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The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Small GTPase, Gsp1p/Ran, Is Involved in 3' Processing of 7S-to-5.8S rRNA and in Degradation of the Excised 5'-A0 Fragment of 35S Pre-rRNA, Both of Which Are Carried Out by the Exosome
Nobuhiro Suzukia,b, Eishi Noguchia, Nobutaka Nakashimaa, Masaya Okia, Tomoyuki Ohbaa, Alan Tartakoffc, Masamichi Ohishib, and Takeharu Nishimotoaa Department of Molecular Biology, Graduate School of Medical Science, Kyushu University, Fukuoka 812-8582, Japan,
b Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Advanced Course, Division of Dental Science, Graduate School, Kyushu University, Fukuoka 812-8582, Japan
c Department of Pathology and Cell Biology Program, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio 44106-2622
Corresponding author: Takeharu Nishimoto, Department of Molecular Biology, Graduate School of Medical Science, Kyushu University, 3-1-1 Maedashi, Higashiku, Fukuoka 812-8582, Japan., tnishi{at}molbiol.med.kyushu-u.ac.jp (E-mail)
Communicating editor: A. G. HINNEBUSCH
| ABSTRACT |
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Dis3p, a subunit of the exosome, interacts directly with Ran. To clarify the relationship between the exosome and the RanGTPase cycle, a series of temperature-sensitive Saccharomyces cerevisiae dis3 mutants were isolated and their 5.8S rRNA processing was compared with processing in strains with mutations in a S. cerevisiae Ran homologue, Gsp1p. In both dis3 and gsp1 mutants, 3' processing of 7S-to-5.8S rRNA was blocked at three identical sites in an allele-specific manner. In contrast, the 5' end of 5.8S rRNA was terminated normally in gsp1 and in dis3. Inhibition of 5.8S rRNA maturation in gsp1 was rescued by overexpression of nuclear exosome components Dis3p, Rrp4p, and Mtr4p, but not by a cytoplasmic exosome component, Ski2p. Furthermore, gsp1 and dis3 accumulated the 5'-A0 fragment of 35S pre-rRNA, which is also degraded by the exosome, and the level of 27S rRNA was reduced. Neither 5.8S rRNA intermediates nor 5'-A0 fragments were observed in mutants defective in the nucleocytoplasmic transport, indicating that Gsp1p regulates rRNA processing through Dis3p, independent of nucleocytoplasmic transport.
A Ras-like small GTPase, Ran, is regulated by the GTPase-activating protein RanGAP1 and the GDP/GTP exchange protein RCC1 (![]()
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Recombinant S. cerevisiae Dis3p binds directly to Gsp1p, the S. cerevisiae Ran homologue, and Schizosaccharomyces pombe Dis3p is in a complex in vivo with S. pombe Ran and RCC1 homologues (![]()
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5' degradation of S. cerevisiae mRNA (![]()
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Other proteins of the RanGTPase cycle were defined as temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants defective in RNA metabolism. Rna1p, the S. cerevisiae homologue of RanGAP1 (![]()
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3' trimming of pre-rRNA is carried out by Xrn1p and Rat1p (![]()
5' trimming is performed by the exosome, a subunit of which is Dis3p/Rrp44p (![]()
To investigate the functional relationship between the exosome and the RanGTPase cycle, we isolated a series of ts mutants of S. cerevisiae DIS3/RRP44 (henceforth referred to as DIS3) by error-prone PCR and compared their rRNA processing with that of gsp1 alleles that had been isolated by ![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strains and plasmids:
S. cerevisiae strains and plasmids used in this study are described in Table 1 and Table 2. Transformation of S. cerevisiae was performed by a modified LiCl method using dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO; ![]()
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Construction of plasmids:
The EcoRI-ApaI fragment of YCp5072 (![]()
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, resulting in pTKSURA3-3'. Subsequently, the BamHI-PstI fragment of pSKEB 2.0 was inserted into the BamHI/PstI site of pTKSURA3-3', resulting in pTKSdis3
::URA3. Finally, the PstI-EcoRI fragment of pTKSdis3
::URA3 was exchanged with the NsiI-EcoRI fragment of pSKHIS3
, resulting in pNS3 (pTKSdis3
::HIS3). The SacI-XhoI fragment of pUCDIS3P was inserted into the SacI/SalI site of YEplac195, resulting in p195DIS3P.
