast to S1 nuclease, T2 RNase does not require divalent cations for activity. We have used this enzyme to investigate the role of Mg2+ ions in the stabilization of RNA conformation. We find that, at neutral pH, drastic reduction of the available divalent metal ions results in a decrease in the ability of T2 RNase to cleave the anticodon loop of tRNAPhe. This change accompanies an increase in the cleavage of the molecule in the T psi C and in the dihydrouracil loops. Similar treatment of Tetrahymena thermophila 5S ribosomal RNA shows that changes in magnesium ion concentration does not have a pronounced effect on the cleavage pattern produced by T2 RNase. T2 RNase activity has a broader pH range than S1 nuclease and can be used to study pH induced conformational shifts in RNA structure. We find that upon lowering the pH from 7.0 to 4.5, nucleotide D16 in the dihydrouracil loop of tRNAPhe becomes highly sensitive to T2 RNase hydrolysis. This change accompanies a decrease in the relative sensitivity of the anticodon loop to the enzyme. The role of metal ion and proton concentrations in maintenance of the functional conformation of tRNAPhe is discussed.
Publication
Journal: Immunity
April/15/2020
Abstract
Human toll-like receptor 8 (TLR8) activation induces a potent T helper-1 (Th1) cell response critical for defense against intracellular pathogens, including protozoa. The receptor harbors two distinct binding sites, uridine and di- and/or trinucleotides, but the RNases upstream of TLR8 remain poorly characterized. We identified two endolysosomal endoribonucleases, RNase T2 and RNase 2, that act synergistically to release uridine from oligoribonucleotides. RNase T2 cleaves preferentially before, and RNase 2 after, uridines. Live bacteria, P. falciparum-infected red blood cells, purified pathogen RNA, and synthetic oligoribonucleotides all required RNase 2 and T2 processing to activate TLR8. Uridine supplementation restored RNA recognition in RNASE2-/- or RNASET2-/- but not RNASE2-/-RNASET2-/- cells. Primary immune cells from RNase T2-hypomorphic patients lacked a response to bacterial RNA but responded robustly to small-molecule TLR8 ligands. Our data identify an essential function of RNase T2 and RNase 2 upstream of TLR8 and provide insight into TLR8 activation.
Publication
Journal: Biochemistry
December/28/1977
Abstract
In vitro maturation of precursor 5S ribosomal RNA (p5A) from Bacillus subtilis effected by RNase M5 yields mature 5S RNA (m5, 116 nucleotides), and 3' precursor-specific segment (42 nucleotides), and a 5' precursor-specific segment (21 nucleotides) (Sogin, M.L., Pace, B., and Pace, N.R. (1977), J. Biol. Chem. 252, 1350). Limited digestion of p5A with RNase T2 introduces a single scission at position 60 of the molecule; m5 is cleaved at the corresponding nucleotide residue. The complementary "halves" of the molecules could be isolated from denaturing polyacrylamide gels. The isolated fragments of p5A are not substrates for RNase M5, suggesting that some recognition elements can be utilized by RNase M5 only when presented in double-helical form. In exploring the involvement of the precursor-specific segments in the RNase M5-p5A interaction, substrate molecules lacking the 3' or 5' precursor-specific segment were constructed by reannealing complementary "halves" from p5A and m5 RNA. The artificial substrate lacking the 5'-terminal precursor segment was cleaved very much more slowly than the lacking t' segment; the 5' precursor-specific segment therefore contains one or more components recognized by RNase M5 during its interaction with the p5A substrate.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Virology
December/22/1976
Abstract
The 5'-terminal sequence m(7)G(5') ppp(5') GmpCp was isolated from Moloney murine leukemia virus 35S RNA after digestion of (32)P-labeled RNA with RNases T1, T2, and A followed by pH 3.5 ionophoresis on DEAE paper.
