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Department of Biology, University of MissouriSt. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri 63121-4499, USA
Reprint requests to: Wendy M. Olivas, Department of Biology, University of MissouriSt. Louis, One University Boulevard, St. Louis, MO 63121-4499, USA. e-mail: olivasw{at}umsl.edu; fax: (314) 516-6233.
| ABSTRACT |
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Keywords: Puf; decay; turnover; mRNA; yeast; 3'-UTR
| INTRODUCTION |
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The Puf family of proteins is one group of 3'-UTR-binding proteins that regulate both translation and mRNA degradation in diverse eukaryotic organisms (Wickens et al. 2002
). Pumilio from Drosophila melanogaster (DmPum) and FBF from Caenorhabditis elegans were the founding members of this group, thus providing the Puf family name. Both DmPum and FBF require interactions with other proteins to regulate mRNA expression. For example, DmPum must form a complex with Nanos and Brat proteins to regulate hunchback mRNA (Sonada and Wharton 1999
, 2001
), whereas Nanos but not Brat is recruited for regulation of cyclin B mRNA (Sonada and Wharton 2001
). Similarly, FBF interacts with a Nanos-like protein to regulate fem-3 mRNA (Kraemer et al. 1999
), as well as a CPEB (cytoplasmic polyadenylation element-binding protein) homolog for a possible role in spermatogenesis (Luitjens et al. 2000
). While the requirement for protein partners is likely true of all Puf-mediated mRNA regulation, Puf partners have yet to be identified in unicellular eukaryotes.
Puf proteins are characterized by a domain containing eight imperfect repeats of a 36-amino-acid sequence plus short flanking regions. This Puf repeat domain is sufficient not only for mRNA binding (Zamore et al. 1997
; Zhang et al. 1997
; Jackson et al. 2004
) but also for interacting with protein partners (Kraemer et al. 1999
; Sonada and Wharton 1999
, 2001
; Luitjens et al. 2000
) and, at least in DmPum and the yeast Puf3p, for regulating mRNA metabolism (Wharton et al. 1998
; Jackson et al. 2004
). The crystal structures of the repeat domains of DmPum (Edwards et al. 2001
) and a human Puf protein (HsPum) (Wang et al. 2001
) are similar. In both, each repeat folds into three
helices that stack on the helices of neighboring repeats to form an extended crescent-shaped structure. The core consensus sequences of each repeat are arranged on parallel helices located on the inner concave surface. The crystal structure of HsPum bound to an RNA ligand confirmed that this inner surface binds RNA, and the binding was predicted to be modular, with three amino acids of each repeat recognizing a successive base along the RNA (Wang et al. 2002
). Conversely, mutational analysis of DmPum indicates that amino acids on the outer convex surface contact Nanos and Brat proteins (Edwards et al. 2001
).
The binding sequences of all RNA targets analyzed to date contain a shared UGUR motif required for Puf binding, with flanking sequences providing specificity (Wickens et al. 2002
). Inspection of the RNA target sequences of DmPum and its most closely related Puf proteins, including yeast Puf3p and Pufs in human, mouse, and Xenopus, reveals an expanded, shared binding motif of UGUANAUA (Murata and Wharton 1995
; Zamore et al. 1997
; Nakahata et al. 2001
; White et al. 2001
; Jackson et al. 2004
). The crystal structure of HsPum shows that nucleotides (nt) 1 through 8 of this RNA motif are contacted by protein repeats 8 through 1, respectively (Wang et al. 2002
).
Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains six members of the Puf protein family (Puf1p-Puf6p). To date, only three of the yeast Pufs have verified roles in regulating specific RNA targets. Puf3p binds the 3'-UTR of COX17 mRNA and promotes its deadenylation and subsequent decay (Olivas and Parker 2000
), Puf5p binds the 3'-UTR of the HO mRNA, repressing its expression and stimulating its decay (Tadauchi et al. 2001
), and Puf6p binds the 3'-UTR of the ASH1 mRNA to regulate its translation and localization (Gu et al. 2004
). In addition to these studied targets, a microarray analysis has identified several hundred candidate RNA targets that interact with one or more of the yeast Pufs 15 (Gerber et al. 2004
). Moreover, consensus sequence motifs containing UGUR were identified in many of the RNAs associated with Pufs 3, 4, and 5, with RNAs bound by each Puf protein having distinct sequences following the UGUR. However, it is still unclear how each of the yeast Pufs recognizes its unique target RNA sequence, or how the bound Pufs promote functional changes of the mRNAs.
