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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The yeast cell nucleus has previously been shown to be divided into two regions by a variety of microscopic approaches. We used antibodies specific for the 2,2,7-trimethylguanosine cap structure of small nuclear ribonucleic acids (snRNAs) and for a protein component of
small nuclear ribonucleoprotein
particles to identify the distribution of
small nuclear ribonucleoprotein
particles within the yeast cell nucleus. These studies were performed with the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe and the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. By using immunofluorescence microscopy and immunoelectron microscopy, most of the abundant snRNAs were localized to the portion of the nucleus which has heretofore been referred to as the nucleolus. This distribution of snRNAs is different from that found in mammalian cells and suggests that the nucleolar portion of the yeast nucleus contains functional domains in addition to those associated with RNA polymerase I activity.
Mol
Cell Biol 1990 Jul
PMID:Differential distribution of factors involved in pre-mRNA processing in the yeast cell nucleus. 219 58
Biosynthetic precursors of U2 small nuclear RNA have been identified in cultured human cells by hybrid-selection of pulse-labeled RNA with cloned U2 DNA. These precursor molecules are one to approximately 16 nucleotides longer than mature U2 RNA and contain 2,2,7-trimethylguanosine "caps". The U2 RNA precursors are associated with proteins that react with a monoclonal antibody for antigens characteristic of
small nuclear ribonucleoprotein
particles. Like previously described precursors of U1 and U4 small nuclear RNAs, the pre-U2 RNAs are recovered in cytoplasmic fractions, although it is not known if this is their location in vivo. The precursors are processed to mature-size U2 RNA when cytoplasmic extracts are incubated in vitro at 37 degrees C. Mg2+ is required but ATP is not. The ribonucleoprotein structure of the pre-U2 RNA is maintained during the processing reaction in vitro, as are the 2,2,7-trimethylguanosine caps. The ribonucleoprotein organization is of major importance, as exogenous, protein-free U2 RNA precursors are degraded rapidly in the in vitro system. Two lines of evidence indicate that the conversion of U2 precursors to mature-size U2 RNA involves a 3' processing reaction. First, the reaction is unaffected by a large excess of mature U2 small nuclear RNP, whose 5' trimethylguanosine caps would be expected to compete for a 5' processing activity. Second, when pre-U2 RNA precursors are first stoichiometrically decorated with an antibody specific for 2,2,7-trimethylguanosine, the extent of subsequent processing in vitro is unaffected. These results provide the first demonstration of a eukaryotic RNA processing reaction in vitro occurring within a ribonucleoprotein particle.
J
Mol
Biol 1985 May 05
PMID:Ribonucleoprotein organization of eukaryotic RNA. XXXII. U2 small nuclear RNA precursors and their accurate 3' processing in vitro as ribonucleoprotein particles. 240 91
In somatic cells the expression of replication-dependent histone genes is coupled to the S phase of the cell cycle. However, we have found a number of novel H2a, H2b, and H3 poly(A)+ RNA species in avian haploid round spermatids. The spermatid-specific H2a and H2b 0.8-kilobase RNAs are transcribed from a subset of the replication-dependent H2a and H2b gene families. Two cDNAs derived from the spermatid-specific H2b transcripts were isolated and sequenced. The structures of these cDNAs reveal that the spermatid-specific RNAs are identical to the 0.5-kilobase poly(A)- H2b mRNAs expressed in proliferating somatic cells, except for the addition of poly(A) at the 3' ends. The site of poly(A) addition in the spermatid-specific RNAs is located 26 to 28 nucleotides 3' of the poly(A)- H2b mRNA terminus. Thus, the hairpin structures and purine-rich elements required for the U7
small nuclear ribonucleoprotein
-mediated cleavage reaction that generates the 3' ends of poly(A)- H2b mRNAs are not utilized in spermatids and are retained in the poly(A)+ H2b RNAs.
