Literature DB >> 21628430

Pseudouridine formation in archaeal RNAs: The case of Haloferax volcanii.

Ian K Blaby1, Mrinmoyee Majumder, Kunal Chatterjee, Sujata Jana, Henri Grosjean, Valérie de Crécy-Lagard, Ramesh Gupta.   

Abstract

Pseudouridine (Ψ), the isomer of uridine, is commonly found at various positions of noncoding RNAs of all organisms. Ψ residues are formed by a number of single- or multisite specific Ψ synthases, which generally act as stand-alone proteins. In addition, in Eukarya and Archaea, specific ribonucleoprotein complexes, each containing a distinct box H/ACA guide RNA and four core proteins, can produce Ψ at many sites of different cellular RNAs. Cbf5 is the core Ψ synthase in these complexes. Using Haloferax volcanii as an archaeal model organism, we show that, contrary to eukaryotes, the Cbf5 homolog (HVO_2493) is not essential in this archaeon. The Cbf5-deleted strain of H. volcanii completely lacks Ψ at positions 1940, 1942, 2605, and 2591 (Escherichia coli positions 1915, 1917, 2572, and 2586) of its 23S rRNA, and contains reduced steady-state levels of some box H/ACA RNAs. Archaeal Cbf5 is known to have tRNA Ψ55 synthase activity in vitro but we could not confirm this activity in vivo in H. volcanii. Conversely, the Pus10 (previously PsuX) homolog (HVO_1979), which can produce tRNA Ψ55, as well as Ψ54 in vitro, is shown here to be essential in H. volcanii, whereas the corresponding tRNA Ψ55 synthases, Pus4 and TruB, are not essential in yeast and E. coli, respectively. Finally, we demonstrate that HVO_1852, the TruA/Pus3 homolog, is responsible for the pseudouridylation of position 39 in H. volcanii tRNAs and that the corresponding gene is not essential.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21628430      PMCID: PMC3138572          DOI: 10.1261/rna.2712811

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  RNA        ISSN: 1355-8382            Impact factor:   4.942


  82 in total

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  25 in total

1.  Pseudouridine-Free Escherichia coli Ribosomes.

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2.  A homozygous truncating mutation in PUS3 expands the role of tRNA modification in normal cognition.

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3.  Distinct Modified Nucleosides in tRNATrp from the Hyperthermophilic Archaeon Thermococcus kodakarensis and Requirement of tRNA m2G10/m2 2G10 Methyltransferase (Archaeal Trm11) for Survival at High Temperatures.

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4.  Differential roles of human PUS10 in miRNA processing and tRNA pseudouridylation.

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Review 5.  Pseudouridine: still mysterious, but never a fake (uridine)!

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6.  Revisiting the structure/function relationships of H/ACA(-like) RNAs: a unified model for Euryarchaea and Crenarchaea.

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7.  Evolution of Eukaryal and Archaeal Pseudouridine Synthase Pus10.

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8.  Archaeal proteins Nop10 and Gar1 increase the catalytic activity of Cbf5 in pseudouridylating tRNA.

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9.  Contribution of two conserved histidines to the dual activity of archaeal RNA guide-dependent and -independent pseudouridine synthase Cbf5.

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Review 10.  Ribonucleoproteins in archaeal pre-rRNA processing and modification.

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Journal:  Archaea       Date:  2013-03-10       Impact factor: 3.273

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