Genetics, Vol. 153, 1205-1218, November 1999, Copyright © 1999

Multiple Functions of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Splicing Protein Prp24 in U6 RNA Structural Rearrangements

Regina M. Vidavera, David M. Fortner1,a, Liana S. Loos-Austina, and David A. Browa
a Department of Biomolecular Chemistry, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin 53706-1532

Corresponding author: David A. Brow, Department of Biomolecular Chemistry, 535A MSC, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1300 University Ave., Madison, WI 53706-1532., dabrow{at}facstaff.wisc.edu (E-mail)

Communicating editor: M. HAMPSEY


*  ABSTRACT
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

U6 spliceosomal RNA has a complex secondary structure that includes a highly conserved stemloop near the 3' end. The 3' stem is unwound when U6 RNA base-pairs with U4 RNA during spliceosome assembly, but likely reforms when U4 RNA leaves the spliceosome prior to the catalysis of splicing. A mutation in yeast U6 RNA that hyperstabilizes the 3' stem confers cold sensitivity and inhibits U4/U6 assembly as well as a later step in splicing. Here we show that extragenic suppressors of the 3' stem mutation map to the gene coding for splicing factor Prp24. The suppressor mutations are located in the second and third of three RNA-recognition motifs (RRMs) in Prp24 and are predicted to disrupt RNA binding. Mutations in U6 RNA predicted to destabilize a novel helix adjacent to the 3' stem also suppress the 3' stem mutation and enhance the growth defect of a suppressor mutation in RRM2 of Prp24. Both phenotypes are reverted by a compensatory mutation that restores pairing in the novel helix. These results are best explained by a model in which RRMs 2 and 3 of Prp24 stabilize an extended intramolecular structure in U6 RNA that competes with the U4/U6 RNA interaction, and thus influence both association and dissociation of U4 and U6 RNAs during the splicing cycle.


NUCLEAR pre-mRNA splicing is performed by a ribonucleoprotein complex called the spliceosome, which is assembled on each intron. Five small nuclear RNAs (snRNAs) are essential constituents of the spliceosome: U1, U2, U4, U5, and U6. Each snRNA associates with specific proteins to form a small nuclear ribonucleoprotein complex (snRNP). Early in spliceosome assembly, U6 RNA base-pairs with U4 RNA to form the U4/U6 snRNP complex (HASHIMOTO and STEITZ 1984 Down; RINKE et al. 1985 Down; BROW and GUTHRIE 1988 Down). A tri-snRNP complex, comprising the U4/U6 snRNP and the U5 snRNP, then forms and associates with the prespliceosome, which consists of the pre-mRNA and U1 and U2 snRNPs (reviewed in WILL and LUHRMANN 1997 Down; BURGE et al. 1999 Down). For the spliceosome to become catalytically active, U4 RNA must dissociate from U6 RNA and may leave the spliceosome (YEAN and LIN 1991 Down). Concomitant with or soon after U4 RNA release, U6 RNA base-pairs with U2 RNA (reviewed in MADHANI and GUTHRIE 1994 Down; ARES and WEISER 1995 Down; NILSEN 1998 Down) and the first catalytic step of splicing occurs. After splicing, the U6/U2 RNA interaction is disrupted, and free U6 RNA is recycled to the U4/U6 snRNP.

U6 RNA undergoes several conformational changes during spliceosome assembly and activation. In the free U6 snRNP, Saccharomyces cerevisiae (hereafter "yeast") U6 RNA contains at least three intramolecular helices: the 5', central, and 3' stem (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down; Figure 1). The central and 3' stems must unwind for U6 RNA to base-pair with U4 RNA, and the 3' stem likely reforms upon U6 RNA base-pairing with U2 RNA. To study the conformational changes of U6 RNA, we created a mutation, A62G, in yeast U6 RNA. The U6-A62G mutation, which creates a G-C base pair, results in (1) hyperstabilization of the 3' stem, (2) a defect in U4/U6 complex assembly, and (3) cold-sensitive growth (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down). Overexpression of U4 RNA in the U6-A62G strain restores U4/U6 complex to wild-type levels but does not fully suppress the cold sensitivity. Thus, the U6-A62G mutation affects not only U4/U6 complex assembly, but at least one additional process as well.



View larger version (21K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 1. Proposed secondary structure of yeast U6 RNA in the U6 snRNP. The telestem includes residues 36–43 and 86–95. The site of the 62/85 base pair, hyperstabilization of which leads to a cold-sensitive phenotype, is indicated with an oval. Arrows represent phosphodiester bonds. The boxed residues interact with the pre-mRNA 5' splice site; solid lines indicate proven base pairs (reviewed in NILSEN 1998 Down), dashed lines indicate proposed interactions (LI and BROW 1996 Down; SPINGOLA et al. 1999 Down).

To further characterize the defects caused by the U6-A62G mutation, spontaneous suppressors of the cold-sensitive growth were selected. Of 109 suppressor strains obtained, 31 contain a mutation in U6 RNA (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down). Some of these cis-suppressors fully revert the U4/U6 complex assembly defect caused by the A62G mutation, likely by destabilizing the 3' stem of U6 RNA. Others, however, have an intermediate or negligible effect on U4/U6-A62G complex assembly. Most of these latter mutations fall within two regions of U6 RNA: positions 38–43 and 86–95. We previously noted that these regions have the potential to base-pair and form a stem in U6 RNA (BROW and VIDAVER 1995 Down), here named the telestem to reflect the fact that the interaction occurs across a distance. If present simultaneously with the central stem loop of free U6, the telestem would form a pseudoknot structure (Figure 1). Our previous in vitro studies on the human U4/U6 complex showed that a competing intramolecular structure in human U6 RNA, the extended 3' stem, destabilizes the human U4/U6 complex (BROW and VIDAVER 1995 Down). We suggested that the telestem in yeast U6 RNA performs an analogous destabilizing function.

Evidence from chemical modification studies (JANDROSITZ and GUTHRIE 1995 Down) supports the notion that the U6 RNA telestem exists in purified U6 snRNPs. U6 RNA bases 40–43, which reside in the 5'-most strand of the telestem, are protected in the U6 snRNP (but not in deproteinized U6 RNA) from reagents that modify unpaired bases. It was proposed that the essential U6 snRNP protein, Prp24 (SHANNON and GUTHRIE 1991 Down), binds directly to bases 40–43 because mutations in the third RNA-recognition motif (RRM) of Prp24 also abolish protection. We suggest instead that the protection of U6 RNA bases 40–43 is due to base-pairing in the telestem, and that the stem requires Prp24 for stabilization. The fact that a mutation in the 3' strand of the telestem (U6-A91G) eliminates the ability of U6 RNA to be coimmunoprecipitated by anti-Prp24 antibodies (SHANNON and GUTHRIE 1991 Down) and abolishes protection of bases 40–43 (JANDROSITZ and GUTHRIE 1995 Down) supports our suggestion that the telestem is stabilized by Prp24. However, direct evidence for the telestem base-pairing interaction has not been reported, nor has any genetic interaction between Prp24 and U6 RNA. Furthermore, our proposal that the telestem/Prp24 complex promotes U4/U6 dissociation appears to contradict other studies that implicate Prp24 in U4/U6 association (GHETTI et al. 1995 Down; RAGHUNATHAN and GUTHRIE 1998B Down).

