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Enzyme
Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.26.5 (
RNase P
)
1,348
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The ability to target RNA, mRNA and viral RNA in particular, for degradation is a powerful approach in molecular biology and pharmacology. Such approaches can be used in the study of gene function as in functional genomics, in the identification of disease-associated genes, and for the treatment of human diseases. This review provides a comprehensive up-to-date look at all the current available technologies used for the destruction of RNA, with a focus on their therapeutic potential. This includes approaches that utilize the activity of protein ribonucleases such as antisense oligonucleotide, small interfering RNA,
RNase P
-associated external guide sequence, onconase and bovine seminal
RNase
. Sequence-specific approaches that do not utilize activity of protein ribonucleases, such as ribozyme and DNazyme, are also reviewed and discussed. This review should provide a useful starting framework for researchers interested in using the RNA-destruction methodologies on the bench and in the clinic, and serves as a stimulus for further development of novel and more potent RNA degradation technologies. This is particularly critical, given the anticipation of discoveries of new cellular RNA degradation machineries and human diseases that are associated with dysfunctional RNA molecules.
...
PMID:Destroying RNA as a therapeutic approach. 1661 Oct 72
RNase P
and
RNase
MRP are ribonucleoprotein enzymes required for 5'-end maturation of precursor tRNAs (pre-tRNAs) and processing of precursor ribosomal RNAs, respectively. In yeast,
RNase P
and MRP holoenzymes have eight protein subunits in common, with Pop1p being the largest at >100 kDa. Little is known about the functions of Pop1p, beyond the fact that it binds specifically to the
RNase P
RNA subunit, RPR1 RNA. In this study, we refined the previous Pop1 phylogenetic sequence alignment and found four conserved regions. Highly conserved amino acids in yeast Pop1p were mutagenized by randomization and conditionally defective mutations were obtained. Effects of the Pop1p mutations on pre-tRNA processing, pre-rRNA processing, and stability of the RNA subunits of
RNase P
and MRP were examined. In most cases, functional defects in
RNase P
and
RNase
MRP in vivo were consistent with assembly defects of the holoenzymes, although moderate kinetic defects in
RNase P
were also observed. Most mutations affected both pre-tRNA and pre-rRNA processing, but a few mutations preferentially interfered with only
RNase P
or only
RNase
MRP. In addition, one temperature-sensitive mutation had no effect on either tRNA or rRNA processing, consistent with an additional role for
RNase P
,
RNase
MRP, or Pop1p in some other form. This study shows that the Pop1p subunit plays multiple roles in the assembly and function of of RNases P and MRP, and that the functions can be differentiated through the mutations in conserved residues.
...
PMID:Functional characterization of the conserved amino acids in Pop1p, the largest common protein subunit of yeast RNases P and MRP. 1661 65
RNase
MRP is a eukaryotic endoribonuclease involved in nucleolar and mitochondrial RNA processing events.
RNase
MRP is a ribonucleoprotein particle, which is structurally related to
RNase P
, an endoribonuclease involved in pre-tRNA processing. Most of the protein components of
RNase
MRP have been reported to be associated with
RNase P
as well. In this study we determined the association of these protein subunits with the human
RNase
MRP and
RNase P
particles by glycerol gradient sedimentation and coimmunoprecipitation. In agreement with previous studies,
RNase
MRP sedimented at 12S and 60-80S. In contrast, only a single major peak was observed for
RNase P
at 12S. The analysis of individual protein subunits revealed that hPop4 (also known as Rpp29), Rpp21, Rpp20, and Rpp25 only sedimented in 12S fractions, whereas hPop1, Rpp40, Rpp38, and Rpp30 were also found in 60-80S fractions. In agreement with their cosedimentation with
RNase P
RNA in the 12S peak, coimmunoprecipitation with VSV-epitope-tagged protein subunits revealed that hPop4, Rpp21, and in addition Rpp14 preferentially associate with
RNase P
. These data show that hPop4, Rpp21, and Rpp14 may not be associated with
RNase
MRP. Furthermore, Rpp20 and Rpp25 appear to be associated with only a subset of
RNase
MRP particles, in contrast to hPop1, Rpp40, Rpp38, and Rpp30 (and possibly also hPop5), which are probably associated with all
RNase
MRP complexes. Our data are consistent with a transient association of Rpp20 and Rpp25 with
RNase
MRP, which may be inversely correlated to its involvement in pre-rRNA processing.
...
