Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.27.1 (RNase)
16,360 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The yeast nuclear gene DSS1 codes for a mitochondrial protein containing regions of homology to bacterial RNase II and can act as a multicopy suppressor of a deletion of the SUV3 gene, which encodes an RNA helicase. In order to establish the function of the DSS1 gene in mitochondrial biogenesis we studied RNA metabolism in yeast strains disrupted for SUV3 or DSS1. The results indicate that in the absence of DSS1 the in vitro activity of 3'-5' exoribonuclease is abolished and mitochondrial translation is blocked. In disruption strains harboring intronless mitochondrial genomes steady-state levels of COB mRNA and 16S rRNA were very low, while in the presence of a mitochondrial genome containing the omega intron in the 21S rRNA gene the excised intron accumulates. Moreover we observed an accumulation of precursors of 21S rRNA and the VAR1 mRNA. All these phenotypes are virtually identical to those of strains in which SUV3 is disrupted. We suggest that the DSS1 gene product, like the SUV3 gene product, is a subunit of the yeast mitochondrial degradosome (mtEXO), and that this protein complex participates in intron-independent turnover and processing of mitochondrial transcripts. In addition our studies exclude any role for the NUC1 nuclease in these phenomena.
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PMID:The yeast nuclear gene DSS1, which codes for a putative RNase II, is necessary for the function of the mitochondrial degradosome in processing and turnover of RNA. 982 34

Saccharomyces cerevisiae nuclear genes SUV3 and DSS1 encode putative RNA helicase and RNase II, respectively, which are subunits of the mitochondrial degradosome (mtEXO): a three-protein complex which has a 3' to 5' exoribonuclease activity and plays a major role in regulating stability of mitochondrial RNA. Lack of either of the two gene products results in a respiratory negative phenotype, while on the molecular level it causes a total block of mitochondrial translation, loss of the in vitro exoribonuclease activity and changes in stability and processing of many mtRNAs. We have found that the yeast nuclear gene PET127 present on a low or high copy number vector can effectively suppress the effects of the SUV3 or DSS1 gene disruptions. Since the product of the PET127 gene is involved in processing of the 5' ends of mitochondrial mRNAs, we suggest that there is a functional coupling between the 5' and 3' ends of mitochondrial mRNAs.
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PMID:Yeast nuclear PET127 gene can suppress deletions of the SUV3 or DSS1 genes: an indication of a functional interaction between 3' and 5' ends of mitochondrial mRNAs. 1039 41

The yeast mitochondrial degradosome (mtEXO) is an NTP-dependent exoribonuclease involved in mitochondrial RNA metabolism. Previous purifications suggested that it was composed of three subunits. Our results suggest that the degradosome is composed of only two large subunits: an RNase and a RNA helicase encoded by nuclear genes DSS1 and SUV3, respectively, and that it co-purifies with mitochondrial ribosomes. We have found that the purified degradosome has RNA helicase activity that precedes and is essential for exoribonuclease activity of this complex. The degradosome RNase activity is necessary for mitochondrial biogenesis but in vitro the degradosome without RNase activity is still able to unwind RNA. In yeast strains lacking degradosome components there is a strong accumulation of mitochondrial mRNA and rRNA precursors not processed at 3'- and 5'-ends. The observed accumulation of precursors is probably the result of lack of degradation rather than direct inhibition of processing. We suggest that the degradosome is a central part of a mitochondrial RNA surveillance system responsible for degradation of aberrant and unprocessed RNAs.
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PMID:The yeast mitochondrial degradosome. Its composition, interplay between RNA helicase and RNase activities and the role in mitochondrial RNA metabolism. 1242 13

The mitochondrial degradosome (mtEXO), the main RNA-degrading complex of yeast mitochondria, is composed of two subunits: an exoribonuclease encoded by the DSS1 gene and an RNA helicase encoded by the SUV3 gene. We expressed both subunits of the yeast mitochondrial degradosome in Escherichia coli, reconstituted the complex in vitro and analyzed the RNase, ATPase and helicase activities of the two subunits separately and in complex. The results reveal a very strong functional interdependence. For every enzymatic activity, we observed significant changes when the relevant protein was present in the complex, compared to the activity measured for the protein alone. The ATPase activity of Suv3p is stimulated by RNA and its background activity in the absence of RNA is reduced greatly when the protein is in the complex with Dss1p. The Suv3 protein alone does not display RNA-unwinding activity and the 3' to 5' directional helicase activity requiring a free 3' single-stranded substrate becomes apparent only when Suv3p is in complex with Dss1p. The Dss1 protein alone does have some basal exoribonuclease activity, which is not ATP-dependent, but in the presence of Suv3p the activity of the entire complex is enhanced greatly and is entirely ATP-dependent, with no residual activity observed in the absence of ATP. Such absolute ATP-dependence is unique among known exoribonuclease complexes. On the basis of these results, we propose a model in which the Suv3p RNA helicase acts as a molecular motor feeding the substrate to the catalytic centre of the RNase subunit.
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PMID:In vitro reconstitution and characterization of the yeast mitochondrial degradosome complex unravels tight functional interdependence. 1765 49

RNA turnover in yeast mitochondria is controlled by the complex called degradosome, which consists of two nuclear-encoded proteins: the SUV3 gene codes for an RNA helicase and the DSS1 gene codes for an RNase. In contrast to yeast, much less is known about RNA degradation in human mitochondria. We suggest that the key enzyme involved in this process is nuclear-encoded polynucleotide phosphorylase, hPNPase.
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PMID:RNA degradation in yeast and human mitochondria. 2002 Nov 23

R loops are nucleic acid structures comprising an DNA-RNA hybrid and a displaced single-stranded DNA. These structures may occur transiently during transcription, playing essential biological functions. However, persistent R loops may become pathological as they are important drivers of genome instability and have been associated with human diseases. The mitochondrial degradosome is a functionally conserved complex from bacteria to human mitochondria. It is composed of the ATP-dependent RNA and DNA helicase SUV3 and the PNPase ribonuclease, playing a central role in mitochondrial RNA surveillance and degradation. Here we describe a new role for the mitochondrial degradosome in preventing the accumulation of pathological R loops in the mitochondrial DNA, in addition to preventing dsRNA accumulation. Our data indicate that, similar to the molecular mechanisms acting in the nucleus, RNA surveillance mechanisms in the mitochondria are crucial to maintain its genome integrity by counteracting pathological R-loop accumulation.
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PMID:Human mitochondrial degradosome prevents harmful mitochondrial R loops and mitochondrial genome instability. 3030 8

Transcription of the human mitochondrial genome produces a vast amount of non-coding antisense RNAs. These RNA species can form G-quadraplexes (G4), which affect their decay. We found that the mitochondrial degradosome, a complex of RNA helicase SUPV3L1 (best known as SUV3) and the ribonuclease PNPT1 (also known as PNPase), together with G4-melting protein GRSF1, is a key player in restricting antisense mtRNAs.
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PMID:Controlling the mitochondrial antisense - role of the SUV3-PNPase complex and its co-factor GRSF1 in mitochondrial RNA surveillance. 3052 95