The DNA fragment containing the C-terminal open reading frame (ORF) of mtr4-1 and the 3' noncoding region of MTR4 was amplified from the DNA of pRMts (![]()
Disruption of DIS3 gene:
DNA of the plasmid pNS3 (
dis3::HIS3) was digested with the restriction enzymes SacI and ApaI and introduced into the S. cerevisiae diploid strain N43, resulting in the strain YSN2, into which p316DIS3P was introduced. The resulting strain YSN2[p316DIS3P] was sporulated and a haploid segregant YSN2T-1
was isolated and mated with the YPH499. The resulting diploid was sporulated and a haploid strain YSN3T-1b was isolated.
Mutagenesis of DIS3 gene:
The N-terminal and C-terminal parts of the S. cerevisiae Dis3p ORF carried on p314DIS3P were separately amplified by the error-prone PCR (![]()
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Extraction of total RNA:
Cultures of 10 ml sampled at the indicated time points were centrifuged at 10,000 rpm for 5 min. Cell pellets were washed with ice-cold ddH2O containing diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEPC; 0.1%) and suspended in 0.2 ml of lysis buffer (0.5 M NaCl, 0.2 M Tris-HCl, pH 7.6, 0.01 M EDTA, 1% SDS). After addition of glass beads and 0.2 ml of chloroform-saturated phenol, cells were vortexed for 3 min and then received 0.3 ml of lysis buffer and 0.3 ml of chloroform-saturated phenol. After further vortexing for 3 min, the mixture was centrifuged at 10,000 rpm for 5 min, and the supernatant received 0.3 ml of chloroform-saturated phenol and was vortexed and then centrifuged at 10,000 rpm for 5 min. Sodium acetate was added to 0.3 M, followed by 1 ml of 100% ethanol, and the mixture was kept at -20° overnight and then centrifuged at 10,000 rpm for 15 min. The precipitate was washed twice with 100% ethanol and dried. Afterward, the precipitates were suspended in TE buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.6, 1 mM EDTA) containing 0.1% DEPC at the final RNA concentration (2.0 mg/ml) and stored at -80°. All procedures were carried out at 4° except where otherwise indicated.
Northern hybridization:
In the 5.8S rRNA processing analysis, 4 µl of total RNA for each lane was electrophoresed at 250 V, 16 mA for 12 hr in TBE buffer containing 8.3 M urea, 5.0% Long Ranger (FMC, Rockland, ME), 0.05% ammonium persulfate (APS), and 0.07% TEMED (N,N,N',N'-tetramethylethylenediamine) and electrotransferred onto Hybond-N (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) in 60 mM sodium acetate buffer at 120 mA for 15 hr as described (![]()
In the mRNA analysis, 2 µl of total RNA was electrophoresed at 50 V, 20 mA for 8 hr in 3-(N-morpholino)propanesulfonic acid (MOPS) buffer containing 1% agarose, 1x MOPS (20 mM MOPS, 10 mM CH3COONa · 3H2O, and 0.5 M EDTA), and formamide (16%) and transferred onto Hybond (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Arlington Heights, IL) in 20x SSC.
The prepared RNA filters were prehybridized twice with 100 µg/ml of single-strand salmon sperm DNA at 50° for 2 hr in buffer containing 0.5% SDS, 50% formamide, 6x SSC (0.15 M NaCl, 0.015 M sodium citrate, pH 7.0), and 5x Denhardt's solution and were then incubated with 32P-labeled oligodeoxyribonucleotides for 8 hr. After hybridization, filters were washed in the following manner: once in 2x SSC plus 0.1% SDS for 10 min at room temperature, once in 1x SSC plus 0.1% SDS for 10 min at 42°, and twice in 1x SSC plus 0.1% SDS for 10 min at 42°. Finally, filters were dried and analyzed by Fuji Bioimage analyzer.
