Eukaryotic RNA processing (L14) Flashcards

1
Q

What is the main type of eukaryotic RNAP and what does it transcribe for?

A

RNAP II and transcribes for mRNA and snRNA

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2
Q

Which eukaryotic RNAP is located in the nucleolus?

Where are the other 2 located?

A

RNAP I (transribes rRNA);

Nucleoplasm

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3
Q

Describe RNAP II initiation in eukaryotes.

A
  1. TFIID complex recognizes TATA box
  2. TFIIA promotes TBP binding to TATA
  3. TFIIB acts as a bridge b/w TBP and RNAPII
  4. TFIIE complex melts DNA at promoter
  5. TFIIF weakens interactions b/w RNAPII and nonspecific DNA binding
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4
Q

What does alpha-Amanitin do?

A

It’s a cellular toxin derived from a specific mushroom that binds and inhibits RNAP II, halting mRNA synthesis and ultimately protein synthesis.

Liver, GI tract will be severely effected, death results potentially

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5
Q

What does Actinomycin D do?

A

antibiotic compound that binds to DNA and inhibits ELONGATION of RNA transcription by RNAP.

Toxic but used in pediatric cancers

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6
Q

What are the 3 main mRNA processing events that occur?

A
  1. 5’ capping
  2. Splicing (only occurs 93% of the time)
  3. Cleavage and addition of poly-A tail
    (4. )RNA editing happens rarely
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7
Q

Describe the 5’ capping process to protect mRNA from exonucleases in eukaryotes

A

Starting from pppN1N2N3…:

  1. 5’ terminal triphosphate hydrolyzed to diphosphate (ppN1N2…)
  2. GTP condenses w/ 5’ end releasing ppi (G(5’)pppN1)
  3. SAM methylates G(5’), mRNA is transported to cytoplasm, and SAM methylates N1 & N2 at 2’ OH (m7G(5’)pppN1mN2mN3…)
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8
Q

Describe the splicing process

A
  1. 2’OH branch site on A attacks the 5’ splice site AFTER G of the 5’ splice site AG (creates lariate intermediate and separate upstream exon)
  2. 3’OH on that G attacks 3’ spice site BEFORE G of the 3’ splice site uniting both exons and separating the lariat form of the intron
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9
Q

Which small nuclear RNAs (snRNPs) are involved in splicing and how?

A

U1 snRNP binds 5’ splice site and U2 snRNP binds branch point (A-(2’OH))

U4,5,6 tri-snRNP then joins assembly to help.

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10
Q

What is systemic Lupus Erythematosus (Lupus for short)?

A

An autoimmune disease where several antibodies attack cellular components, one of them which happens to be snRNPs

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11
Q

Describe Cleavage and poly adenylation

A
  1. The cleavage signal (aka polyA site (PAS)) emerges in RNA and is recognized by PAS binding machinery and cleavage occurs 15 nt downstream.
  2. After cleavage polyA polymerase adds ~200 A’s at end of mRNA
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12
Q

Describe termination of transcription in eukaryotes

A

After polyA tail added, Xrn2 5’>3’ exonuclease degrades elongating mRNA and catches up to RNAPII (like a “torpedo”) and knocks it off causing termination

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13
Q

In nonmetastatic and normal prostate cells, what growth factor pre-mRNA exons are used?

What about cancerous, metastatic cells?

This is an example of what?

A

FGFR IIIa and IIIb (exons 7 and 8 respectively) for norm/non metastatic;

FGFR IIIa and IIIc (exons 7 and 9 respectively) for metastatic cells;

This is an example of alternate splicing. The IIIb and IIIc exons are mutually exclusive (meaning they won’t be on a processed mRNA together) and affect different ligand binding properties for FGFR mRNA.

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14
Q

What are the genetic causes of Spinal Muscular Atrophy and the molecular consequences?

A

Genetic causes: Deletion/inactivation of SMN1 gene causes reliance on SMN2 gene which is slightly mutated causing significant exon skipping and thus reduced levels of SMN protein. (SMN makes snRNPs)

Molecular consequences: Reduced lvls of SMN cause a defect in snRNP assembly, AND affects NeuroMuscular Junctions in motor neurons

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15
Q

Describe how alternate splicing affects IgG formation.

A

Initially, lymphocytes produce a long transcript that creates a membrane-bound antibody. Once this Ab recognizes an antigen, the cells produce a SHORTER transcript (due to alternate splicing) by using a different cleavage and polyadenylation site, which leads to the antibody without the hydrophobic membrane domain so it can be secreted from the cell into the blood stream.

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16
Q

Describe how RNA editing affects apoprotein B (ApoB)

A

RNA editing will change a single AA in the Apoprotein B gene which makes that codon a stop codon in the intestine.

In the liver, the full ApoB protein is there but thru RNA editing, the intestines has a smaller ApoB protein.

17
Q

What is different about tRNA in eukaryotes than in prokaryotes?

A

Eukaryotic tRNA has an intron that MUST be removed for the anticodon to function.

18
Q

What does it mean that HIV is a “retrovirus”?

A

It enters the cell as RNA but is then converted into dsDNA by their own reverse transcriptase.

19
Q

What do the Tat and Rev proteins do for HIV?

A

Tat stimulates transcription of the viral DNA, and Rev causes the viral RNA transcripts (which have introns) to leave the nucleus unspliced.

The reason for Rev is b/c if the transcript was left inside the nucleus, it would be spliced by the host mechanisms, so Rev moves the unspliced transcript to the cytoplasm where all of it can be translated.

20
Q

How does zidovudine (ZDV) work against HIV?

A

It is an analog of thymine that lacks a 3’OH for the addition of the next nt so it inhibits the viral DNAP.

21
Q

Why is it recommended that AIDS patients take a number of drugs, including more than one reverse transcriptase inhibitor?

A

The HIV virus mutates very rapidly due to its reverse transcriptase lacking 3’>5’ exonuclease (proofreading) activity so it frequently develops resistance to these drugs. So more than one is taken to reduce resistance effects.