Here we report strong evidence for the involvement of Prp24 in both U4/U6 complex association and dissociation. Extragenic suppressors of the U6-A62G mutations map to RRMs 2 and 3 of Prp24. Although the suppressor mutations inhibit wild-type U4/U6 complex assembly, they partially relieve the U4/U6 complex assembly defect caused by the U6-A62G mutation. This finding supports the proposal of SHANNON and GUTHRIE 1991 Down that wild-type Prp24 brings U4 and U6 RNAs into close proximity but inhibits their base-pairing, because the suppressor mutations in Prp24 seem to disrupt both functions. However, relief of the U4/U6-A62G complex assembly defect is not the mechanism of suppression, because the cold sensitivity of a U6 RNA 3' stem mutant that does not affect U4/U6 complex assembly is nevertheless suppressed by the Prp24 mutations. Rather, the following results suggest that suppression is due to inhibition of U4/U6 complex dissociation via decreased stabilization of the telestem. First, the suppressor mutations in Prp24 map to the predicted RNA contact surface of RRMs 2 and 3 and include residues known to directly bond with RNA in model RRMs. Second, mutations in U6 RNA that disrupt the telestem also suppress U6-A62G cold sensitivity, and at least one compensatory mutation reverts suppression. Third, a suppressor mutation in RRM2 of Prp24 confers a synthetic lethal phenotype when combined with mutations in the U6 RNA telestem, but viability is restored upon restoration of telestem base-pairing potential. Our results support a model in which the telestem/Prp24 interaction antagonizes U4/U6 base-pairing and plays an important role in U4/U6 dissociation during spliceosome activation.


*  MATERIALS AND METHODS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Plasmid constructions and site-directed mutagenesis:
Mutant alleles of SNR6 (except as described below) were generated by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis of plasmids p-539H6 (BROW and GUTHRIE 1990 Down), p-539H6-A62G (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down), or p-539H6-G39A,A62G (constructed from a spontaneous cis-suppressor allele; FORTNER et al. 1994 Down). Single-stranded DNA was obtained and mutagenesis performed essentially as described (KUNKEL et al. 1987 Down; VIEIRA and MESSING 1987 Down). Resulting clones were confirmed by sequencing with oligonucleotide U6G. Mutant alleles of SNR6 were cloned into the yeast shuttle vector pSE358 (CEN4, TRP1; derivative of pUN10; ELLEDGE and DAVIS 1988 Down) by isolating the EcoRI-SphI fragment from each allele and ligating it into EcoRI-SphI-digested pSE358.

The U89C mutation in SNR6 was created by PCR amplification of p-539H6 using the U6-U89C oligonucleotide as the downstream primer and U6PCR5' as the upstream primer. The resulting PCR product was cut with FokI and ligated to an isolated fragment containing the downstream portion of SNR6 from FokI-digested pSE358-SNR6 (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down). This ligated fragment was then subjected to PCR amplification using the U6PCR5' and U6PCR3' oligonucleotides as primers. The resulting PCR product was cut with EcoNI and BstBI and ligated into EcoNI-BstBI-digested pSE358-snr6-A62G (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down) to create pSE358-snr6-A62G,U89C. The resulting DNA was then transformed into Escherichia coli and clones were sequenced as above. pSE358-snr6-A40G,A62G,U89C was generated by isolating the EcoRI-BclI fragment from pSE358-snr6-A40G,A62G (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down) and subsequent ligation into EcoRI-BclI-digested pSE358-snr6-A62G,U89C. The resulting DNA was then transformed into E. coli and clones were sequenced as above. pRS317-snr6-A62U/C85A was previously described (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down). pRS426-snr6-A62G was constructed by isolating the EcoRI-SacI fragment from pRS317-snr6-A62G (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down) and ligating it into EcoRI-SacI-digested pRS426 (SIKORSKI and HIETER 1989 Down).

pRS314-PRP24 was constructed by isolating the SpeI-SnaBI fragment from pUN50-PRP24 (CEN4, URA3; a kind gift from K. Shannon and C. Guthrie; SHANNON and GUTHRIE 1991 Down) and subsequent ligation into SpeI-HincII-digested pRS314 (CEN6, TRP1; SIKORSKI and HIETER 1989 Down). pRS313-PRP24 was constructed by isolating the SacI-XhoI fragment from pRS314-PRP24 and subsequent ligation into SacI-XhoI-cut pRS313 (CEN6, HIS3; SIKORSKI and HIETER 1989 Down). pRS314-PRP24 and pRS313-PRP24 were amplified and mutagenized by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis as above. pRS314-PRP24 was mutagenized using oligonucleotides PRP24-RRM1sub, PRP24-RRM2sub, and PRP24-RRM3sub. pRS313-PRP24 was mutagenized with PRP24-A474C and PRP24-T769A. The resulting DNA was then transformed into E. coli and clones were sequenced using primers PRP24-920-904 and PRP24-Seq1. The pRS314-PRP24-RRM3sub clones that resulted from this mutagenesis contained a deletion of a base pair at position 741, so site-directed mutagenesis was carried out using the PRP24-RRM3sub+A primer to add back the deleted base pair. All mutant PRP24 alleles were subcloned into a wild-type PRP24 plasmid with the same vector backbone to ensure that only the desired mutation was present.

The ADE2 gene was obtained from pRS316-ADE2 (a kind gift from Phil James, UW-Madison) by digesting with Ecl136II and ClaI. This fragment was ligated into pUN50-PRP24 that had been digested with ClaI and SnaBI to remove part of the Prp24 coding sequence, to yield plasmid pUN50-prp24-{Delta}1::ADE2. pRS306-prp24-T769A was created by isolating the SacI-XhoI fragment from pRS313-prp24-T769A and subsequent ligation into SacI-XhoI-cut pRS306 (URA3 integrating plasmid; SIKORSKI and HIETER 1989 Down).

Yeast strains and genetic methods:
Mutant alleles of SNR6 cloned into pSE358 were tested for their ability to function as the sole U6 RNA gene in the cell by transformation (GIETZ et al. 1995 Down) into a yeast strain containing an insertion in the chromosomal copy of SNR6 (DAB016; MATa leu2 trp1 his4 ura3 snr6::LEU2 [YCpEP6]; BROW and GUTHRIE 1988 Down). Trp+ transformants of DAB016 were streaked onto synthetic dropout medium containing 0.75 mg/ml 5-fluoroorotic acid (5-FOA) to select for loss of the URA3-marked wild-type SNR6 plasmid. Resulting colonies were streaked to YEPD plates at the temperatures indicated in the figure legends. All strains generated as spontaneous suppressors of U6-A62G cold sensitivity are derivatives of DAB016 containing pSE358-snr6-A62G (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down).

Construction of a PRP24 chromosomal disruption strain was as follows: pUN50-PRP24 was transformed into PJ51-3A (MATa his3 leu2 trp1 ura3 met2 can1 ade2 lys2; a kind gift from Phil James, UW-Madison) and a Ura+ transformant was selected to create LL100. To introduce the ADE2 gene into the chromosomal locus of PRP24, a linear BamHI-SphI fragment from pUN50-prp24-{Delta}1::ADE2 was transformed into LL100, and Ade+ transformants were selected. Disruption of the PRP24 locus was verified by Southern blotting. The resulting Prp24 chromosomal disruption strain was named LL101 (MATa his3 leu2 trp1 ura3 met2 can1 ade2 lys2 prp24-{Delta}1::ADE2 [pUN50-PRP24]). Mutant alleles of PRP24 cloned into pRS314 or pRS313 were tested for their ability to function as the sole Prp24 gene by transformation into LL101, selection on -Trp or -His medium, respectively, and subsequent plating to synthetic dropout medium containing 5-FOA. A strain containing chromosomal disruptions of the U6 and Prp24 genes was generated by mating LL101 with a strain containing a replacement of the U6 gene (MWK023; MAT{alpha} his3 leu2 trp1 ura3 met2 can1 ade2 lys2 snr6{Delta}::LEU2 [YCp50-39D6]; ESCHENLAUER et al. 1993 Down). Ade+Leu+ diploids were selected and then sporulated by growth in liquid YEPA medium. Resulting spores were screened for Ade+Leu+ and 5-FOA-sensitive phenotypes. An Ade+Leu+ 5-FOA-sensitive spore was propagated and named LL200 (MATa his3 leu2 trp1 ura3 met2 can1 ade2 lys2 prp24{Delta}1::ADE2 snr6{Delta}::LEU2 [pUN50-PRP24], [YCp50-39D6]). Mutant alleles of PRP24 cloned into pRS313 were tested for their ability to function in the presence of SNR6 alleles carried on pSE358 by cotransformation into LL200, selection on -Trp-His medium, and subsequent plating to synthetic dropout medium containing 5-FOA.