In this work we have focused on understanding how yeast Puf3p attains specificity to its mRNA target. The predicted RNA-binding residues in Puf3p and Puf5p are identical in all but three repeats. By mutating those residues of Puf3p to those found in Puf5p, we showed that a single amino acid change was sufficient to prevent detectable binding of the protein to its COX17 mRNA target, whereas replacing other residues had no effect on binding. Conversely, any combination of these amino acid changes in Puf3p enhanced binding of the protein to the Puf5p target HO mRNA, with each amino acid playing a small but similar role in binding affinity. These results suggest that corresponding amino acid positions in Puf3p and Puf5p have divergent roles in determining target specificity, and therefore, the mode of binding of these Pufs to their target RNAs is likely different. We also identified a loop region on the outer surface of Puf3p that was required for promoting both deadenylation and subsequent decapping of the COX17 mRNA, indicating that regulation of these processes is linked by a single interaction point on Puf3p.
| RESULTS |
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To determine which amino acids of Puf3p promoted specificity of binding to the COX17 mRNA, we analyzed a sequence alignment (Wang et al. 2002
) of Puf3p with another yeast Puf protein, Puf5p (Fig. 1A
). A comparison of the amino acids located at the predicted RNA-interacting positions of Puf3p and Puf5p revealed only three differences between the two proteins, one each in repeats 1, 3, and 5 (boxed in green, olive, and magenta, respectively, Fig. 1A
). The likely Puf5p target region within the HO 3'-UTR is very similar to the Puf3p target (Fig. 1D
), yet Puf5p cannot bind the COX17 target sequence (Jackson et al. 2004
), and Puf3p binds only weakly to the HO target sequence (see below). This made the amino acid difference in repeat 3 especially intriguing, since in the HsPum-RNA complex, the third repeat interacts with the sixth nucleotide position of the RNA sequence (UGUAUAUA). This position is the only difference between the Puf3p target sequence and the predicted Puf5p target sequence (Fig. 1D
). We therefore exchanged the three differential amino acids of Puf3p with the respective amino acids of Puf5p. Combinations of these point mutations were also made to test whether multiple amino acid changes were necessary to alter binding specificity. A prediction of where these amino acid positions might be located on a theoretical structure of Puf3RDp is shown in Figure 1C
. This structure was created by Swiss-Model (Peitsch 1995
; Guex and Peitsch 1997
; Schwede et al. 2003
) by aligning Puf3RDp with Puf proteins of known structure.
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-helix domains of repeat 6 (Fig. 1A
Analysis of Puf3RDp sequences required for COX17 mRNA interaction
To test whether any of the mutations or deletions in Puf3RDp affect the proteins ability to bind the COX17 3'-UTR target sequence, in vitro binding assays were performed with glutathione-S-transferase (GST)tagged wild-type and mutant proteins. The RNA used in these assays encompassed the COX17 Site A sequence (Fig. 2A
), which we previously found to be the higher affinity target of two Puf3p binding sequences in the COX17 3'-UTR (Jackson et al. 2004
). The resulting complexes were analyzed by gel mobility shift experiments. As shown in Figure 2B
, wild-type Puf3RDp bound to the Site A RNA (lane 3), while GST protein alone did not bind (lane 2). Point mutations in R3 (lane 7), R5 (lane 9), or both R3/R5 (lane 8) did not disrupt binding. In contrast, a point mutation in R1 (lane 4), or any double mutation with R1 (R1/R3 in lane 5 or R1/R5 in lane 6), inhibited detectable RNA binding. This indicates that of these three amino acid differences between Puf3p and Puf5p, only the S553C change in the R1 mutant alters binding to the Puf3p target.
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Gel mobility shift assays were also performed in the presence of excess nonspecific or specific unlabeled competitor RNA (Fig. 2C
). All interactions of the wild-type and binding-competent mutant Puf3RD proteins with the Site A RNA were specific. Excess nonspecific vector RNA had no effect on binding, while excess COX17 3'-UTR RNA abolished the signal from the bound complex (Fig. 2C
). While only a small amount of specific complex is seen in these RNA binding assays, we believe this may be due to decay of the complexes during the gel run as evidenced by the significant smearing of RNA signal down each lane of bound RNA. Moreover, all signal through these lanes is abolished by specific competitor (Fig. 2C
), providing further evidence that the smeared signal represents specific complexes.
