Literature DB >> 18177749

Polynucleotide phosphorylase and the archaeal exosome as poly(A)-polymerases.

Shimyn Slomovic1, Victoria Portnoy, Shlomit Yehudai-Resheff, Ela Bronshtein, Gadi Schuster.   

Abstract

The addition of poly(A)-tails to RNA is a phenomenon common to almost all organisms. Not only homopolymeric poly(A)-tails, comprised exclusively of adenosines, but also heteropolymeric poly(A)-rich extensions, which include the other three nucleotides as well, have been observed in bacteria, archaea, chloroplasts, and human cells. Polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) and the archaeal exosome, which bear strong similarities to one another, both functionally and structurally, were found to polymerize the heteropolymeric tails in bacteria, spinach chloroplasts, and archaea. As phosphorylases, these enzymes use diphosphate nucleotides as substrates and can reversibly polymerize or degrade RNA, depending on the relative concentrations of nucleotides and inorganic phosphate. A possible scenario, illustrating the evolution of RNA polyadenylation and its related functions, is presented, in which PNPase (or the archaeal exosome) was the first polyadenylating enzyme to evolve and the heteropolymeric tails that it produced, functioned in a polyadenylation-stimulated RNA degradation pathway. Only at a later stage in evolution, did the poly(A)-polymerases that use only ATP as a substrate, hence producing homopolymeric adenosine extensions, arise. Following the appearance of homopolymeric tails, a new role for polyadenylation evolved; RNA stability. This was accomplished by utilizing stable poly(A)-tails associated with the mature 3' ends of transcripts. Today, stable polyadenylation coexists with unstable heteropolymeric and homopolymeric tails. Therefore, the heteropolymeric poly(A)-rich tails, observed in bacteria, organelles, archaea, and human cells, represent an ancestral stage in the evolution of polyadenylation.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18177749     DOI: 10.1016/j.bbagrm.2007.12.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta        ISSN: 0006-3002


  25 in total

1.  Megadalton complexes in the chloroplast stroma of Arabidopsis thaliana characterized by size exclusion chromatography, mass spectrometry, and hierarchical clustering.

Authors:  Paul Dominic B Olinares; Lalit Ponnala; Klaas J van Wijk
Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2010-04-26       Impact factor: 5.911

2.  Addition of poly(A) and poly(A)-rich tails during RNA degradation in the cytoplasm of human cells.

Authors:  Shimyn Slomovic; Ella Fremder; Raymond H G Staals; Ger J M Pruijn; Gadi Schuster
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-04-05       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Large scale comparative proteomics of a chloroplast Clp protease mutant reveals folding stress, altered protein homeostasis, and feedback regulation of metabolism.

Authors:  Boris Zybailov; Giulia Friso; Jitae Kim; Andrea Rudella; Verenice Ramírez Rodríguez; Yukari Asakura; Qi Sun; Klaas J van Wijk
Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2009-08       Impact factor: 5.911

Review 4.  RNA turnover and chromatin-dependent gene silencing.

Authors:  Marc Bühler
Journal:  Chromosoma       Date:  2008-11-21       Impact factor: 4.316

5.  The poly(A)-dependent degradation pathway of rpsO mRNA is primarily mediated by RNase R.

Authors:  José M Andrade; Eliane Hajnsdorf; Philippe Régnier; Cecília M Arraiano
Journal:  RNA       Date:  2008-12-22       Impact factor: 4.942

Review 6.  The RNA exosome and proteasome: common principles of degradation control.

Authors:  Debora L Makino; Felix Halbach; Elena Conti
Journal:  Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2013-08-29       Impact factor: 94.444

7.  Landscape of RNA polyadenylation in E. coli.

Authors:  Alexandre Maes; Céline Gracia; Nicolas Innocenti; Kaiyang Zhang; Erik Aurell; Eliane Hajnsdorf
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2017-03-17       Impact factor: 16.971

Review 8.  Bacterial/archaeal/organellar polyadenylation.

Authors:  Bijoy K Mohanty; Sidney R Kushner
Journal:  Wiley Interdiscip Rev RNA       Date:  2011 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 9.957

9.  S1 and KH domains of polynucleotide phosphorylase determine the efficiency of RNA binding and autoregulation.

Authors:  Alexander G Wong; Kristina L McBurney; Katharine J Thompson; Leigh M Stickney; George A Mackie
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2013-03-01       Impact factor: 3.490

10.  Through ancient rings thread programming strings.

Authors:  Martyn F Symmons; Ben F Luisi
Journal:  Structure       Date:  2009-11-11       Impact factor: 5.006

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