PMID:Differential association of protein subunits with the human RNase MRP and RNase P complexes. 1672 59
Rpp20 and Rpp25 are subunits of the human
RNase
MRP and
RNase P
endoribonucleases belonging to the Alba superfamily of nucleic acid binding proteins. These proteins, which bind very strongly to each other, transiently associate with
RNase
MRP. Here, we show that the Rpp20-Rpp25 heterodimer is resistant to both high concentrations of salt and a nonionic detergent. The interaction of Rpp20 and Rpp25 with the P3 domain of the
RNase
MRP RNA appeared to be strongly enhanced by their heterodimerization. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated that only a single copy of each of these proteins is associated with the
RNase
MRP and
RNase P
particles in HEp-2 cells. Both proteins accumulate in the nucleoli, which in case of Rpp20 is strongly dependent on its interaction with Rpp25. Finally, the results of overexpression and knock-down experiments indicate that their expression levels are codependent. Taken together, these data indicate that the Rpp20-Rpp25 heterodimerization regulates their RNA-binding activity, subcellular localization, and expression, which suggests that their interaction is also crucial for their role in
RNase
MRP/P function.
...
PMID:Heterodimerization regulates RNase MRP/RNase P association, localization, and expression of Rpp20 and Rpp25. 1711 99
Pop6 and Pop7 are protein subunits of Saccharomyces cerevisiae
RNase
MRP and
RNase P
. Here we show that bacterially expressed Pop6 and Pop7 form a soluble heterodimer that binds the RNA components of both
RNase
MRP and
RNase P
. Footprint analysis of the interaction between the Pop6/7 heterodimer and the
RNase
MRP RNA, combined with gel mobility assays, demonstrates that the Pop6/7 complex binds to a conserved region of the P3 domain. Binding of these proteins to the MRP RNA leads to local rearrangement in the structure of the P3 loop and suggests that direct interaction of the Pop6/7 complex with the P3 domain of the RNA components of RNases MRP and P may mediate binding of other protein components. These results suggest a role for a key element in the
RNase
MRP and
RNase P
RNAs in protein binding, and demonstrate the feasibility of directly studying RNA-protein interactions in the eukaryotic RNases MRP and P complexes.
...
PMID:Specific binding of a Pop6/Pop7 heterodimer to the P3 stem of the yeast RNase MRP and RNase P RNAs. 1771 80
Ribonuclease MRP is an endonuclease, related to
RNase P
, which functions in eukaryotic pre-rRNA processing. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae,
RNase
MRP comprises an RNA subunit and ten proteins. To improve our understanding of subunit roles and enzyme architecture, we have examined protein-protein and protein-RNA interactions in vitro, complementing existing yeast two-hybrid data. In total, 31 direct protein-protein interactions were identified, each protein interacting with at least three others. Furthermore, seven proteins self-interact, four strongly, pointing to subunit multiplicity in the holoenzyme. Six protein subunits interact directly with MRP RNA and four with pre-rRNA. A comparative analysis with existing data for the yeast and human
RNase P
/MRP systems enables confident identification of Pop1p, Pop4p and Rpp1p as subunits that lie at the enzyme core, with probable addition of Pop5p and Pop3p. Rmp1p is confirmed as an integral subunit, presumably associating preferentially with
RNase
MRP, rather than
RNase P
, via interactions with Snm1p and MRP RNA. Snm1p and Rmp1p may act together to assist enzyme specificity, though roles in substrate binding are also indicated for Pop4p and Pop6p. The results provide further evidence of a conserved eukaryotic
RNase P
/MRP architecture and provide a strong basis for studies of enzyme assembly and subunit function.
...
PMID:Interactions between subunits of Saccharomyces cerevisiae RNase MRP support a conserved eukaryotic RNase P/MRP architecture. 1788 80
Ribonuclease P (
RNase P
) is an essential enzyme that catalyzes the 5' endonucleolytic cleavage of precursor transfer RNAs (pretRNAs). It is found in all phylogenetic domains: bacteria, archaea and eukaryotes. The bacterial enzyme consists of a single, catalytic RNA subunit and one small protein, while the archaeal and eukaryotic enzymes have 4-10 proteins in addition to a similar RNA subunit. The bacterial RNA acts as a ribozyme at high salt in vitro; however the added protein optimizes kinetics and makes specific contacts with the pre-tRNA substrate. The bacterial protein subunit also appears to be required for the processing of non-tRNA substrates by broadening recognition tolerance. In addition, the immense increase in protein content in the eukaryotic enzymes suggests substantially enlarged capacity for recognition of additional substrates. Recently intron-encoded box C/D snoRNAs were shown to be likely substrates for
RNase P
, with several lines of evidence suggesting that the nuclear holoenzyme binds tightly to, and can cleave single-stranded RNA in a sequence dependent fashion. The possible involvement of
RNase P
in additional RNA processing or turnover pathways would be consistent with previous findings that
RNase
MRP, a variant of
RNase P
that has evolved to participate in ribosomal RNA processing, is also involved in turnover of specific messenger RNAs. Here, involvement of
RNase P
in multiple RNA processing pathways is discussed.