To test whether the binding-competent mutant proteins altered RNA binding affinity, the apparent equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd,app) was measured for each protein. Figure 3A
shows representative gel mobility shift assays, while the binding data from all gel mobility shift assays are plotted in Figure 3B
. Complex formation was measured as the sum of all specific complexes migrating through each lane. Binding-incompetent RNAs appeared in some RNA preparations with a slightly retarded mobility versus Free RNA, and these RNA bands were not included in the calculations of Free RNA or bound RNA (see Materials and Methods). We found no significant differences in the affinities of the binding-competent mutant proteins to that of the wild-type protein (Kd,app = 0.50 ± 0.02 µM) (Fig. 3B
). We have previously shown the specific activity of our wild-type Puf3RDp to be at 5%10% of total protein concentration (Jackson et al. 2004
). Therefore, we estimate that our apparent Kd is at least 10-fold weaker than the actual Kd. Since all proteins were purified in the same manner, the specific activity of all mutant proteins is predicted to be similar to that of the wild-type Puf3RDp. This prediction is supported by the fact that all proteins tested in Figure 3B
displayed the same Kd,app value. Together, these results indicate that unlike the R1 mutation, the amino acid differences in R3 and R5 between Puf3p and Puf5p play no role in the differential binding affinities of the two proteins toward the Puf3p target RNA. Moreover, the amino acids of the R6A and R7A regions that are likely located in outer surface loop structures have no role in Puf3RDp RNA binding affinity.
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strain via each mutant protein by monitoring the decay of steady-state COX17 mRNA. For this experiment, plasmids encoding the wild-type or mutant proteins were transformed into a puf3
strain containing a temperature-sensitive lesion in RNA polymerase II (rpb1-1), in which transcription is rapidly repressed following a shift to the nonpermissive temperature.
In the puf3
strain, COX17 mRNA decayed with a half-life of 28.0 ± 0.7 min, while expression of the wild-type Puf3RDp in the puf3
strain rescued rapid decay of COX17 mRNA to a half-life of 15.5 ± 0.7 min (Fig. 4A,B
). When mutant proteins that could not bind the COX17 mRNA (Puf3RDp-R1, -R1/R3, -R1/R5, -R6B, and -R7B) were expressed in the puf3
strain, COX17 decayed with a half-life of 2830 min, nearly identical to that of the puf3
alone (Fig. 4CE,J,L
). This indicates that RNA binding is required for Puf3RDp-mediated rapid COX17 mRNA decay. Conversely, when proteins containing inner surface point mutations that did not inhibit RNA binding (Puf3RDp-R3, -R3/R5, and -R5) were expressed in the puf3
strain, COX17 decayed with a half-life of 1617 min, nearly identical to wild-type Puf3RDp (Fig. 4FH
). This demonstrates that these mutations have no detrimental effect on mRNA decay regulation. Most interesting were our results with the outer surface loop deletions that did not disrupt RNA binding. Expression of Puf3RDp-R6A in the puf3
strain rescued COX17 mRNA decay to wild-type levels, with a half-life of 16.8 ± 0.4 min (Fig. 4I
). Thus, this outer loop region plays no role in signaling for the decay of COX17 mRNA. However, expression of Puf3RDp-R7A in the puf3
strain did not rescue rapid decay of COX17 mRNA, with a half-life of 29.0 ± 0.7 min (Fig. 4K
). Therefore, the amino acids of the R7A loop are absolutely essential for Puf3RDp to mediate rapid mRNA decay. We predict that this region may be involved in proteinprotein interactions that signal to the decay machinery.