The prp24-F257I allele was introduced into the PRP24 chromosomal locus via homologous recombination (SCHERER and DAVIS 1979 Down). MWK033 (MATa his3 leu2 trp1 ura3 met2 can1 ade2 lys2 snr6{Delta}::LEU2 [pRS317-539H6 (CEN6, LYS2)], a derivative of MWK023; ESCHENLAUER et al. 1993) was transformed with RsrII-linearized pRS306-prp24-T769A, and Ura+ colonies were selected. Integration of this plasmid by homologous recombination at the PRP24 locus results in a strain with a tandem duplication of the PRP24 gene, separated by the URA3 gene. To screen for such strains, the following assay was performed: Ura+ colonies were grown overnight in liquid -Ura medium, and a quick DNA preparation for PCR was performed (LING et al. 1995 Down). PCR amplification was carried out using the oligonucleotides PRP24-END and URA3-1 as primers; a product is expected only if the integration event occurred at the PRP24 locus. Southern blotting was performed on PCR-positive clones to verify integration at the PRP24 locus. The RRM2-RRM3 region of PRP24 from resulting cultures was amplified using the oligonucleotides PRP24-RRM2-5' and PRP24-920-904, and PCR products were digested with Tsp509I, which cuts the mutant PRP24 allele but not the wild-type allele. Those colonies that appeared to contain the prp24-F257I allele in addition to wild-type PRP24 were mated to MWK038, an isogenic strain carrying wild-type SNR6 on a TRP1-marked plasmid (pRS314), and Lys+Trp+ diploids were selected. Diploids were plated to synthetic dropout medium containing 5-FOA to select for cells that had undergone homologous intrachromosomal recombination such that one of the tandem PRP24 alleles "popped out." Resulting colonies were screened by the amplification/restriction assay to determine if the mutation was maintained, and those with the mutation were then transformed with pRS316-snr6-A62G (URA3-marked centromeric plasmid) and plated to medium lacking uracil. The resulting colonies were plated to synthetic dropout medium containing 2 mg/ml {alpha}-aminoadipate to select for loss of the LYS2-marked wild-type SNR6 plasmid. The resulting yeast were sporulated and tetrads dissected. Spores were replica plated to -Ura and -Trp media to determine which spores contained only wild-type SNR6 (TRP1 marked) or snr6-A62G (URA3 marked). Spores that appeared to have only the snr6-A62G allele were assayed for the presence or absence of the Prp24-F257I mutation by the amplification/restriction screen described above. A spore that appeared to have the mutant prp24 allele, based on the screen, was subjected to PCR to amplify the PRP24 locus and the PCR product was sequenced directly to confirm the identity of the PRP24 allele. The resulting strain was named RMV022 (MAT{alpha} his3 leu2 trp1 ura3 met2 can1 ade2 lys2 snr6{Delta}::LEU2 prp24-F257I [pRS316-snr6-A62G]). Mutant alleles of SNR6 carried on pSE358 were tested for their ability to function as the sole U6 RNA gene in the prp24-F257I integrant cells by transformation, selection on -Trp media, and subsequent plating to synthetic dropout medium containing 5-FOA.

Oligonucleotides:

  • URA3-1: 5'-dGGATAATGCGTTTAGCGG;

  • U6G: 5'-dCGAGACAATTTTCTATTCGAG;

  • U6-U36A,U37A: 5'-dCTGTATTGTTTCATTTTGACCAAAT GTCC;

  • U6-A41U,A42U: 5'-dCATCTCTGTATTGAATCAAATTGACC;

  • U6-U87A,U88A: 5'-dCTCTTTGTAATTCGGTTCATCC;

  • U6-U89C: 5'-dCTCTTTGTAGAACGGTTCATCC;

  • U6-C92U: 5'- dCGAAATAAATCTCTTTATAAAACGGTTC;

  • U6-A94U,A95U: 5'-dCGAAATAAATCTCAATGTAAAACGG TTC;

  • PRP24-RRM2-5': 5'-dCGCCATAGTACAGAATGCACATTA TGG;

  • PRP24-577-596: 5'-dCCAATCCGCTGGAAAAGTCG;

  • PRP24-920-904: 5'-dGCTCTTACGCGATGCGAG;

  • PRP24-Seq1: 5'-dGGAGTATGGACATCACGC;

  • PRP24-Seq4: 5'-dCGCCCCTCTAGTGTGGC;

  • PRP24-END: 5'-dCTAGGTGAGTAGACTAACCG;

  • PRP24-A474C: 5'-dCGATTCAATACAAGCAGCAGGTTCGCTTAC;

  • PRP24-T769A: 5'-dCTGTTGTGCAATTATGGTTTTTG;

  • PRP24-RRM1sub: 5'-dCGCTGAAGAAGAACGCTCGTGCTGCAGCTATTGAATTTGCC;

  • PRP24-RRM2sub: 5'-dCGATTCAATACAAGCGCTAGGGCTGCTGCTATCGATGTTAC;

  • PRP24-RRM3sub: 5'-dGAGCACAGTTTCAATGCTTGTGCTGCAGCTATGGTTTTTG;

  • PRP24-RRM3sub+A: 5'-dGAAAGAGCACAGTTTCAAT GCTTG;

  • U1-SH, U6-SH (KUHN et al. 1999 Down);

  • U4B, U6D (LI and BROW 1993 Down);

  • U4PCR5', U4PCR3', U6PCR5', U6PCR3' (LI and BROW 1996 Down).

RNA analysis:
Total cellular RNA was obtained as previously described (TRECO 1989 Down). All strains were grown at the indicated temperatures in YEPD broth. Solution hybridization was done essentially as described (LI and BROW 1993 Down) using 1.5–2 µg of RNA and 0.1 pmol 32P-labeled oligonucleotide U1-SH, U6-SH, or U6D, and/or U4B in each reaction. Oligonucleotides were end-labeled with [{gamma}-32P]ATP using T4 polynucleotide kinase (United States Biochemical, Cleveland) and separated from unincorporated nucleotides using a TE MIDI Select-D, G-25 microcentrifuge spin column (5 prime -> 3 prime) according to manufacturer instructions. Oligonucleotide/RNA hybrids were separated by electrophoresis at 4°, 300 V on a 10-cm-tall, 1-mm-thick, 6 or 9% polyacrylamide nondenaturing gel [30:1 acrylamide/bisacrylamide (BDH Electran) in 50 mM Tris-borate, pH 8.3 and 1 mM EDTA] for ~1–1.5 hr. Gels were exposed to Biomax MR film (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY) with or without a Cronex Lightning-Plus screen (DuPont, Wilmington, DE). Gels were quantitated using a Molecular Dynamics (Sunnyvale, CA) Phosphorimager and ImageQuant software.