Publication
Journal: EMBO Journal
July/26/1984
Abstract
We have used RNases T1, T2 and A to digest two aminoacyl-tRNAs, Escherichia coli Phe-tRNAPhe and E. coli Met- tRNAMetm both in the naked forms and in ternary complexes with E. coli elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) and GTP. An analysis of the 'footprinting' results has led to an interpretation that has localized the part of the three-dimensional structure of aminoacyl-tRNA covered by the protein in the ternary complex. In terms of the three-dimensional structure of tRNA established for yeast tRNAPhe, EF-Tu covers the aa-end, aa-stem, T-stem, and extra loop on the side of the L-shaped tRNA that exposes the extra loop.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Virology
May/26/1977
Abstract
Full-length virion RNA and complementary mRNA's of vesicular stomatitis virus can be annealed to each other, digested with RNases, and then separated as five unique duplex RNA molecules on polyacrylamide slab gels. Similar RNA duplexes were detected whether mRNA or virion RNA was the radioactive component and whether the mRNA was synthesized in vitro or in vivo. The sharp banding pattern of these RNA molecules was dependent on treatment with RNase T2, suggesting that removal of poly(A) is necessary. Identification of the coding region contained in each RNA duplex was based on their previous identification as single-stranded mRNA on formamide-containing, polyacrylamide gels. Because the two smallest mRNA'S had not been previously separated, their identification was based on their in vitro transcriptional gene order. In the order of increasing mobilities on the slab gels, the RNA duplexes are identified as the hybrid of the region of the genome RNA hybridized to the complementary mRNA coding for the large protein, the glycoprotein, the nucleocapsid protein, the core-associated NS protein, and the matrix protein (L,G,N,NS, and M). Several lines of evidence support the presence of undegraded complete mRNA, excluding poly(A), in these RNA duplexes. Also, the two smallest mRNA's, separated by duplex formation, were denatured, and their individual oligonucleotide fingerprints were determined. From chemical length determinations, the molecular weights of the mRNA, minus poly(A), are 2.78 X 10(5) and 2.5 X 10(5), respectively, for the mRNA's of the NS and M proteins.
Publication
Journal: EMBO Journal
August/5/1985
Abstract
Solanum nodiflorum mottle virus (SNMV) RNA2 is a single-stranded, covalently closed circular molecule. RNase T2 or nuclease P1 digests of this RNA contain a minor nucleotide of unusual chromatographic and electrophoretic mobility. This nucleotide is resistant to further digestion by T2 or P1 ribonucleases, or by alkali, but is sensitive to venom phosphodiesterase digestion. Alkaline phosphatase digestion yields a product which is RNase T2 and P1 sensitive. The products of these various digests show that the minor nucleotide is a ribonuclease-resistant dinucleotide carrying a 2' phosphomonoester group with the core structure C2'p3'p5'A. This dinucleotide is found in a unique RNase T1 product of SNMV RNA2, thus establishing a unique location in the sequence for the 2' phosphomonoester group at residue 49. Identical results have been obtained with a second related virus. The phosphomonoester group probably results from the RNA ligation event by which the molecules were circularised.
Publication
Journal: Biochemistry
July/27/1975
Abstract
Simple two-dimensional thin-layer chromatography was found to be useful for the separation of sugar methylated dinucleotides in RNA. Of the 16 possible sequences of the type Nm-Np, 15 were separated and all the sequences were determined. In a mouse hepatoma, MH 134, the levels of the sugar methylation in the 18S and 28S RNA molecules were 17-18 and 11-12 per 1000 nucleotides, respectively. Thus, 18s RNA contained approximately 35 2'-O-methylated dinucleotides and 28S RNA approximately 60 2'-O-methylated dinucleotides. The pattern of distribution was also distinct between these two molecules. Two 2'-O-methylated trinucleotides were identified in the 28S RNA with the sequences Um-Gm-Up and Um-Gm-psip. A unique 2'-O-methylated tetranucleotide was present also in the 28S RNA, the sequence of which was Am-Gm-Cm-Ap. The 5'-terminal nucleotides of both 18S and 28S RNA were obtained as nucleoside 3',5'-diphosphates (pNp) in the trinucleotide fraction of the RNase T2 digest. The 5'-termimi of 18S and 28S RNA were pUp and pCp, respectively, and found to be almost homogeneous.
Publication
Journal: FEBS Letters
August/5/1991
Abstract
The complete amino acid sequence of ribonuclease (RNase MC) from the seeds of bitter gourd (Momordica charantia) has been determined. This has been achieved by the sequence analysis of peptides derived by enzymatic digestion with trypsin, lysylendopeptidase, and chymotrypsin, as well as by chemical cleavage with cyanogen bromide. The protein contains 191 amino acid residues and has a calculated molecular mass of 21,259 Da. Comparison of this sequence with sequences of the fungal RNases, RNase T2, and RNase Rh, revealed that there are highly conserved residues at positions 32-38 (TXHGLWP) and 81-92 (FWXHEWXKHGTC). Furthermore, the sequence of RNase MC was found to be homologous to those of Nicotiana alata S-glycoproteins involved in self-incompatibility sharing 41% identical residues.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biochemistry
August/25/1967
Authors
Publication
Journal: Molecular Microbiology
July/16/1991
Abstract
We have analysed transcription and mRNA processing for the gene 32 region of five phages related to T4. Two different organizations of gene 32 proximal promoters were found. In T4 and M1, middle- and late-mode promoters are separated by 50 nucleotides and located within an upstream open reading frame. In T2, K3, Ac3, and Ox2, the 626bp T4 sequence that includes these promoters is replaced by a 59bp sequence containing overlapping middle and late promoters. The RNase E-dependent processing of the g32 mRNAs is conserved in all of the phages. The processing site immediately upstream of g32 in T4 and M1 has been replaced in the other phages by a different sequence that is also cleaved by RNase E. The remarkable conservation of these regulatory features, despite the sequence divergences, suggests that they play an important role in the control of gene expression.