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In confirmation of previous work (Jackson et al. 2004
), we found that a pulse of COX17 transcripts expressed in a puf3
strain was synthesized with poly(A) tails of 3560 residues (Fig. 5A
, lane 0). The poly(A) tails then deadenylated slowly such that fully deadenylated species did not appear until 15 min after transcriptional repression, and transcripts with short poly(A) tails of between 0 and 25 residues persisted to 40 min (Fig. 5A
). In contrast, expression of the wild-type Puf3RDp in the puf3
strain rescued rapid deadenylation, with transcripts that started out with similar poly(A) tails of 4560 residues (Fig. 5B
, lane 0) reaching a deadenylated state within 4 min. Moreover, there was no persistence of transcripts with short poly(A) tails, and all transcripts were nearly completely degraded by 6 min (Fig. 5B
). This indicates that Puf3RDp is sufficient not only to promote rapid deadenylation but also to promote a second step in COX17 degradation. Since terminal deadenylation is not typically required for subsequent decapping (Caponigro and Parker 1996
), the simplest explanation is that Puf3RDp accelerates decapping of deadenylated and partially deadenylated COX17 mRNAs (Olivas and Parker 2000
).
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strain was analyzed for the ability to promote rapid COX17 deadenylation and decapping. As predicted, any mutant protein that failed to bind COX17 mRNA also failed to promote rapid deadenylation and decapping. Figure 5C
strain (Fig. 5
strain (Fig. 5
Point mutations in Puf3RDp enhance affinity to a Puf5p target mRNA
Since each of the three inner surface mutations replaced an amino acid of Puf3RDp with the respective amino acid found in Puf5p, we hypothesized that these mutations might enhance binding to the HO mRNA target. To examine RNAprotein complex formation, gel mobility shift assays were done with each of the wild-type and mutant proteins incubated with RNA encompassing the target binding sequence within the HO 3'-UTR (Fig. 6A
). As shown in Figure 6B
, the wild-type Puf5RDp bound the HO target sequence (lane 3), while the wild-type Puf3RDp bound the HO RNA less well (lane 4) and GST protein alone did not bind (lane 2). Evaluation of complex formation with each of the mutant proteins showed that all single and double point mutations on the RNA binding surface of Puf3RDp maintained binding to the HO RNA (lanes 510). In addition, the R6A and R7A outer surface deletions that did not inhibit binding to the COX17 RNA also did not inhibit binding to the HO RNA (lanes 11,13, respectively). In contrast, the R6B and R7B outer surface deletions prevented detectable binding of the protein to the HO RNA (lanes 12,14, respectively). Since these deletions also prevented binding to the COX17 RNA, these results provide additional evidence that the R6B and R7B deletions cause overall structural changes to the Puf3RDp that block its ability to bind RNA.
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Finally, to determine whether any of the mutant proteins bound the HO RNA with an increased affinity versus the wild-type Puf3RDp, the Kd,app was measured for each protein. Three representative gel mobility shift assays are shown in Figure 7A
, while the data from all gel mobility shift analyses are plotted in the graph of Figure 7B
. For the wild-type Puf5RDp, the Kd,app was 0.27 ± 0.02 µM (Fig. 7A,B
). In contrast, the interaction of Puf3RDp with HO RNA was approximately fivefold weaker, with a Kd,app of 1.25 ± 0.11 µM (Fig. 7A,B
). The R1, R3, and R5 single point mutations all promoted a small increase in affinity toward the HO RNA versus the wild-type Puf3RDp, with Kd,app values of 0.86 ± 0.04 µM, 0.85 ± 0.04 µM, and 0.87 ± 0.04 µM, respectively (Fig. 7A,B
). Any combination of two point mutations (R1/R3, R1/R5, or R3/R5) promoted a slightly larger increase in affinity of the protein to the HO RNA, with Kd,app values of 0.74 ± 0.03 µM, 0.76 ± 0.03 µM, and 0.77 ± 0.03 µM, respectively (Fig. 7A,B
). Since all combinations of double mutants promoted a similar enhanced affinity toward the HO RNA, these results indicate that the three amino acid positions tested play equal roles in RNA binding, and the small contribution of each toward binding affinity is additive. This observation was verified by analysis of a triple mutant (R1/R3/R5), which showed an even greater increase in affinity to the HO RNA, with a Kd,app of 0.65 ± 0.02. However, this affinity was still over twofold weaker than that of the wild-type Puf5RDp.