Isolation and characterization of SNR14 and PRP24 alleles:
Complementation of the temperature-sensitive phenotype of suppressor snr6-A62G, snr14-A16G (DMF110) was performed using plasmid YCp50-SNR14 (CEN4, URA3; SHANNON and GUTHRIE 1991 Down). Dideoxy sequencing of U4 RNA from total cellular RNA of this strain was performed as described (BROW and GUTHRIE 1990 Down) using the U4B oligonucleotide. The U4 coding sequence from DMF110 was cloned into the EcoRI site of pUC118 by amplifying genomic DNA (HOFFMAN and WINSTON 1987 Down) with primers U4PCR5' and U4PCR3'. The M13 universal primers (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) were used to sequence the U4 RNA coding sequence. Complementation of the temperature-sensitive phenotypes of suppressor strains snr6-A62G, prp24-R158S (DMF111) and snr6-A62G, prp24-F257I (DMF112) was performed using plasmid pUN50-PRP24. The region of PRP24 containing RRM3 was sequenced from gel-purified fragments generated by amplification of genomic DNA with primers PRP24-577-596 and PRP24-920-904. The region of PRP24 containing RRMs 1 and 2 was sequenced from amplified DNA generated with primers PRP24-Seq1 and PRP24-Seq4. Nonconditional U6-A62G suppressor strains were screened for mutations in PRP24 by PCR amplification and sequencing of RRMs 1–3 using the primers PRP24-Seq1 and PRP24-920-904.


*  RESULTS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Identification of extragenic suppressors of U6-A62G:
Only 31 of 109 spontaneous suppressors of the U6-A62G cold sensitivity are cis-acting (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down); thus the other 78 are in genes other than SNR6. Four of the extragenic suppressor strains, DMF110–113, also displayed a temperature-sensitive phenotype (Figure 2). In one strain, DMF113, the weak temperature sensitivity and suppression are not linked, so this strain was not studied further. In another strain, DMF110, complementation of the temperature sensitivity was observed upon transformation with a plasmid containing the wild-type U4 RNA gene (data not shown). Sequencing of U4 RNA and its gene from DMF110 revealed a single mutation, A16G (Figure 3). Interestingly, U4-A16G is the only identified cis-acting suppressor of the cold-sensitive phenotype of the U4-G14C mutation, which destabilizes stem II of the U4/U6 complex (K. SHANNON and C. GUTHRIE, personal communication). While the mechanism of suppression by U4-A16G is unknown, the ability of a U4 RNA mutation to suppress the cold sensitivity of U6-A62G strongly suggests that the cold-sensitive block occurs when U4 is present, i.e., between formation and dissociation of the U4/U6 complex.



View larger version (39K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 2. Four extragenic suppressors of the cold-sensitive growth defect of snr6-A62G have temperature-sensitive phenotypes. Shown are the parental, wild-type strain; the original snr6-A62G strain; and the spontaneous suppressor strains DMF110–113, incubated on YEPD medium at 16° for 5 days and at 37° for 2 days. Identified mutations are indicated (see text).



View larger version (12K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 3. Secondary structure model of the yeast U4/U6 RNA interaction. Positions of the U6-A62G cold-sensitive mutation and U4-A16G suppressor mutation are indicated by arrows. The boxed regions of U6 RNA form the telestem, the overlined regions form the 3' stem, and the underlined region forms the 3' strand of the central stem (see Figure 1).

The two remaining temperature-sensitive suppressor strains, DMF111 and DMF112, were tested for complementation by PRP24. After transformation with a plasmid bearing the wild-type PRP24 gene, the two suppressor strains were able to grow at wild-type rates at 37° (data not shown), suggesting that the PRP24 locus contains the suppressor mutations in these strains. Sequencing of fragments amplified from genomic DNA with primers flanking the three RRMs of PRP24 (Figure 4A) revealed a single base change in RRM2 of one strain and in RRM3 of the other. The RRM2 mutation results in a change of an arginine codon at amino acid position 158 to a serine codon, while the RRM3 mutation results in a change of a phenylalanine codon at amino acid position 257 to an isoleucine codon (Figure 4B, solid boxes).





View larger version (69K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 4. Sites of suppressor mutations in Prp24. (A) Schematic diagram of the primary structure of Prp24. Numbers refer to amino acid residues. The RNA-recognition motifs (RRMs) are shown as shaded boxes. RRM1 and RRM2 overlap by one amino acid, residue 118. (B) Amino acid sequence of Prp24 RRMs 1–3, with the mutations discussed in the text indicated. Where the deduced amino acid sequence from the parental DAB016 strain differs from that in the yeast genome database, the DAB016 sequence is on the bottom. All spontaneous suppressor mutations are single-site substitutions. U6-A62G-suppressor mutations are boxed, with a black background indicating an additional, temperature-sensitive phenotype. Suppressors of U4-G14C (SHANNON and GUTHRIE 1991 Down) are outlined in ovals. The sites of triple-alanine substitutions made in each RNP-1 domain are underlined. Solid vertical lines indicate identical amino acids conserved between the RRMs. Dashed vertical lines indicate similar amino acids (I = V = L; F = Y = W; Q = N; Q = E; D = E; N = D; R = K; S = T). Likely regions of ß-strands, loops, and {alpha}-helices are indicated (based on the alignment from KENAN et al. 1991 Down). (C) Locations of U6-A62G suppressor mutations in Prp24 RRMs 2 and 3 were modeled on the crystal structure of the N-terminal RRM of U1A (OUBRIDGE et al. 1994 Down) using MolMol. The {alpha}-carbons of mutant residues in RRMs 2 and 3 are indicated as purple and green spheres, respectively. A side view of the RNA-contact surface is shown, with the RNA-binding site at the bottom.

To determine if some of the nonconditional suppressor strains also have mutations in Prp24, we sequenced ~900 bp (containing all three RRMs) of the PRP24 gene from 12 randomly selected trans-suppressor strains. In 5 of these 12 strains, a mutation in either RRM2 or RRM3 of PRP24 was found (Figure 4B, open boxes). This result implies that approximately half of the 78 extragenic suppressor strains contain mutations in Prp24. These mutations represent the first genetic interaction identified between U6 RNA and Prp24.

The availability of the crystal structure of the amino-terminal RRM of the U1A protein (OUBRIDGE et al. 1994 Down) allowed us to model the positions of the Prp24 suppressor mutations onto the RRM structure (Figure 4C). Strikingly, the mutations localize to the RNA-binding surface of the motif (reviewed in VARANI and NAGAI 1998 Down). For example, arginine 158 of Prp24 is predicted to occupy a position analogous to arginine 52 of the U1A protein, which hydrogen-bonds directly to two bases in cocrystals with its target RNA (OUBRIDGE et al. 1994 Down). In the U2B'' protein, the equivalent arginine side chain also interacts directly with the RNA target (PRICE et al. 1998 Down). The R52Q mutation in U1A has previously been shown to destroy specific RNA binding (NAGAI et al. 1990 Down); thus we expect the R158S mutation to reduce binding of Prp24 to its target RNA(s). Phenylalanine 257 of Prp24 is predicted to be equivalent to phenylalanine 56 of U1A, which base-stacks with the target RNA (as does the analogous phenylalanine residue in U2B''), and the F56L mutation in the related U1-70K protein greatly decreases RNA binding (KENAN et al. 1991 Down). Because the F257I mutation would destroy Prp24's ability to base-stack this residue with its target RNA, it is likely that this mutation weakens RNA binding. The other suppressor mutations are also predicted to lie on the RNA-binding face, so nonconservative changes in these residues are also likely to result in decreased binding of Prp24 to its target RNA(s).

prp24-R158S and -F257I are each sufficient for suppression of U6-A62G cold sensitivity and confer temperature sensitivity:
To confirm that the PRP24 mutations identified in the temperature-sensitive strains are responsible for suppression of the U6-A62G cold-sensitive phenotype, we introduced each of these mutations into plasmid-borne PRP24 by site-directed mutagenesis. The plasmid bearing prp24-R158S or prp24-F257I was introduced, along with a plasmid containing snr6-A62G, into a strain (LL200) with chromosomal Prp24 and U6 gene disruptions complemented by wild-type PRP24 and SNR6 alleles on separate URA3-marked plasmids. After plating to medium containing 5-FOA to select for loss of the wild-type PRP24 and SNR6 plasmids (plasmid shuffle), both the prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I alleles were found to be capable of suppressing the U6-A62G growth defect at 16° (Figure 5A), showing that each mutation is responsible for the suppressor phenotype of the original strains.