...
PMID:RNase P: increased versatility through protein complexity? 1910 27
Ribonuclease MRP is a eukaryotic ribonucleoprotein complex consisting of one RNA molecule and 7-10 protein subunits. One important function of MRP is to catalyze an endonucleolytic cleavage during processing of rRNA precursors.
RNase
MRP is evolutionary related to
RNase P
which is critical for tRNA processing. A large number of MRP RNA sequences that now are available have been used to identify conserved primary and secondary structure features of the molecule. MRP RNA has structural features in common with P RNA such as a conserved catalytic core, but it also has unique features and is characterized by a domain highly variable between species. Information regarding primary and secondary structure features is of interest not only in basic studies of the function of MRP RNA, but also because mutations in the RNA give rise to human genetic diseases such as cartilage-hair hypoplasia.
...
PMID:Conserved and variable domains of RNase MRP RNA. 1939 64
Ribonuclease P (
RNase P
) is a ribonucleoprotein complex that catalyzes the 5' maturation of precursor tRNAs. To investigate the mechanism of substrate recognition in this enzyme, we characterize the thermodynamics and kinetics of Bacillus subtilis pre-tRNA(Asp) binding to B. subtilis
RNase P
holoenzyme using fluorescence techniques. Time courses for fluorescein-labeled pre-tRNA binding to
RNase P
are biphasic in the presence of both Ca(II) and Mg(II), requiring a minimal two-step association mechanism. In the first step, the apparent bimolecular rate constant for pre-tRNA associating with
RNase P
has a value that is near the diffusion limit and is independent of the length of the pre-tRNA leader. Following formation of the initial enzyme-substrate complex, a unimolecular step enhances the overall affinity of pre-tRNA by eight- to 300-fold as the length of the leader sequence increases from 2 to 5 nucleotides. This increase in affinity is due to a decrease in the reverse rate constant for the conformational change that correlates with the formation of an optimal leader-protein interaction in the
RNase P
holoenzyme-pre-tRNA complex. Furthermore, the forward rate constant for the conformational change becomes rate limiting for cleavage under single-turnover conditions at high pH, explaining the origin of the observed apparent pK(a) in the
RNase P
-catalyzed cleavage reaction. These data suggest that a conformational change in the
RNase
P*pre-tRNA complex is coupled to the interactions between the 5' leader and P protein and aligns essential functional groups at the cleavage active site to enhance efficient cleavage of pre-tRNA.
...
PMID:Conformational change in the Bacillus subtilis RNase P holoenzyme--pre-tRNA complex enhances substrate affinity and limits cleavage rate. 1954 19
Here we report a unique processing pathway in Escherichia coli for tRNA(Leu5) in which the exoribonuclease polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) removes the Rho-independent transcription terminator from the leuX transcript without requiring the RhlB RNA helicase. Our data demonstrate for the first time that PNPase can efficiently degrade an RNA substrate containing secondary structures in vivo. Furthermore,
RNase P
, an endoribonuclease that normally generates the mature 5'-ends of tRNAs, removes the leuX terminator inefficiently independent of PNPase activity.
RNase P
cleaves 4-7 nt downstream of the CCA determinant generating a substrate for RNase II, which removes an additional 3-4 nt. Subsequently,
RNase
T completes the 3' maturation process by removing the remaining 1-3 nt downstream of the CCA determinant. RNase E, G and Z are not involved in terminator removal. These results provide further evidence that the E. coli tRNA processing machinery is far more diverse than previously envisioned.
...
PMID:Processing of the Escherichia coli leuX tRNA transcript, encoding tRNA(Leu5), requires either the 3'-->5' exoribonuclease polynucleotide phosphorylase or RNase P to remove the Rho-independent transcription terminator. 1990 95
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