Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.13.1 (exoribonuclease)
732 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

RNA editing in trypanosomatids is catalyzed by a high molecular mass RNP complex, which is only partially characterized. TbMP42 is a 42 kDa protein of unknown function that copurifies with the editing complex. The polypeptide is characterized by two Zn fingers and a potential barrel structure/OB-fold at its C terminus. Using recombinant TbMP42, we show that the protein can bind to dsRNA and dsDNA but fails to recognize DNA/RNA hybrids. rTbMP42 degrades ssRNA by a 3' to 5' exoribonuclease activity. In addition, rTbMP42 has endoribonuclease activity, which preferentially hydrolyzes non-base-paired uridylate-containing sequences. Gene silencing of TbMP42 inhibits cell growth and is ultimately lethal to the parasite. Mitochondrial extracts from TbMP42-minus trypanosomes have only residual RNA editing activity and strongly reduced endo-exoribonuclease activity. However, all three activities can be restored by the addition of rTbMP42. Together, the data suggest that TbMP42 contributes both endo- and exoribonuclease activity to the editing reaction cycle.
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PMID:TbMP42, a protein component of the RNA editing complex in African trypanosomes, has endo-exoribonuclease activity. 1574 13

Small RNA-guided gene silencing is an evolutionarily conserved process that operates by a variety of molecular mechanisms and plays an essential role in developmental pathways and defense responses against genomic parasites in eukaryotes. Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) triggered posttranscriptional gene silencing, termed RNA interference (RNAi), is also becoming a powerful tool for reverse genetics studies. Stable RNAi, induced by the expression of long dsRNAs or duplex small RNAs from genome-integrated transgenes, has been achieved in multiple organisms, including the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. However, the level of gene repression is often quite variable, depending on the type of construct, transgene copy number, site of integration, and target gene. Moreover, unintended transcripts partly complementary to a trigger dsRNA can also be silenced, making difficult the interpretation of observed phenotypes. To obviate some of these problems we have developed a tandem inverted repeat system that consistently induces cosilencing of a gene with a selectable RNAi-induced phenotype (encoding tryptophan synthase beta-subunit) and any other (nonessential) gene of interest. In addition, to circumvent off-target effects, for each tested gene, RNAi lines are generated with at least two transgenes, homologous to distinct and nonoverlapping sequences of the target transcript. A common phenotype among these independent RNAi strains is expected to result from suppression of expression of the gene of interest. We demonstrate this approach for the characterization of a gene of unknown function in Chlamydomonas, encoding a predicted exoribonuclease with weak similarity to 3'hExo/ERI-1.
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PMID:Targeted gene silencing by RNA interference in Chlamydomonas. 2040 13

XRN2 is an essential eukaryotic exoribonuclease that processes and degrades various substrates. Here we identify the previously uncharacterized protein R05D11.6/PAXT-1 as a subunit of an XRN2 complex in C. elegans. Targeted paxt-1 inactivation through TALEN-mediated genome editing reduces XRN2 levels, decreases miRNA turnover activity, and results in worm death, which can be averted by overexpressing xrn-2. Hence, stabilization of XRN2 is a major function of PAXT-1. A truncated PAXT-1 protein retaining a predicted domain of unknown function (DUF3469) suffices to restore viability to paxt-1 mutant animals, elevates XRN2 levels, and binds to XRN2. This domain occurs in additional metazoan proteins and mediates interaction of human CDKN2AIP/CARF and NKRF/NRF with XRN2. Thus, we have identified a bona fide XRN2-binding domain (XTBD) that can link different proteins, and possibly functionalities, to XRN2.
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PMID:PAXT-1 promotes XRN2 activity by stabilizing it through a conserved domain. 2446 8

RNA degradation plays important roles for maintaining temporal control and fidelity of gene expression, as well as processing of transcripts. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae the RNA exosome is a major 3'-to-5' exoribonuclease and also has an endonuclease domain of unknown function. Here we report a physiological role for the exosome in response to a stimulus. We show that inactivating the exoribonuclease active site of Rrp44 up-regulates the iron uptake regulon. This up-regulation is caused by increased levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the mutant. Elevated ROS also causes hypersensitivity to H2O2, which can be reduced by the addition of iron to H2O2 stressed cells. Finally, we show that the previously characterized slow growth phenotype of rrp44-exo(-) is largely ameliorated during fermentative growth. While the molecular functions of Rrp44 and the RNA exosome have been extensively characterized, our studies characterize how this molecular function affects the physiology of the organism.
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PMID:The RNA exosome affects iron response and sensitivity to oxidative stress. 2486 16

The archaeal exosome is a phosphorolytic 3'-5' exoribonuclease complex. In a reverse reaction it synthesizes A-rich RNA tails. Its RNA-binding cap comprises the eukaryotic orthologs Rrp4 and Csl4, and an archaea-specific subunit annotated as DnaG. In Sulfolobus solfataricus DnaG and Rrp4 but not Csl4 show preference for poly(rA). Archaeal DnaG contains N- and C-terminal domains (NTD and CTD) of unknown function flanking a TOPRIM domain. We found that the NT and TOPRIM domains have comparable, high conservation in all archaea, while the CTD conservation correlates with the presence of exosome. We show that the NTD is a novel RNA-binding domain with poly(rA)-preference cooperating with the TOPRIM domain in binding of RNA. Consistently, a fusion protein containing full-length Csl4 and NTD of DnaG led to enhanced degradation of A-rich RNA by the exosome. We also found that DnaG strongly binds native and in vitro transcribed rRNA and enables its polynucleotidylation by the exosome. Furthermore, rRNA-derived transcripts with heteropolymeric tails were degraded faster by the exosome than their non-tailed variants. Based on our data, we propose that archaeal DnaG is an RNA-binding protein, which, in the context of the exosome, is involved in targeting of stable RNA for degradation.
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PMID:Archaeal DnaG contains a conserved N-terminal RNA-binding domain and enables tailing of rRNA by the exosome. 2532 20

The RNA exosome is a key 3'-5' exoribonuclease with an evolutionarily conserved structure and function. Its cytosolic functions require the co-factors SKI7 and the Ski complex. Here we demonstrate by co-purification experiments that the ARM-repeat protein RESURRECTION1 (RST1) and RST1 INTERACTING PROTEIN (RIPR) connect the cytosolic Arabidopsis RNA exosome to the Ski complex. rst1 and ripr mutants accumulate RNA quality control siRNAs (rqc-siRNAs) produced by the post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS) machinery when mRNA degradation is compromised. The small RNA populations observed in rst1 and ripr mutants are also detected in mutants lacking the RRP45B/CER7 core exosome subunit. Thus, molecular and genetic evidence supports a physical and functional link between RST1, RIPR and the RNA exosome. Our data reveal the existence of additional cytosolic exosome co-factors besides the known Ski subunits. RST1 is not restricted to plants, as homologues with a similar domain architecture but unknown function exist in animals, including humans.
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PMID:RST1 and RIPR connect the cytosolic RNA exosome to the Ski complex in Arabidopsis. 3264 20