View larger version (136K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 5. Phenotypes of single-site mutants prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I. (A) prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I each suppress the U6-A62G cold sensitivity. Each allele of PRP24 was introduced, along with SNR6 or snr6-A62G, into a strain with chromosomal disruptions of the Prp24 and U6 genes (LL200) and plated to 5-FOA to select against the wild-type Prp24 and U6 genes carried on URA3-marked plasmids. Shown are the resulting strains plated to YEPD at 16° for 5 days. Two colonies were plated from each transformation. A wild-type PRP24 strain (DAB016) with SNR6 or snr6-A62G is included as a control. (B) prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I each confer a temperature-sensitive phenotype. Each allele of PRP24 was introduced into a strain with a chromosomal disruption of the Prp24 gene (LL101) and subsequently plated to 5-FOA to select against the wild-type Prp24 gene carried on a URA3-marked plasmid. Shown are two clones of each resulting strain plated to YEPD at 37° for 2 days.

The 37° growth phenotypes of prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I were tested in a strain (LL101) containing a chromosomal PRP24 disruption, complemented by wild-type PRP24 on a URA3-marked plasmid, with the wild-type U6 gene at the chromosomal locus. After plasmid shuffle, both prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I conferred a temperature-sensitive growth phenotype, although the phenotype caused by the prp24-F257I allele was less severe (Figure 5B), showing that each of these individual mutations is responsible for the associated temperature sensitivity of the original suppressor strains. Because the temperature-sensitive phenotypes appear in the presence of wild-type U6 RNA, the temperature sensitivity is dependent on the mutant Prp24 protein itself rather than on a specific interaction of Prp24 with U6-A62G RNA.

To test if the temperature sensitivity of the prp24-F257I allele is more severe when restricted to single copy, the prp24-F257I allele was integrated into the chromosome. The integrated allele exhibits both suppression of the U6-A62G cold sensitivity and the temperature-sensitive phenotype (data not shown). Colony sizes of these cells appeared slightly smaller at 37° than those from the strain containing the plasmid-borne prp24-F257I allele, indicating a modest effect of copy number on the temperature-sensitive growth phenotype.

Substitution of three highly conserved residues in RRMs 2 and 3, but not RRM1, of Prp24 severely affects growth:
The identification of U6-A62G suppressor mutations in Prp24-RRM2 provides the first evidence for the requirement of this RRM in Prp24 function. The suppressor mutations in RRMs 2 and 3 presumably decrease the RNA binding activity of Prp24. However, because the selection demanded that the suppressor strains retain Prp24's essential function, the suppressor mutations may be hypomorphic, i.e., the mutated RRMs may retain some RNA-binding activity. To systematically test if each RRM is essential, we created mutant RRMs in which three of the RNP-1 consensus residues are changed to alanine (see Figure 4B). These residues correspond to positions 52, 54, and 56 of the human U1A protein, which interact directly with the RNA target (see above). Thus, we expect that the triple-alanine mutations eliminate RNA-binding activity of each RRM of Prp24.

Each mutant prp24 allele was transformed into a strain (LL101) that contains a chromosomal Prp24 gene disruption complemented by wild-type PRP24 on a URA3-marked plasmid. After selection against the wild-type PRP24, the triple-alanine substitution in RRM1 (prp24-RRM1sub) has no appreciable effect on cell growth at any temperature tested (Figure 6). Therefore, the mutations in this RRM, predicted to greatly destabilize RNA binding, do not significantly affect cell viability. The triple-alanine mutation in RRM2 (prp24-RRM2sub) causes a lethal phenotype at all temperatures tested (Figure 6 and data not shown). This growth defect is likely due to disruption of RNA-binding activity of the RRM; however, we cannot rule out the possibility that the mutation causes destabilization of the protein. The analogous substitution in RRM3 (prp24-RRM3sub) leads to a severe temperature-sensitive growth phenotype, allowing growth at 18°, with only minimal growth at 30° (Figure 6). The severe temperature sensitivity observed is consistent with a function for RRM3 in stabilizing an RNA structure by binding; at low temperature such stabilization may not be required. Interestingly, prp24-RRM3sub, like the single-site mutant prp24-F257I, suppresses U6-A62G cold sensitivity (data not shown), further suggesting that a decrease in binding of Prp24 to its target RNA(s) results in suppression of U6-A62G. The phenotypes of the RRM2- and RRM3-mutant strains show that these RRMs have functions in the cell that influence viability, and because these RRMs also interact genetically with U6 RNA, it seems likely that interaction with U6 RNA is at least one of the functions required for viability.



View larger version (52K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 6. Recessive growth phenotypes of prp24-RRMsub alleles. The prp24-RRM1sub mutant grows normally at all temperatures tested. The prp24-RRM2sub mutant does not survive at any temperature tested. The prp24-RRM3sub mutant is viable at 18° and only weakly so at 30°. Shown are YEPD plates incubated for 5 days at 18° or 2 days at 37°, and a 5-FOA-containing plate incubated at 30° for 4 days.

To test if the functions of RRMs 2 and 3 of Prp24 are physically separable, we assessed whether prp24-RRM2-sub and prp24-RRM3sub can rescue one another in trans. The two alleles, on differently marked plasmids, were transformed into the strain (LL101) described above. After selection against the wild-type PRP24, the strain shows a phenotype identical to the prp24-RRM3sub strain, showing that the two alleles do not complement one another in trans and prp24-RRM3sub is dominant to prp24-RRM2sub. This result implies that the essential functions of RRMs 2 and 3 are required in the same molecule.

Mutations in Prp24 affect U4/U6 complex assembly in vivo, but suppression of mutations in the U6 3' stem occurs independently of this effect:
As a first step toward understanding the mechanism of suppression of U6-A62G cold sensitivity by mutant Prp24 proteins, we used nondenaturing gel analysis (see Figure 7A) to examine the levels of U4/U6 complex, free U4, and free U6 RNAs in prp24 mutant cells grown overnight at 37° (Table 1). We examined RNA levels in the presence of either a chromosomal (LL101) or plasmid-borne (LL200) U6 gene. Both prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I confer a moderate U4/U6 complex assembly defect when the U6 gene is chromosomal as judged by the increased ratio of free to total U4 RNA (Table 1). This result corroborates in vivo (LYGEROU et al. 1999 Down) and in vitro (GHETTI et al. 1995 Down; RAGHUNATHAN and GUTHRIE 1998B Down) evidence that Prp24 is involved in the assembly of the U4/U6 complex. However, in prp24 mutant strains with the U6 gene provided on a plasmid, a three- to fourfold increase in U6 RNA is seen, and the ratio of free U4 to U4/U6 complex is normal or even subnormal (Table 1). Presumably, increased expression of U6 RNA drives U4/U6 complex assembly by mass action. We have not examined the mechanism of U6 RNA overexpression in the prp24 strains, but it is likely due to amplification of the low-copy-number centromeric plasmid (BITOUN and ZAMIR 1986 Down).