The oligodeoxyribonucleotide probes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 that were used for 5.8S rRNA analysis were as follows: 1, CGA ACG ACA AGC CTA CTCG; 2, CAT GGC TTA ATC TTT GAG AC; 3, CCA GTT ACG AAA ATT CTTG; 4, TTT CGC TGC GTT CTT CATC; 5, TGA GAA GGA AAT GAC GCT; 6, GGC CAG CAA TTT CAA GTTA; and 7, GAA CAT TGT TCG CCT AGA, as described by ![]()
Pulse-chase labeling experiments:
dis3, gsp1, and, as a control, wild-type Dis3 strains were grown to OD660 = 0.2 in 100 ml of YPD medium and harvested by centrifugation. Cells were resuspended in SD medium lacking uracil at a density of 20 OD660/ml in a total volume of 1 ml. The culture was preincubated for 15 min at 37° with shaking, 0.8 mCi of prewarmed [5.6-3H]uracil (TRK408; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) was added to the culture, and it was incubated for 20 min (![]()
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| RESULTS |
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Construction of temperature-sensitive S. cerevisiae dis3 strains:
To introduce mutations into the S. cerevisiae DIS3 gene, the ORF of Dis3p was divided into an N-terminal half (aa 1614) and a C-terminal half (aa 4131001). Subsequently, each region was separately amplified by error-prone PCR. The amplified DNA fragments were introduced into the strain 37C19 (
dis3::HIS3 [YCp5072]; Table 1), along with the plasmid p314DIS3P (DIS3, CEN, TRP1), from which a part of the DIS3 gene had been removed using either PstI and ClaI (N-terminal half) or BamHI and EcoRI (C-terminal half), as shown in Fig 1A. Transfected cells were plated onto synthetic medium lacking tryptophan and uracil at 26°. Of 200,000 Trp+, Ura+ colonies, 2000 grew on synthetic medium containing 1 mg/ml of 5'-FOA. Colonies were replated onto YPD plates and incubated either at 26°, the permissive temperature, or at 37°, the nonpermissive temperature. A total of 12 ts dis3 alleles were obtained (Table 3). Some dis3 alleles possessed multiple amino acid changes. In these cases, the amino acid changes of conserved residues (underlined in Table 3) were introduced into the wild-type DIS3 gene by site-directed mutagenesis, to identify single amino acid changes responsible for the ts phenotype. Finally, 4 ts dis3 alleles had single amino acid changes (Table 3). To characterize in a uniform genetic background, all of the ts dis3 genes listed in Table 3 and, as a control, the wild-type DIS3 were inserted into the haploid strain YSN3T-1b (
dis3::HIS3[p316DIS3P]) by homologous recombination, and colonies (Trp+, Ura+) were incubated in synthetic medium containing 1 mg/ml of 5'-FOA. All of the resulting dis3 strains ceased to grow after incubation at 37° for 12 hr in liquid medium (representative results are shown in Fig 1B). Southern hybridization analysis revealed that the dis3 alleles were correctly integrated into the chromosome (data not shown) and all of the dis3 mutant strains could be complemented by the wild-type DIS3 gene.
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3' end processing of 5.8S rRNA is blocked at three distinct sites:
A series of the dis3 strains and, as a control, the wild-type DIS3 strain (dis3-WT) were cultured at 26° to OD660 = 0.8 and then incubated at 37°. After incubation for 2, 4, and 8 hr, total RNA was extracted, resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and hybridized with oligonucleotide 4, which is complementary to the mature 5.8S rRNA (Fig 2A, bottom). In the DIS3 strain, two bands corresponding to 7S and 5.8S rRNAs were detected. Additionally, one or two fragments intermediate in length between 7S and 5.8S rRNA appeared in 12 out of 13 dis3 strains upon incubation at 37° (Table 3; representative results are shown in Fig 2A).
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To determine whether the observed intermediates are 3' end-extended forms of 5.8S rRNA, total RNAs of dis3-1, -4, and -9 strains, which contain the middle, long, and short intermediate fragments, respectively, were mixed and hybridized with the oligonucleotides 3, 4, 5, or 6. The positions of these oligonucleotides in pre-rRNA are shown in the bottom of Fig 2A. As expected, probe 4 hybridized with all three intermediate fragments, in addition to both 7S and 5.8S rRNA (Fig 2B, probe 4). Probe 5, which is partially complementary to both the 3' end of 5.8S rRNA and the 5' end of the ITS2 spacer, hybridized with all three intermediate fragments and with 7S rRNA, but not with the mature 5.8S rRNA, as previously reported (![]()
50 nucleotides farther 3' from the mature 5.8S rRNA, hybridized with 7S rRNA and the two long (L) and middle (M) intermediate fragments (Fig 2B), but not with the short (S) intermediate fragment (Fig 2B, probe 6). No 5.8S rRNA fragments hybridized with probe 3 (data not shown), which is complementary to a site in ITS1 proximal to the 5' end of 5.8S rRNA. These observations prove that the fragments of 5.8S rRNA intermediate in length between 7S and 5.8S rRNAs are 3' extended forms of 5.8S rRNA.