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| DISCUSSION |
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strain failed to rescue rapid decay of the COX17 mRNA (Fig. 4
strain (Fig. 5
The results with the inner surface point mutations of the Puf3p repeat domain are surprising, given the predicted roles of these amino acids in binding to a target RNA. Based on the alignment with the HsPum crystal structure (Wang et al. 2002
), the serine in the first repeat of Puf3p was predicted to make a specific van der Waals interaction with the final adenine of the COX17 target sequence (Fig. 1C
). In Puf5p, a cysteine located at this position was predicted to make a similar van der Waals interaction with a final adenine of the HO RNA target sequence (Fig. 1C
). Therefore, the serine-to-cysteine mutation in R1 of Puf3RDp was not expected to cause a significant change in the ability of Puf3RDp to bind the COX17 target RNA. In fact, Puf3p utilizes a cysteine in Repeat 3 to make a predicted van der Waals interaction with another adenine in the COX17 target sequence (Fig. 1C
). However, since the serine to cysteine mutation in R1 abolished detectable RNA binding, this result demonstrates that the role of the R1 serine cannot be to simply make a low-energy van der Waals interaction with the adenine. It is actually quite remarkable that a single amino acid change would have such a drastic effect on a protein that utilizes 24 predicted RNA contacts over its extended eight-repeat structure. We do not believe that the cysteine introduction caused a reduction of protein activity due to disulfide bond formation, as RNA-protein binding buffer is made fresh with dithiothreitol (DTT) for each experiment. Moreover, the serine to cysteine mutation did not interrupt binding to the HO target sequence (Fig. 7
), demonstrating that the R1 mutant protein is still active and thus likely folded correctly. Therefore, the R1 serine of Puf3p may be critical for intra-protein interactions, such as with other side-chains, to promote the precise architecture of the chemical surface to bind the COX17 RNA target. Alternatively, the R1 serine may be contacting the RNA downstream of the 8-nt core binding element, where there are several differences between the Puf3 and Puf5 target sites. Indeed, analysis of the FBF target binding site revealed that specific sequences both 5' and 3' of the core binding element are required for optimal binding, and it is hypothesized that these nucleotides may make novel contacts with the Puf protein (Bernstein et al. 2005
).
Alignment with the HsPum crystal structure (Wang et al. 2002
) places the cysteine of the Puf3p Repeat 3 in a van der Waals contact with an adenine (Fig. 1C
), while Puf5p utilizes a threonine at this position to contact a guanine (Fig. 1C
). Since the adenine versus guanine contact is the only difference between the Puf3p and Puf5p RNA target sequences used in these studies, we had originally predicted this amino acid position to be a point of target specificity. Previous work with the HsPum supported a modular role of each repeat, such that specificity is determined by three amino acids located at predicted RNA-binding positions of each repeat. In particular, directed alteration of the three RNA-binding amino acids within repeat 6 of the HsPum could alter target specificity (Wang et al. 2002
). However, our results show that binding specificity is not necessarily modular. The finding that a cysteine-to-threonine mutation in R3 of Puf3RDp did not inhibit binding to the COX17 target RNA (Fig. 3
) implies that other amino acids outside the three predicted positions of this repeat are promoting RNA binding specificity. This result also supports our hypothesis that RNA target specificity may be dependent on changes in protein surface architecture that are promoted by intraprotein interactions between amino acids that are not necessarily critical for direct contact with the RNA. Precedence for nucleic acid binding proteins that appear to act in a modular fashion but are, in fact, much more complex are the zinc-finger proteins. These proteins, similar to the Puf proteins, were originally thought to attain specificity to target sequences by the identity of amino acids at particular base-interacting positions within each zinc-finger module. However, closer inspection has shown that intraprotein interactions such as side-chainside-chain contacts and interactions with ordered water molecules are critical for determining binding specificity (Miller and Pabo 2001
). We believe this might be occurring in the Puf proteins as well.
In contrast to the COX17 binding studies, analyses of the Puf3RDp mutants binding the HO RNA show that the identities of the amino acids at all three mutagenized RNA-interacting positions are important for binding to this Puf5p target RNA. In addition, amino acids outside these predicted positions are also critical for promoting binding affinity. Unlike the inability of Puf5p to bind the COX17 RNA, Puf3p weakly bound the HO RNA (Fig. 7
), suggesting that the architecture of the Puf3p binding surface is flexible enough to accommodate binding to this RNA. Single mutations that replaced a Puf3p amino acid for that found in Puf5p promoted a small increase in affinity to the HO RNA, while combinations of double mutations and a triple mutant promoted successively larger increases in affinity (Fig. 7
). This supports a model in which each HO RNA-protein contact makes a small but equal contribution to the binding energy, with the identity of the amino acid important for proper binding. However, while the Puf3RDp triple mutant effectively mimics 24 out of 24 predicted RNA-interacting amino acids of Puf5p, the affinity of this protein was still over twofold less than that of wild-type Puf5RDp toward the HO target (Fig. 7
). This suggests that there are other amino acids unique to Puf5RDp that play significant roles in RNA binding. These amino acids may be involved in critical intraprotein interactions, or they may be contacting the RNA outside the 8-nt core binding element.
