| Literature DB >> 26585389 |
Valentina Ahl1, Heiko Keller1, Steffen Schmidt1, Oliver Weichenrieder2.
Abstract
The Alu element is the most successful human genomic parasite affecting development and causing disease. It originated as a retrotransposon during early primate evolution of the gene encoding the signal recognition particle (SRP) RNA. We defined a minimal Alu RNA sufficient for effective retrotransposition and determined a high-resolution structure of its complex with the SRP9/14 proteins. The RNA adopts a compact, closed conformation that matches the envelope of the SRP Alu domain in the ribosomal translation elongation factor-binding site. Conserved structural elements in SRP RNAs support an ancient function of the closed conformation that predates SRP9/14. Structure-based mutagenesis shows that retrotransposition requires the closed conformation of the Alu ribonucleoprotein particle and is consistent with the recognition of stalled ribosomes. We propose that ribosome stalling is a common cause for the cis-preference of the mammalian L1 retrotransposon and for the efficiency of the Alu RNA in hijacking nascent L1 reverse transcriptase.Entities:
Keywords: LINE; RNA structure; SINE; mobile DNA; molecular evolution; translational control
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26585389 DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2015.10.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell ISSN: 1097-2765 Impact factor: 17.970