Publication | Open Access
Characterization of the Essential Activities of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Mtr4p, a 3′→5′ Helicase Partner of the Nuclear Exosome
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Citations
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References
2007
Year
Molecular BiologyProtein SynthesisPartial Duplex RnaProtein FoldingYeastNuclear ExosomeDuplex RegionProteomicsRna ProcessingBiochemistryRna Structure PredictionDna ReplicationNuclear OrganizationSki2p FamilyGene ExpressionEssential ActivitiesChromatin FunctionProtein BiosynthesisChromatinChromatin RemodelingNatural SciencesSystems BiologyMedicineHelicase Partner
Mtr4p belongs to the Ski2p family of DEVH-box containing proteins and is required for processing and degradation of a variety of RNA substrates in the nucleus. In particular, Mtr4p is required for creating the 5.8 S ribosomal RNA from its 7 S precursor, proper 3'-end processing of the U4 small nuclear RNA and some small nucleolar RNAs, and degradation of aberrant mRNAs and tRNAs. In these studies we have shown that Mtr4p has RNA-dependent ATPase (or dATPase) activity that is stimulated effectively by likely substrates (e.g. tRNA) but surprisingly weakly by poly(A). Using an RNA strand-displacement assay, we have demonstrated that Mtr4p can, in the presence of ATP or dATP, unwind the duplex region of a partial duplex RNA substrate in the 3'-->5' direction. We have examined the ability of Mtr4p to bind model RNA substrates in the presence of nucleotides that mimic the stages (i.e. ATP-bound, ADP-bound, and nucleotide-free) of the unwinding reaction. Our results demonstrate that the presence of a non-hydrolyzable ATP analog allows Mtr4p to discriminate between partial duplex RNA substrates, binding a 3'-tailed substrate with 5-fold higher affinity than a 5'-tailed substrate. In addition, Mtr4p displays a marked preference for binding to poly(A) RNA relative to an oligoribonucleotide of the same length and a random sequence. This binding exhibits apparent cooperativity and different dynamic behavior from binding to the random single-stranded RNA. This unique binding mode might be employed primarily for degradation.
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