Key information was also obtained regarding Puf3p interactions required for mRNA decay regulation. The R7A deletion of amino acids RDKN, which are located at the beginning of a predicted 16-amino-acid loop structure on the proteins outer surface between repeats 7 and 8, abolished COX17 decay regulation (Fig. 4
), with deadenylation and decapping slowed to the same extent as in a puf3
strain (Fig. 5
), while having no effect on binding of the protein to the mRNA (Fig. 3
). It is likely that one or more of these amino acids are involved in proteinprotein interactions that provide a signal to the decay machinery to rapidly degrade the bound mRNA. This signal could be involved in recruiting the decay machinery to the mRNA, or the signal could enhance the activity of the decay machinery, perhaps by altering the mRNP structure. The fact that the RDKN deletion disrupts both rapid deadenylation and rapid decapping suggests that regulation of these processes is linked by protein interactions at this site. Such interactions could involve direct contacts with regulators or components of both the deadenylation and decapping machineries, or these interactions could simply be altering the mRNP structure to allow more rapid access of the mRNA to both decay machineries. A corresponding loop region between repeats 7 and 8 of DmPum is required for protein interactions with Nanos and Brat, which are necessary for hunchback mRNA repression (Edwards et al. 2001
). However, it is unknown how these interactions repress hunchback mRNA. While this site of protein interaction appears to be conserved between Puf proteins, it is intriguing that the characteristics of the loops in DmPum and Puf3p are quite different, with no conservation of sequence and the Puf3p loop being 11 amino acids longer. Efforts are underway to study the role of this loop in potential Puf3p protein interactions.
In contrast to the R7A deletion, the R6A deletion of amino acids FTNKEM, which our results suggest are located in an outer surface loop of Puf3p within repeat 6, had no deleterious effects on either binding (Fig. 3
) or COX17 decay regulation (Fig. 4
), with deadenylation and decapping occurring as rapidly as with wild-type Puf3RDp (Fig. 5
). While these results show that this amino acid region plays no role in the decay of COX17 mRNA, it is possible that this region is important for regulation of other Puf3p target mRNAs. Precedence for a single Puf protein recruiting different sets of protein partners on different mRNA targets comes from Drosophila, where DmPum recruits both Nanos and Brat when bound to hunchback mRNA but only recruits Nanos when bound to cyclinB mRNA (Sonada and Wharton 2001
). Future work will determine what roles the R7A and R6A loop domains play in decay regulation of other Puf3p target mRNAs.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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, his4-539, leu2-3,112, trp1-1, ura3-52, cup1::LEU2/PM, rpb1-1, puf3::Neor (yRP1360) (Olivas and Parker 2000
Plasmids
The GST-PUF3 Repeat Domain (amino acids 465879) fusion construct (pWO12) was created in a derivative of pGEX-3X (Amersham Biosciences) as previously described (Jackson et al. 2004
). To create pWO14, the PUF3 Repeat Domain (PUF3RD) was isolated from pWO12 and inserted into a derivative of pG-1 (Schena et al. 1991
), placing the PUF3RD just downstream from an inserted Flag tag sequence and the GPD promoter as previously described (Jackson et al. 2004
). Mutant PUF3RD constructs pWO29pWO38 (Table 1
) were created from pWO14, while pWO76 was created from pWO12 by using the QuikChange XL Site-Directed Mutagenesis Kit (Stratagene). All mutations were verified by sequencing. Mutant GST-PUF3RD fusion constructs pWO39pWO47 and pWO75 (Table 1
) were created by BamHI and SalI digestion of pWO29pWO38 and insertion into a derivative of pGEX-3X using the same restriction sites. The pWO18 GST-PUF5RD fusion construct was created in pGEX-6p-3 (Amersham Biosciences) as previously described (Jackson et al. 2004
).