Publication
Journal: Nucleic Acids Research
June/17/2004
Abstract
DEx(D)/(H) proteins catalyze structural rearrangements in RNA by coupling ATP hydrolysis to the destabilization of RNA helices or RNP complexes. The Escherichia coli DEx(D)/(H) protein DbpA specifically recognizes a region within the catalytic core of 23S rRNA. To better characterize the interaction of DbpA with this region and to identify changes in the complex between different nucleotide-bound states of the enzyme, RNase T1, RNase T2, kethoxal and DMS footprinting of DbpA on a 172 nt fragment of 23S rRNA were performed. A number of protections identified in helices 90 and 92 were consistent with biochemical experiments measuring the RNA binding and ATPase activity of DbpA with truncated RNAs. When DbpA was bound with AMPPNP, but not ADP, several additional footprints were detected in helix 93 and the single-stranded region 5' of helix 90, suggesting binding of the helicase domains of DbpA at these sites. These results propose that DbpA can act at multiple sites and hint at the targets of its biological activity on rRNA.
Publication
Journal: Nucleic Acids Research
May/17/1988
Abstract
The secondary and tertiary structures of Xenopus oocyte and somatic 5S rRNAs were investigated using chemical and enzymatic probes. The accessibility of both RNAs towards single-strand specific nucleases (T1, T2, A and S1) and a helix-specific ribonuclease from cobra venom (RNase V1) was determined. The reactivity of nucleobase N7, N3 and N1 positions towards chemical probes was investigated under native (5 mM MgCl2, 100 mM KCl, 20 degrees C) and semi-denaturing (1 mM EDTA, 20 degrees C) conditions. Ethylnitrosourea was used to identify phosphates not reactive towards alkylation under native conditions. The results obtained confirm the presence of the five helical stems predicted by the consensus secondary structure model of 5S rRNA. The chemical reactivity data indicate that loops C and D are involved in a number of tertiary interactions, and loop E folds into an unusual secondary structure. A comparison of the data obtained for the two types of Xenopus 5S rRNA indicates that the conformations of the oocyte and somatic 5S rRNAs are very similar. However, the data obtained with nucleases under native conditions, and chemical probes under semi-denaturing conditions, reveal that helices III and IV in the somatic 5S rRNA are less stable than the same structures in oocyte 5S rRNA. Using chimeric 5S rRNAs, it was possible to demonstrate that the relative resistance of oocyte 5S rRNA to partial denaturation in 4 M urea is conferred by the five oocyte-specific nucleotide substitutions in loop B/helix III. In contrast, the superior stability of oocyte 5S rRNA in the presence of EDTA is related to a single C substitution at position 79.
Publication
Journal: Nucleic Acids Research
November/20/2018
Abstract
RNA fragments deriving from tRNAs (tRFs) exist in all branches of life and the repertoire of their biological functions regularly increases. Paradoxically, their biogenesis remains unclear. The human RNase A, Angiogenin, and the yeast RNase T2, Rny1p, generate long tRFs after cleavage in the anticodon region. The production of short tRFs after cleavage in the D or T regions is still enigmatic. Here, we show that the Arabidopsis Dicer-like proteins, DCL1-4, do not play a major role in the production of tRFs. Rather, we demonstrate that the Arabidopsis RNases T2, called RNS, are key players of both long and short tRFs biogenesis. Arabidopsis RNS show specific expression profiles. In particular, RNS1 and RNS3 are mainly found in the outer tissues of senescing seeds where they are the main endoribonucleases responsible of tRNA cleavage activity for tRFs production. In plants grown under phosphate starvation conditions, the induction of RNS1 is correlated with the accumulation of specific tRFs. Beyond plants, we also provide evidence that short tRFs can be produced by the yeast Rny1p and that, in vitro, human RNase T2 is also able to generate long and short tRFs. Our data suggest an evolutionary conserved feature of these enzymes in eukaryotes.
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