Mol
Cell Biol 1989 Mar
PMID:Expression of replication-dependent histone genes in avian spermatids involves an alternate pathway of mRNA 3'-end formation. 247 Oct 62
We have altered the specificity of U1 small nuclear RNA by replacing its 5' splice site recognition sequence (nucleotides 3 to 11) with sequences complementary to other regions of either the adenovirus E1A or the rabbit beta-globin mRNA precursor. We then used a HeLa cell transient expression assay to test whether such altered U1
small nuclear ribonucleoprotein
particles (snRNPs) could interfere with splicing of the targeted mRNA precursors. The altered U1 snRNPs were able to cause novel splicing of the E1A mRNA precursor, minor changes in the ratio of E1A 12 to 13S mRNAs, and modest nuclear accumulation of beta-globin mRNA precursors with either one of the two introns removed. Most of the altered U1 snRNPs did not affect the level of mature cytoplasmic mRNA significantly, but in one case an altered U1 snRNP (alpha 1) whose intended target was located downstream from the adenovirus E1A 12S 5' splice site was able to reduce the level of cytoplasmic 12S mRNA by approximately 60% and that of 13S mRNA by 90%. This alpha 1 snRNP induced an additional E1A splice, resulting in the appearance of 10 and 11S E1A mRNAs normally found only late in adenovirus infection. Thus, a trans-acting factor can induce alternative splicing. Surprisingly, the effects of alpha 1 on E1A splicing were not abolished by deleting the intended target sequence on the mRNA precursor.
Mol
Cell Biol 1989 Aug
PMID:A U1 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle with altered specificity induces alternative splicing of an adenovirus E1A mRNA precursor. 247 85
A comparative analysis of ribozyme, antisense RNA, and antisense DNA inhibitors of the in vitro
small nuclear ribonucleoprotein
U7-dependent histone pre-mRNA processing reaction was performed. RNA molecules complementary to the U7 sequence inhibited in vitro processing of histone pre-mRNA at a sixfold excess over U7. Single-stranded DNA complementary to the entire U7 sequence inhibited the reaction at a 60-fold excess over U7, while a short, 18-nucleotide DNA molecule complementary to the 5' end of U7 inhibited the processing reaction at a 600-fold excess. A targeted ribozyme was capable of specifically cleaving the U7
small nuclear ribonucleoprotein
in a nuclear extract and inhibited the U7-dependent processing reaction, but in our in vitro system it required a 1,000-fold excess over U7 for complete inhibition of processing.
Mol
Cell Biol 1989 Oct
PMID:Ribozyme, antisense RNA, and antisense DNA inhibition of U7 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein-mediated histone pre-mRNA processing in vitro. 247 28
Native small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) purified by several conventional procedures or reconstituted in vitro have no ribonuclease activity. However, when these same snRNPs are centrifuged in cesium chloride gradients at low [Mg2+] and in the presence of sarkosyl, an endoribonuclease is unmasked at the density of core particles (i.e. containing only the set of low molecular weight proteins common to all snRNPs), while an inhibitory component is released in soluble form. The nature of this inhibitor was not further investigated and the molecular events underlying this inhibition/activation process remained only a matter of speculation. On the other hand, evidence was obtained that the nuclease activity is carried by B-B' on the basis of its comigration with B-B' as well as with two of their cleavage products after SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of
snRNP
proteins. One was identified by a B-B'-specific monoclonal antibody. Another one, especially prominent and migrating between D and E core proteins, was identified as the N-terminal half of B-B' by microsequence analysis. Although tightly associated with core snRNPs, the activity is not dependent upon the presence of an snRNA. For the time being, the functional significance of this nuclease remains entirely elusive.
J
Mol
Biol 1989 Apr 05
PMID:B-B' proteins from small nuclear ribonucleoproteins have an endoribonuclease catalytic domain inactive in native particles. 252 74
We have studied the interaction of two of the U1
small nuclear ribonucleoprotein
(
snRNP
)-specific proteins, U1-70K and U1-A, with U1 small nuclear RNA (snRNA). The U1-70K protein is a U1-specific RNA-binding protein. Deletion and mutation analyses of a beta-galactosidase/U1-70K partial fusion protein indicated that the central portion of the protein, including the RNP sequence domain, is both necessary and sufficient for specific U1 snRNA binding in vitro. The highly conserved eight-amino-acid RNP consensus sequence was found to be essential for binding. Deletion and mutation analyses of U1 snRNA showed that both the U1-70K fusion protein and the native HeLa U1-70K protein bound directly to loop I of U1 snRNA. Binding was sequence specific, requiring 8 of the 10 bases in the loop. The U1-A
snRNP
protein also interacted specifically with U1 snRNA, principally with stem-loop II.
