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Ubiquitination of mRNA cycling sequence binding protein from <i>Leishmania donovani</i> (LdCSBP) modulates the RNA endonuclease activity of its Smr domain
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Citations
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References
2011
Year
Rna Endonuclease ActivityLdcsbp ProteinRna Binding ProteinSystems BiologyNatural SciencesMrna Cycling SequenceSmr DomainRna BiologyMolecular BiologyDna ReplicationRna Structure PredictionGene ExpressionMedicineCell BiologyRna ProcessingProtein SynthesisLdcsbp Smr Domain
In trypanosomatid parasites, an octanucleotide sequence (C/A)AUAGAA(G/A) in the UTRs primarily determines the stability of S-phase specific mRNAs. A multi-domain protein LdCSBP from Leishmania donovani interacts with the UTR of an S-phase RNA containing the octanucleotide sequence through its unique CCCH-type Zn-finger motifs. Interestingly, the RNA binding protein contains a previously characterized DNA endonuclease domain - Smr. It has been demonstrated here that the LdCSBP Smr domain independently possesses both DNA and RNA endonuclease activities, but the full-length LdCSBP exhibits only riboendonuclease activity. Moreover, LdCSBP protein has been shown to be ubiquitinated, resulting in the down-regulation of its riboendonuclease activity. In conclusion, the results described here suggest a novel regulatory mechanism of mRNA degradation through ubiquitination in eukaryotes.
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