View larger version (96K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 7. The U6-A62U/C85A cold sensitivity is suppressed by prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I. (A) U4 RNA is not significantly impaired in its assembly with U6-A62U/C85A RNA. Total cellular RNA from strains grown at 30° expressing the indicated U6 RNAs was hybridized in solution to a 32P-labeled oligonucleotide complementary to U4 RNA (U4B) and U1 RNA (U1-SH) and electrophoresed on a nondenaturing gel. The conditions used preserve the U4/U6 complex (LI and BROW 1993 Down). The positions of U4/U6 and free U4 hybrids with the U4 oligonucleotide, and U1 with the U1 oligonucleotide (as a loading control) are indicated and the percentage of free U4 RNA is displayed below each lane. Two separate RNA preparations from the same strain were run in lanes 3 and 4. (B) prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I each suppress the U6-A62U/C85A cold sensitivity. Each allele of PRP24 was introduced, along with snr6-A62U/C85A, into a strain with chromosomal disruptions of the Prp24 and U6 genes (LL200), and plated to 5-FOA to select against the wild-type Prp24 and U6 genes carried on URA3-marked plasmids. Shown are two clones of each resulting strain plated to YEPD at 18° for 4 days.


 
View this table:
In this window
In a new window

 
Table 1. prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I each confer a U4/U6 complex assembly defect at 37°

We next tested if the mutant prp24 alleles influence U4/U6 complex assembly in the U6-A62G strain when grown at 18°. These experiments were carried out only in the presence of a plasmid-borne U6 gene. Both of the mutant alleles of prp24 partially correct the U4/U6-A62G complex assembly defect (Table 2). As was seen in prp24 mutant strains grown at 37°, U6 RNA is overexpressed from plasmid-borne SNR6 alleles in prp24 mutant strains grown at 18° (Table 2). However, suppression of the U4/U6-A62G complex assembly defect is not due to overexpression of U6 RNA, because merely providing the U6-A62G gene on a high-copy plasmid suppresses neither the cold-sensitive phenotype nor the U4/U6-A62G complex assembly defect in a wild-type PRP24 strain despite sixfold overexpression of U6-A62G (data not shown).


 
View this table:
In this window
In a new window

 
Table 2. prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I each partially correct the U4/U6-A62G complex assembly defect at 18°

From the results described above, it is not clear if partial correction of the U4/U6-A62G assembly defect is the mechanism of suppression of cold-sensitive growth by the Prp24-RRM2 and -RRM3 mutants or simply occurs coincident with suppression. To address this issue, we examined a different U6 RNA 3' stem hyperstabilizing mutant, U6-A62U/C85A. The U6-A62U/C85A strain has a more severe cold-sensitive phenotype than U6-A62G (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down) yet does not display an appreciable U4/U6 complex assembly defect (Figure 7A; compare lane 2 with lanes 3 and 4). We asked whether prp24-R158S or prp24-F257I can suppress U6-A62U/C85A cold sensitivity; both alleles do so (Figure 7B). This result clearly shows that the prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I mutations suppress hyperstabilization of the 62/85 base pair in U6 RNA, and that this suppression occurs at a stage other than U4/U6 complex assembly.

Cis-acting suppressors of U6-A62G define a novel U6 RNA structure:
The results described above are consistent with a model of Prp24 function first proposed by SHANNON and GUTHRIE 1991 Down, in which Prp24 brings U4 and U6 RNAs into proximity but antagonizes their base-pairing interaction. Our results suggest that Prp24 antagonizes U4/U6 pairing by stabilizing a competing intramolecular structure in U6 RNA. The 3' stem of yeast U6 RNA is mutually exclusive with U4/U6 pairing (see Figure 1 and Figure 3). Analogy to the dynamics of the human U4/U6 complex (BROW and VIDAVER 1995 Down) suggests that the telestem also contributes to a competing intramolecular structure. The isolation of many cis-acting suppressors of U6-A62G that are expected to disrupt the telestem (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down) supports this hypothesis.

We tested whether the proposed U6 RNA telestem forms in vivo via compensatory mutational analysis. If suppression of U6-A62G is due to disruption of the telestem, then additional mutations that restore base-pairing should revert suppression. Two individual base pairs (39/92 and 40/89) and two sets of adjacent base pairs (36/95,37/94 and 41/88,42/87) were tested (Figure 8A). Each of the mutations in one or the other strand of the duplex suppressed the U6-A62G cold sensitivity (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down; Figure 8B; data not shown) as expected if destabilization of the telestem is responsible for the suppression phenotype. One pair of compensatory mutations reverted the suppression phenotype: that which restored the 36/95,37/94 pairing (Figure 8B). Compensatory mutations in each of the other base pairs tested did not revert suppression (data not shown). These results indicate that at least the lower portion of the telestem in yeast U6 RNA forms in vivo, and that disruption of this structure is one mechanism of suppression of the U6-A62G cold sensitivity. The inability of compensatory mutations at the other locations to revert suppression does not disprove the existence of the upper telestem, because these positions may be sites where sequence-specific binding of a protein(s) is required for telestem formation and/or stabilization (BROW and VIDAVER 1995 Down; see below).




View larger version (94K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 8. Compensatory mutational analysis of the yeast U6 RNA telestem. (A) Sites of tested compensatory mutations in the yeast U6 RNA telestem. Shown is the secondary structure of the proposed telestem. Arrows indicate tested base substitutions (double mutations are boxed). In all cases, mutations on a single side of the telestem resulted in suppression of U6-A62G cold sensitivity. The combination of compensatory mutations marked with asterisks reverted suppression. (B) Compensatory mutational analysis supports formation of part of the telestem in vivo. The strains shown are isogenic (DAB016) except for their SNR6 allele, which is indicated. The strains were incubated on YEPD medium at 16° for 5 days.

If destabilization of the telestem suppresses U6-A62G cold sensitivity solely by allowing U6 RNA to base-pair with U4 RNA more efficiently, we would expect substantial reversion of the U4/U6-A62G complex assembly defect in the presence of telestem mutations. However, in accordance with the behavior of spontaneous telestem mutants (FORTNER et al. 1994 Down), U4/U6 complex assembly was only marginally rescued by site-directed mutations that disrupt the telestem as evidenced by an intermediate fraction of free U4 RNA (40–50% free U4; data not shown). Because the telestem mutations only partially revert the U4/U6-A62G assembly defect, yet fully suppress the U6-A62G cold sensitivity, the telestem must influence a step other than U4/U6 complex assembly.

Synthetic interactions between mutant PRP24 and SNR6 alleles:
Modification/protection studies suggest that the region comprising the 5' strand of the telestem is a binding site for Prp24 (GHETTI et al. 1995 Down; JANDROSITZ and GUTHRIE 1995 Down), while immunoprecipitation studies implicate residue 91, which lies in the 3' strand of the telestem helix, in Prp24 binding (SHANNON and GUTHRIE 1991 Down). If the telestem of U6 RNA is stabilized by Prp24 binding, then mutations in Prp24 that disrupt binding to the telestem are predicted to be suppressors of U6-A62G cold sensitivity.

To test if U6-A62G suppressor mutations in RRMs 2 or 3 disrupt Prp24 binding to the telestem, we asked if either the prp24-R158S or prp24-F257I temperature sensitivity is enhanced by mutations that disrupt the base-pairing potential of the U6 RNA telestem. The prp24-R158S plasmid-borne allele was combined with plasmids bearing various mutant alleles of SNR6 in a strain with chromosomal PRP24 and SNR6 disruptions (LL200). When combined with the prp24-R158S mutant, mutations that disrupt the base-pairing potential of the telestem of U6 RNA result in synthetic lethality or severely impaired viability (Figure 9). The presence of the U6-A62G mutation does not alter the synthetic interaction (data not shown). Furthermore, when the base-pairing potential of the telestem is restored by compensatory mutation, enhancement is abolished, underscoring the importance of base-pairing rather than sequence. Because these results are independent of the U6-A62G mutation, the telestem appears to form in wild-type U6 RNA as well as in U6-A62G RNA. We carried out a similar experiment with the strain containing the integrated allele of prp24-F257I. When mutations in the telestem of U6 RNA were introduced into this strain, no phenotypic changes were observed (Figure 9). The observation that synthetic enhancement of the prp24-R158S phenotype but not the prp24-F257I phenotype occurs when telestem base-pairing is disrupted suggests that RRM2 has a greater influence on the stabilization and/or formation of the telestem than does RRM3.