Mol
Cell Biol 1989 Oct
PMID:Direct, sequence-specific binding of the human U1-70K ribonucleoprotein antigen protein to loop I of U1 small nuclear RNA. 253 Dec 75
To understand how the U5
small nuclear ribonucleoprotein
(
snRNP
) interacts with other spliceosome components, its structure and binding to the U4/U6
snRNP
were analyzed. The interaction of the U5
snRNP
with the U4/U6
snRNP
was studied by separating the snRNPs in HeLa cell nuclear extracts on glycerol gradients. A complex running at 25S and containing U4, U5, and U6 but not U1 or U2 snRNAs was identified. In contrast to results with native gel electrophoresis to separate snRNPs, this U4/U5/U6
snRNP
complex requires ATP to assemble from the individual snRNPs. The structure of the U5 RNA within the U5
snRNP
and the U4/5/6
snRNP
complexes was then compared. Oligonucleotide-targeted RNase H digestion identified one RNA sequence in the U5
snRNP
capable of base pairing to other nucleic acid sequences. Chemical modification experiments identified this sequence as well as two other U5 RNA sequences as accessible to modification within the U5 RNP. One of these regions is a large loop in the U5 RNA secondary structure whose sequence is conserved from Saccharomyces cerevisiae to humans. Interestingly, no differences in modification of free U5
snRNP
as compared to U5 in the U4/U5/U6
snRNP
complex were observed, suggesting that recognition of specific RNA sequences in the U5
snRNP
is not required for U4/U5/U6
snRNP
assembly.
Mol
Cell Biol 1989 Aug
PMID:U5 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein: RNA structure analysis and ATP-dependent interaction with U4/U6. 255 94
Protection experiments with antibodies against small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) have elucidated the location of and requirements for interactions between snRNPs and human beta-globin transcripts during splicing in vitro. U2
snRNP
association with the intron branch site continues after branch formation, requires intact U2 RNA, and is affected by some alterations of the 3' splice site sequence. U2
snRNP
binding to the branched intermediate and U1
snRNP
protection of an extended 5' splice region are detected exclusively in spliceosome fractions, indicating that both snRNPs are spliceosome components. While each
snRNP
associates specifically with the pre-mRNA, they also appear to interact with each other. The recovery of fragments mapping upstream of the 5' splice site suggests how the excised exon is held in the spliceosome.
Mol
Cell Biol 1987 Jan
PMID:Multiple interactions between the splicing substrate and small nuclear ribonucleoproteins in spliceosomes. 295 86
U1 small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) are required for in vitro splicing of pre-mRNA. Sequences within U1 RNA hybridize to, and thus recognize, 5' splice junctions. We have investigated the mechanism of association of U1 snRNPs with the spliceosome. U1-specific antibodies detected U1 association with precursor RNA early during assembly. Removal of the 5' terminal sequences of U1 RNA by oligo-directed cleavage or removal of U1 snRNPs by immunoprecipitation prior to the addition of precursor RNA depressed the association of all snRNPs with precursor RNA as detected by immunoprecipitation of splicing complexes by either Sm or U1-specific antibodies. Assembly of the spliceosome as monitored by gel electrophoresis was also depressed after cleavage of U1 RNA. The dependency of Sm precipitability of precursor RNA upon the presence of U1 snRNPs suggests that U1 snRNPs participate in the early recognition of substrate RNAs by U2 to U6 snRNPs. Although removal of the 5'-terminal sequences of U1 depressed U1
snRNP
association with precursor RNA, it did not eliminate it, suggesting semistable association of U1 snRNPs with the assembling spliceosome in the absence of U1 RNA hybridization. This association was not dependent upon 5' splice junction sequences but was dependent upon 3' intronic sequences, indicating that U1 snRNPs interact with factors recognizing 3' intronic sequences. Mutual dependence of 5' and 3' recognition factors suggests significant
snRNP
-
snRNP
communication during early assembly.
Mol
Cell Biol 1987 Aug
PMID:U1 small nuclear ribonucleoproteins are required early during spliceosome assembly. 295 53
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