To learn whether loss of another exosomal component also inhibits 5.8S rRNA maturation in a similar pattern, the strains GAL10::rrp4, rrp4-1, and GAL10::rrp44 were precultured at 26° in synthetic medium containing 2% galactose or YPD medium and then incubated under nonpermissive conditions. At the indicated times, total RNAs were extracted, coelectrophoresed with the mixture of total dis3 RNAs, and hybridized with oligonucleotide 4. As reported (![]()
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Northern analysis cannot show whether 5.8S rRNA maturation was terminated at these three distinct sites, as opposed to being paused for an extended period. In the latter case, intermediate fragments will ultimately be processed to mature 5.8S rRNA. To address this issue, several dis3 mutants and, as a control, wild-type DIS3 strains were labeled in vivo with [5.6-3H]uracil for 20 min at 37° and then chased with an excess of cold uracil for 60 min. Every 10 min, total RNA was extracted and low molecular weight RNA species were analyzed as described (![]()
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gsp1 has a defect in 3' end but not 5' end processing of 5.8S rRNA, similar to dis3:
The maturation of 5.8S rRNA was examined in 25 gsp1 strains, to learn whether there is any functional relationship between the Ran-GTPase and the exosome. Total RNAs extracted from gsp1 strains after incubation for 2, 4, and 8 hr at 37° were analyzed by Northern hybridization with oligonucleotide 4. In 20 out of 25 gsp1 strains, intermediate 5.8S rRNA fragments appeared (Table 4). Representative results are shown in Fig 4A. Remarkably, three intermediates seen in gsp1 mutants have the same lengths as those of dis3 mutants (Fig 4A, compare with lane M), suggesting that 3' end processing of 5.8S rRNA is inhibited in a similar manner in both gsp1 and dis3 mutants. This is also the case after chasing of [5.6-3H]uracil-labeled RNA with an excess of cold uracil. gsp1-1260 accumulated both L- and M-length intermediates (Fig 3A and Fig B), as observed by Northern analysis (Table 4). Thus, 5.8S rRNA maturation is blocked at three distinct sites in gsp1 mutants at 37°, as in dis3 mutants.
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To determine the 5' end of 5.8S rRNA, primer extension analysis of total RNAs extracted from gsp1-1907 was carried out using as a primer the oligonucleotide 5, which hybridizes to all intermediate 5.8S rRNA fragments and to 7S pre-rRNA, but not to mature 5.8S rRNA (Fig 2B, probe 5). dis3-1 and gsp1-1907 accumulate one and three intermediates, respectively, at 37° (Fig 2A and Table 4). In both mutants, the 5' end of 5.8S rRNA terminates near nucleotides 2855(A) and 2864(A), corresponding to the B1(L) and B1(S), respectively, as reported (![]()
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These results indicate that loss of RanGTPase activity inhibits 3' end processing, but not 5' end processing, of 5.8S rRNA maturation. It is notable that the number of intermediate fragments depends on the gsp1 allele, as for dis3 mutants.
Overexpression of Dis3p and Mtr4p enhances 3' end processing of 5.8S rRNA:
To further examine the relationship between the RanGTPase and the exosome, a high copy DIS3 plasmid, p195DIS3P, was introduced into the gsp1 strains and 3' processing of 5.8S rRNA was examined in the resulting transformants. Representative results are shown in Fig 5A. Upon overexpression of Dis3p, the ladders of 5.8S rRNA intermediates were shifted toward the shorter species (Fig 5A, a), while all 5.8S rRNA intermediates were removed by overexpression of Gsp1p. In the case of gsp1-640, all 5.8S rRNA intermediates disappeared upon overexpression of Dis3p (Fig 5A, Fig B). The same change occurred upon overexpression of Rrp4p, although Dis3p and Rrp4p did not rescue the ts growth phenotype of gsp1 (data not shown).