View larger version (64K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 9. The prp24-R158S mutation exhibits an enhanced phenotype when combined with mutations in the telestem of U6 RNA, while the prp24-F257I mutation does not. The prp24-R158S allele was introduced, along with various SNR6 alleles, into a strain with chromosomal disruptions of the Prp24 and U6 genes (LL200), and plated to 5-FOA to select against the wild-type Prp24 and U6 genes carried on URA3-marked plasmids. The prp24-F257I integrant strain was transformed with various SNR6 alleles and plated to 5-FOA to select against the U6 gene carried on a URA3-marked plasmid. Two clones of each resulting strain are shown. The plate was incubated at 27° for 3 days.


*  DISCUSSION
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Mutations in Prp24 give insight into essential functions of the protein:
We have identified missense mutations in RRMs 2 and 3 of Prp24 that suppress the cold sensitivity resulting from the A62G mutation in U6 RNA. Furthermore, we find that triple alanine substitutions in RRMs 2 and 3 cause severe growth defects. RRM 3 of Prp24 was previously shown to be important for U6 binding (SHANNON and GUTHRIE 1991 Down; JANDROSITZ and GUTHRIE 1995 Down), but no function had been ascribed to RRM2. We conclude that RRMs 2 and 3 perform important, nonredundant functions that likely include binding to U6 RNA. Although the triple alanine substitution in RRM1 of Prp24 has no effect on cell growth, we cannot exclude the possibility that RRM1 has an essential function. For example, RRM1 may participate in protein-protein interactions that are not perturbed by the alanine substitutions in the RNP-1 consensus.

One role of RRMs 2 and 3 of Prp24 is to promote U4/U6 complex assembly. Both prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I mutants confer a U4/U6 complex assembly defect as judged by an increased fraction of free U4 RNA when the U6 gene is chromosomal. These results are in agreement with earlier in vitro studies (GHETTI et al. 1995 Down; RAGHUNATHAN and GUTHRIE 1998B Down) and with the finding of LYGEROU et al. 1999 Down that the prp24-1 mutation, which has not been mapped, inhibits U4/U6 complex assembly in vivo. Interestingly, in prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I mutant strains harboring a plasmid-borne U6 gene, free U4 RNA levels are low and U6 RNA levels are greatly elevated. This observation indicates that wild-type U6 RNA overexpression can drive U4/U6 complex assembly in mutant PRP24 strains. From this we infer that Prp24's primary role in U4/U6 complex assembly is to increase the probability of interaction of the RNAs, likely by binding to each, either directly or through another protein.

Although the RRM2 and RRM3 mutations in Prp24 inhibit wild-type U4/U6 complex assembly, they nevertheless partially correct the U4/U6 complex assembly defect caused by U6-A62G. The observation that overexpression of U6-A62G RNA suppresses neither the cold-sensitive phenotype nor corrects the U4/U6-A62G complex assembly defect leads us to propose that the rate-limiting step in U4/U6-A62G complex assembly is base-pairing rather than the apposition of the two RNAs. Weakened binding of Prp24 to U6-A62G RNA presumably destabilizes the telestem, thus allowing U6-A62G RNA to adopt a conformation favorable for pairing with U4 RNA.

It is clear, however, that Prp24 also functions later in the splicing cycle. Prp24-mediated suppression of the cold sensitivity caused by hyperstabilization of the U6 RNA 62/85 base pair occurs at a stage after assembly of the U4/U6 complex: U6-A62U/C85A confers little or no U4/U6 complex assembly defect, yet its cold-sensitive growth defect is efficiently suppressed by prp24-R158S and prp24-F257I. Thus, these Prp24 mutations alleviate the effect of hyperstabilization of the U6 RNA 62/85 base pair during more than one of U6 RNA's conformational changes.

A potential point of action for suppressors of U6-A62G cold sensitivity:
If, as our results indicate, suppression of the U6-A62G mutation is not due to correction of the U4/U6 assembly defect, then at what point in the splicing cycle do the suppressors act? One intriguing possibility is that there is a free U6 RNA intermediate containing the 3' stem that forms after U4 RNA dissociates from U6 RNA but before U6 RNA base-pairs with U2 RNA. Alteration or premature formation of this structure by hyperstabilization of the 62/85 base pair of U6 RNA could have detrimental effects on the progression of spliceosome activation, and suppressor mutations may counteract these effects by destabilizing the structure.

The yeast U6 RNA telestem/Prp24 complex might form immediately prior to unwinding of the U4/U6 complex during spliceosome activation, promoting both formation of the central and 3' stem loops in U6 RNA and concomitant disruption of U4/U6 base-pairing (see Figure 1 and Figure 3). U6 RNA thus freed from U4 RNA then base-pairs to U2 RNA to form the active catalytic core. In the presence of the U6-A62G mutation, the free U6 RNA intermediate may form prematurely and thus be unable to pair properly with U2 RNA. Disruption of base-pairing elsewhere in the extended intramolecular structure, for example, in the telestem, may suppress the effect of U6-A62G by destabilizing the U6 RNA intermediate, thus delaying its formation until the appropriate point in spliceosome activation.

Several lines of evidence point to the yeast protein Brr2/Rss1/Slt22/Snu246, recently renamed Prp44, as the helicase responsible for unwinding the U4/U6 complex during spliceosome activation (LAGGERBAUER et al. 1998 Down; RAGHUNATHAN and GUTHRIE 1998A Down; KIM and ROSSI 1999 Down; KUHN et al. 1999 Down). However, because this protein is a component of the U4/U6.U5 tri-snRNP (LAUBER et al. 1996 Down; STEVENS and ABELSON 1999 Down), there must be a regulatory mechanism to prevent premature dissociation of the U4/U6 complex on the spliceosome. Perhaps formation of the U6 RNA telestem/Prp24 complex is required for efficient progression of U4/U6 complex dissociation on the fully assembled yeast spliceosome. Examples of RRM-containing proteins influencing the action of a helicase exist, notably the interaction between eukaryotic initiation factor 4B (eIF4B) and eIF4A. eIF4A, a helicase, and eIF4B, an RRM-containing protein, act in a concerted manner to unwind structured 5' untranslated regions of mRNAs to allow initiation of translation (reviewed in SONENBERG 1998 Down). Thus, it seems reasonable to hypothesize that, akin to the eIF4A/eIF4B complex, Prp44 and Prp24 act in a concerted fashion to dissociate the yeast U4/U6 complex.

A model for Prp24 function:
Our data support a model for Prp24 action in the spliceosome, shown in Figure 10, that also incorporates previously defined interactions of Prp24 with other splicing factors. In the fully assembled precatalytic spliceosome, U1 RNA is paired with the 5' splice site and U4 RNA is paired with U6 RNA. Recent findings indicate that Prp28 unwinds U1 RNA from the pre-mRNA 5' splice site during spliceosome activation (STALEY and GUTHRIE 1999 Down), and the prp24-1 allele exhibits a synthetic lethal phenotype when combined with the prp28-1 allele (STRAUSS and GUTHRIE 1991 Down). Thus, it seems likely that Prp24 is present when U6 RNA replaces U1 RNA at the 5' splice site. The telestem/Prp24 complex could form while U4/U6 base-pairing is intact, either before or after U6 RNA base-pairs to the 5' splice site. Formation of the telestem would not interfere with interaction of the essential ACAGA sequence with the 5' splice site (reviewed in NILSEN 1998 Down; see Figure 1), nor with base-pairing of the adjacent U46 with intron position 7 as predicted for the second most abundant class of S. cerevisiae introns (SPINGOLA et al. 1999 Down). It was previously proposed that unwinding of U1 RNA from the 5' splice site and U4/U6 unwinding are coupled (LAGGERBAUER et al. 1998 Down; KUHN et al. 1999 Down; STALEY and GUTHRIE 1999 Down). The prp28-1/prp24-1 synthetic interaction can thus be explained if telestem/Prp24 complex formation is required for U4/U6 unwinding: reduction in function of both Prp24 and Prp28 would synergistically inhibit spliceosome activation. Because the U4-cs1 mutation in U4 RNA inhibits U4/U6 complex disassembly in the spliceosome (LI and BROW 1996 Down; KUHN et al. 1999 Down), we predicted that this mutation would also enhance mutations in Prp24 if the telestem/Prp24 complex functions as proposed. Indeed, a synthetic lethal interaction is observed between U4-cs1 and either prp24-R158S or prp24-F257I (A. N. KUHN and D. A. BROW, unpublished results), strengthening the notion that Prp24 is involved in U4/U6 complex disassembly.



