What type of organism possess 3 RNA polymerases ?
What are the common features between all 3?
Eukaryotes
Common features:
- Are multimeric protein complexes
- Some subunits show significant homology with bacterial RNA polymerase
What is specific to RNA pol II?
Has CTD (C-terminal domain) tail on large subunit
What is the structure of the CTD tail?
Humans: YSPTSPS (52)
52 repeats of heptead-peptide sequence
*serine 5 phosphorylated during initiation (TFIIH/CDK7)
serine 2 phosphorylated after pausing (p-TEFb/CDK9)
Yeast: YSPTSPS (~26)
What must occur for nascent transcriptsas soon as transcription start to help them reach functional mRNAs?
*one of most important post-translational modification
When does the addition of the 7’ methylaguanylate CAP occur? What is its importance?
Occurs during transcriptional pause (post-initiation)
CAP = common to all mRNAs:
- protects pre-mRNA
- facilitates nuclear export
- recognition by translation factors (eIF4)
Why is RNA pol II pausing after initiation an important regulated step?
How does it occur?
What is the impact of phosphorylation of Serine 2 on the CTD?
How is the presence of introns in bacteria? yeasts? humans?
What is the importance of introns?
Bacteria = no introns
Yeast = small introns
Human = long introns
(eukaryotic genes have introns unlike bacterials genes)
Introns contain regulatory sequences (enhancers for ex)
How were introns discovered?
mRNA-DNA hybrid of the adenovirus gene → intron sequences in the DNA loop out bc no complementary regions in mRNA
Which are the highly conserved sequences of introns?
What is the spliceosome?
Large ribonucleocomplex which catalyses splicing of pre-mRNA
Consists of 5 snRNPs (small nuclear ribonucleoprotien particles)
snRNPs = snRNA (U1, U2, U3,U4, U5 or U6) + 6-10 proteins subunits
*RNA:RNA interactions required for splicing (perfect Watson-Crick base pairing)
What is the role of U1 snRNP?
Recognizes 5’ splice site of intron (GU included)
Needs perfect Watson-Crick base pairing
What is the role or U2 snRNP?
Recognizes the branch point sequence within the intron
Key role in formation of spliceosome complex
Needs perfect base pairing except for A which never base-pairs to U2 snRNA creating conformational change (bulges out)
How did researchers find out RNA:RNA interaction was absolutely required for splicing?
By introducing snRNAs that possess a compensatory mutation corresponding to the one un the pre-mRNA, splicing is restored
*Especially for U1 function
What is the role of U4/U6 and U5 snRNAs?
They for an tri-snRNP complex
Stabilize the spliceosomal complex, facilitating the catalytic steps of splicing
Which reactions are involved in intron splicing?
2 trans-esterification reactions: (lariat formation + 2 exons connecting)
VOIR SCREENSHOT
How can the splicing reaction be visualized in vitro?
Using radiolabelled RNA substrate (probes)
Each intermediate splcing product can be separated and quantified in polyacrylamide gel
- 3’-Exon + lariat = most heavy
- lariat by itself (bc longggg introns)
- 2 exons not rlly linked
- final mRNA (2 exons linked by phosphodiester bond)
- 5’-exon by itself detached between the 2 steps
What are the important steps of the spliceosome cycle?
Is the splicing reaction ATP-dependent?
NO, no energy expenditure
But snRNP binding/assembly of the spliceosome is ATP-dependent
How can self-splicing be possible?
Normal splicing = snRNA + proteins = Spliceosome
Self-splicing = only snRNAs meaning RNA must have some catalytic function (ex: as long as have Mg in the mix)
Seen in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, columns = pronase, proteinase K (strong proteasome chewing up all proteins)
Can still see a circular lariat trait and a linear exons trait
What is special with self-splicing group II introns? Where are they present?
They form structure resembling the spliceosome
Now only present in mitochondria and chloroplast genes, but may be evolutionary predecessors of other introns
*Still have snRNAs
What is the importance of the phosphorylation of Serines 2 on the CTD?
It is recognized by proteins and enzymes involved in subsequent RNA processing → capping, splicing, polyadenylation
pre-mRNA → mRNA
When does processing of pre-mRNA to mRNA starts?
It starts as pre-mRNA gets out of the transcriptional complex
Splicing is often co-transcriptional