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A putative ATP-dependent RNA helicase, Mtr4p/Dob1p, functions as a cofactor for the exosome (![]()
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Nucleocytoplasmic transport mutants show no defect in exosomal activity:
Several snoRNPs and ribosomal proteins are involved in rRNA processing (![]()
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mog1, in which both classic and nonclassic nuclear localization signal-dependent nuclear-protein imports are defective (![]()
homologue (![]()
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yrb2, which is defective in the Ran-dependent nuclear export (![]()
After incubation at 37° for 08 hr, total RNAs were analyzed by Northern hybridization using oligonucleotide 4. Even after incubation for 8 hr at 37°, no intermediates were seen (data not shown). To confirm that the nucleocytoplasmic transport defects were induced under our experimental conditions, the presence of pre-mRNA was examined in the same RNA extracts by using a CRY1 probe. As controls for pre-mRNA splicing, we used prp8-1 (![]()
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Using the same probe, we then sought to detect pre-mRNA in total RNA extracts from gsp1 and dis3 strains, to learn whether mRNA splicing occurred in our experimental conditions. No pre-mRNA appeared in more than half of dis3 and gsp1 mutant strains that accumulate intermediate 5.8S rRNA fragments upon incubation at 37° (Table 3 and Table 4). Only four dis3 alleles showed inhibition of mRNA splicing, equivalent to prp8-1 (Fig 6C).
Early steps of rRNA processing are defective in gsp1, as in dis3:
The absence of 5.8S rRNA intermediates does not imply that the exosome functions normally. Using oligonucleotide 1, the position of which is shown at the bottom of Fig 2A, we have therefore evaluated accumulation of the 5'-A0 fragment, which is generated by processing of 35S-to-33S rRNA and is degraded by the exosome (![]()
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The steady-state level of 35S pre-rRNA increased in both dis3 and gsp1 mutants that accumulated the 5'-A0 fragment (Fig 7A, compare 35S and 5'-A0). This finding may indicate that the pre-rRNA cleavage at the A0 and A1 sites was affected in these mutants, which is consistent with the report that depletion of each of the individual exosome components inhibits the early pre-rRNA cleavage at sites A0, A1, A2, and A3 (![]()
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
We mutagenized the DIS3 gene with error-prone PCR. The lethality of the PCR product was >90%. Such a high lethality may be important for efficient isolation of ts mutants. All 12 new dis3 alleles contain distinct amino acid change(s). Using these mutants, the functional interaction between Dis3p and Gsp1p was investigated.
Almost all dis3 mutants show a ladder(s) of 3' extended fragments intermediate in length between 7S and 5.8S rRNAs at 37°, the nonpermissive temperature. This is consistent with the previous report that Dis3p is a subunit of the exosome (![]()
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Since Ran/Gsp1p is required for nucleocytoplasmic transport, 5.8S rRNA maturation could be indirectly inhibited in gsp1 due to defects in nucleocytoplasmic transport. But it is unlikely for the following reasons. First, the majority of gsp1 mutants showing intermediate 5.8S rRNA fragments did not accumulate a pre-mRNA, which does accumulate in nucleocytoplasmic transport mutants. Therefore, any nucleocytoplasmic transport is active enough to carry out pre-mRNA splicing in most of gsp1 strains. Second, the 5' end of 5.8S rRNA intermediates was correctly terminated in gsp1, as in dis3. A large number of trans-acting factors are required for rRNA processing, which have been characterized as nucleases, ribonucleoprotein particles, putative RNA helicases, and ribosome assembly factors (![]()
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from the TPX2 complex (![]()
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It is notable that dis3 strains, which quickly accumulate pre-mRNA, contain amino acid changes in the region from residue 562 to 566 [G562D (dis3-6), E565K (dis3-14), and V566G (dis3-12)]. V566 is conserved from yeast to humans (![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Drs. M. Nomura and D. Tollervey for rRNA vector and the strains GAL::RRP44, GAL10::RRP4, and rrp4-1, respectively. This work was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Specially Promoted Research from The Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan.
Manuscript received August 25, 2000; Accepted for publication March 13, 2001.
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