View larger version (20K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 10. Model of Prp24/U6 RNA telestem action in the spliceosome. Exons are shown as black boxes, and all other RNAs are shown as lines. Approximate sites of base-pairing interactions are shown as short lines. Proteins are depicted as filled ovals. See text for a full description.

Further evidence for a spliceosomal function of Prp24 comes from the isolation of a mutation in Prp21, a U2 snRNP protein, that suppresses prp24-1 temperature sensitivity (VAIDYA et al. 1996 Down). This result raises the possibility of an interaction between Prp24 and Prp21 prior to or concomitant with formation of the U6/U2/pre-mRNA complex, before catalysis. Taken together, the genetic interaction results suggest the following series of events whose order is not clear: Prp24 binds U6 RNA and forms the telestem, Prp28 unwinds the U1/5' splice site helix, U6 RNA base-pairs to the 5' splice site, Prp44 unwinds the U4/U6 complex, and the central and 3' stem loops of U6 RNA form. The rearranged intermediate thus formed (Figure 10) is not yet active for splicing, because U6 RNA has not yet paired to U2 RNA. We propose that mutations that hyperstabilize the 62/85 base pair of the U6 RNA 3' stem block spliceosome activation at this point.

The model presented in Figure 10 does not include all of the proteins likely involved in rearrangements of U6 RNA on the spliceosome. We recently showed that Prp8 influences U4/U6 complex dissociation and perhaps unwinding of U1 RNA from the 5' splice site as well (KUHN et al. 1999 Down). Because Prp8 has been crosslinked to the GU dinucleotide of the 5' splice site (REYES et al. 1996 Down), and our model predicts the U6 RNA telestem would form adjacent to the 5' splice site, there is potential for an interaction between Prp8 and the U6 RNA telestem/Prp24 complex. Other factors, including Prp4, Prp19, and Prp38 (TARN et al. 1993 Down; AYADI et al. 1997 Down; XIE et al. 1998 Down), are also thought to function in U4 release during spliceosome activation, but it is not clear how or if they might interact with Prp24.

The U6 RNA/Prp24 interaction appears to be a dynamic one. It is possible that different RRMs of Prp24 function at different times during the splicing cycle, perhaps binding to different sites on U6 RNA. Genetic interactions described in this work suggest that RRM2, but not RRM3, binds directly to the U6 RNA telestem, which we predict is involved in dissociation of the U4/U6 complex. In vitro binding studies with individual Prp24 RRMs and mutant U6 RNAs may help determine which residues and/or structures are recognized by Prp24. We expect that studies on Prp24/U6 RNA dynamics will reveal general mechanisms by which RNA-binding proteins direct conformational changes in RNAs.


*  FOOTNOTES

1 Present address: Department of Biochemistry, University of California, Riverside, CA 92502. Back


*  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are grateful to Elizabeth Craig, Catherine Fox, and Andreas Kuhn for critical comments on this manuscript, Weiping Jiang and Mark Krebs for help with molecular modeling, and members of the Brow laboratory for helpful discussions. We thank Karen Shannon and Christine Guthrie for communicating unpublished results and for supplying plasmid DNAs, and Phil James and Elizabeth Craig for yeast strains and plasmid DNA. This work was supported by grant GM-54018 from the National Institutes of Health. R.M.V. is a recipient of a Beta chapter Sigma Delta Epsilon/Graduate Women in Science Ruth Dickie Research Scholarship. D.M.F. and L.S.L.-A. were predoctoral trainees of National Institutes of Health Training Grant GM-07215.

Manuscript received June 4, 1999; Accepted for publication July 30, 1999.


*  LITERATURE CITED
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

ARES, M., JR. and B. WEISER, 1995  Rearrangement of snRNA structure during assembly and function of the spliceosome. Prog. Nucleic Acid Res. Mol. Biol. 50:131-159[Medline].

AYADI, L., M. MILLER, and J. BANROQUES, 1997  Mutations within the yeast U4/U6 snRNP protein Prp4 affect a late stage of spliceosome assembly. RNA 3:197-209[Abstract].

BITOUN, R. and A. ZAMIR, 1986  Spontaneous amplification of yeast CEN ARS plasmids. Mol. Gen. Genet. 204:98-102[Medline].

BROW, D. A. and C. GUTHRIE, 1988  Spliceosomal RNA U6 is remarkably conserved from yeast to mammals. Nature 334:213-218[Medline].

BROW, D. A. and C. GUTHRIE, 1990  Transcription of a yeast U6 snRNA gene requires a polymerase III promoter element in a novel position. Genes Dev. 4:1345-1356[Abstract/Free Full Text].

BROW, D. A. and R. M. VIDAVER, 1995  An element in human U6 RNA destabilizes the U4/U6 spliceosomal RNA complex. RNA 1:122-131[Abstract].

BURGE, C. B., T. H. TUSCHL and P. A. SHARP, 1999 Splicing of precursors to mRNAs by the spliceosomes, pp. 525–560 in RNA World II, edited by R. F. GESTELAND, T. R. CECH and J. F. ATKINS. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, NY.

ELLEDGE, S. J. and R. W. DAVIS, 1988  A family of versatile centromeric vectors designed for use in the sectoring-shuffle mutagenesis assay in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Gene 70:303-312[Medline].

ESCHENLAUER, J. B., M. W. KAISER, V. L. GERLACH, and D. A. BROW, 1993  Architecture of a yeast U6 RNA gene promoter. Mol. Cell. Biol. 13:3015-3026[Abstract/Free Full Text].

FORTNER, D. M., R. G. TROY, and D. A. BROW, 1994  A stem/loop in U6 RNA defines a conformational switch required for pre-mRNA splicing. Genes Dev. 8:221-233[Abstract/Free Full Text].

GHETTI, A., M. COMPANY, and J. ABELSON, 1995  Specificity of Prp24 binding to RNA: a role for Prp24 in the dynamic interaction of U4 and U6 snRNAs. RNA 1:132-145[Abstract].

GIETZ, R. D., R. H. SCHIESTL, A. R. WILLEMS, and R. A. WOODS, 1995  Studies on the transformation of intact yeast cells by the LiAc/SS-DNA/PEG procedure. Yeast 11:355-360[Medline].

HASHIMOTO, C. and J. A. STEITZ, 1984  U4 and U6 RNAs coexist in a single small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle. Nucleic Acids Res. 12:3283-3293[Abstract/Free Full Text].

HOFFMAN, C. S. and F. WINSTON, 1987  A ten-minute DNA preparation from yeast efficiently releases autonomous plasmids for transformation of Escherichia coli.. Gene 57:267-272[Medline].

JANDROSITZ, A. and C. GUTHRIE, 1995  Evidence for a Prp24 binding site in U6 snRNA and in a putative intermediate in the annealing of U6 and U4 snRNAs. EMBO J. 14:820-832[Medline].

KENAN, D. J., C. C. Q