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In vitro binding analyses
Short COX17 Site-A and HO RNAs (2930 nt) were transcribed from single-stranded oligonucleotide templates containing the 18-nt T7 RNA polymerase promoter annealed to a complementary primer. The T7-Megashortscript Kit (Ambion) was used to transcribe the RNAs with the following changes: The reactions contained 500 µM each of ATP, CTP, and GTP; 50 µM of UTP; 40 µCi of
-32P UTP (800 Ci/mmol) for labeled reactions; and 20 U RNasin. Radiolabeled transcripts were purified via separation on denaturing polyacrylamide gels, elution from gel slices, and ethanol precipitation. Unlabeled transcripts were purified by using the Nucleotide Removal Kit (Qiagen).
Each 20 µL RNA-protein binding reaction contained radiolabeled RNA (20,000 cpm, ~200 pM) and 1x binding buffer (10 mM HEPES at pH 7.5, 50 mM KCl, 1 mM EDTA, 2 mM DTT, 200 U/mL RNasin, 0.1 mg/mL bovine serum albumin, 0.01% Tween-20, 0.1 mg/mL poly(rU), 10 µg/mL yeast tRNA) in the presence or absence of wild-type GST-Puf3RDp, mutant GST-Puf3RDp, or wild-type GST-Puf5RDp, and in the presence or absence of ~10-fold excess unlabeled transcript. Reactions were incubated at 24° C for 30 min, 5 µg of heparin was added, and then reactions incubated a further 10 min at 24° C. Reactions were electrophoresed on 8% nondenaturing polyacrylamide gels at 200 V for 2.5 h at 4° C. Apparent Kd values were determined by first calculating the fraction of RNA bound for each gel lane using the following definition: Fraction Bound = Shifted RNA/(Shifted RNA + Free RNA), where Shifted RNA and Free RNA represent the storage phosphor signal of all shifted complexes or the free RNA species, respectively. Binding-incompetent RNAs appeared in some RNA preparations and had a more retarded mobility than did the expected free RNA. Since the amount of these RNAs remained fairly constant within an experiment and did not reflect changes in protein concentrations, these RNAs were likely a product of structural changes in the radiolabeled RNA and were not included in the calculations. KaleidaGraph 3.5 software was used to fit the binding data to the Langmuir isotherm: Fraction of RNA Bound = [Protein]/(Kd,app + [Protein]). The confidence levels for all binding fits with the COX17 RNA were >99%, and confidence levels were >98% for all binding fits with the HO RNA. Error was determined as the standard deviation of the average Kd,app from multiple experiments.
In vivo decay analysis
Steady-state transcriptional shut-off experiments were performed essentially as described (Caponigro et al. 1993
) on yWO43 (puf3
), which contains the rbp1-1 temperature-sensitive allele for RNA polymerase II. yWO43 was also analyzed after transformation with plasmids expressing the wild-type Puf3RDp (pWO14) as well as the mutant Puf3RDps (pWO2938). Northern blots were normalized for loading by using the stable RNA polymerase III transcript, scRI RNA (Felici et al. 1989
).
Transcriptional pulse-chase experiments were performed essentially as described (Decker and Parker 1993
) on yWO51 (cox17
, puf3
, rbp1-1). Regulated expression of COX17 RNA was accomplished by transformation of yWO51 with pWO5 (pG74/ST30) (Beers et al. 1997
), in which the COX17 gene is under the control of the GAL10 promoter. In addition, yWO51 was transformed with pWO14 (pPuf3RD-WT) or pWO2938 (pPuf3RD-mutants). Transcription was induced for 8 min by the addition of galactose and then rapidly repressed by simultaneously adding glucose and shifting the culture to 37° C. Poly(A) tail lengths were monitored by the cleavage of COX17 mRNA just upstream of the stop codon using RNaseH reactions with oWO1 as described (oCOX17-C) (Olivas and Parker 2000
). RNA was separated on 6% denaturing polyacrylamide gels at 300 V for 4 h and then transferred to nylon membrane for probing with radiolabeled oWO2 (oCOX17-P, Olivas and Parker 2000
).
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| Footnotes |
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Received July 20, 2005; accepted August 10, 2005.
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