L13 Eukaryotic Transcript Processing Flashcards
Genes transcribed by RNA pol1
See OneNote
- core RNA pol complex and GTFs
- ribosomal RNA (rNRA) genes except 5S (RNA pol3)
RNA pol 1 has its own GTF but shares the TBP
Genes transcribed by RNA pol3
See OneNote
- core RNA pol complex and GTFs: TF2A,B,C
- TF2B has TBP as a component
- small RNAs: 5S RNA, snRNAs, snoRNAs, gRNAs
RNA pol 3 has its own GTFs
Like RNA pol 1 and 2, has TBP as its core component
Primary transcript processing
See OneNote diagram
- coordinately processed in the nucleus
- capping, splicing, polyadenylation and termination
- different functions depend on phosphorylation of CTD
RNA pol2 recruits RNA processing enzymes via CTD
See OneNote diagram
CTD = repeats of 7 aa in C-terminus of large RNA pol2 subunit
- phosphorylated by GTFs
Phosphorylation at serine 5 drives capping reaction
Phosphorylation at serine 2 drives splicing process
Kinase adds phosphate
Specific enzymes target specific aa in the heptamer repeat
Phosphorylation allows for recruitment of different proteins during different states
Involves machinery that recognises modification of CTD
Formation of 5’ mRNA cap
See onenote diagram
- 7 methyl guanine
- triphosphate bound
- 5’ hydroxyl group
5’ end of eukaryotic mRNA
- G added on backwards => ends up with a triphosphate bond and a hydroxyl group that sticks out, no 5’ phosphate to be degraded by endogenous nucleases
- Methylation of guanine
- Specific enzymes recruited to the complex by serine 5 phosphorylation
Transcription termination
See onenote diagram
CTD no longer phosphorylated, CstF and CPSF initially binds to CTD
CstF and CPSF then binds to polyA sequence once it has been transcribed
CstF clips RNA
polyA pol - template independent pol that adds A’s to 3’ end
Poly A binding protein stabilises poly A tail
Length of tail can vary significantly
Longer poly A tail = longer half life
Transcription termination - Rat1/hXrn2
See onenote diagram
For RNA pol2 dissociation:
Rat1/hXrn2 bound to RNA pol complex
Clipping leads to uncapped end (no serine 5 phosphorylation => no capping machinery)
Rat1/hXrn2 chews away the transcript and the RNA pol dissociates
Clipping itself can destabilise the complex and the RNA pol falls off
Transcript splicing
See onenote diagram
Spliceosome catalyses intron splicing
- complex consists of: 150 proteins, 5 small nuclear RNAs (U1,U2,U4/U6,U5 snRNAs)
- snRNAs associate with proteins to form snRNPs (small nuclear ribonucleoproteins - Snurps)
- snRNPs bind in succession to pre-mRNA
5’ splice site consensus sequence = GU-purine-AGU
3’ splice site consensus sequence = CAG
branch site
Transcript splicing mechanism
See onenote diagram
The role of snRNPs - “Snurps”
- recognise 5’ splice site and branch site: determine specificity of splicing
- bring together 5’ splice site and the branch site
- catalyse RNA cleavage and joining reactions
snRNA
See onenote diagram
- snRNA molecules provide the specificity of spliceosomal intron splicing
- snRNA recognises specific sequences by complementary base-pairing
Splicing errors
See onenote diagram
e.g. Thalassemia diseases
- proteins can interact with introns and exons to help define these and assist in accurate splicing
- particularly important for genes with very large introns, If introns are large, exons that need to be joined may be far apart
- exon skipping
- cryptic splice site selection
SR = splice regulators, bind to exonic material
hnRNPs
Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs) are complexes of RNA and protein present in the cell nucleus during gene transcription and subsequent post-transcriptional modification of the newly synthesized RNA (pre-mRNA). The presence of the proteins bound to a pre-mRNA molecule serves as a signal that the pre-mRNA is not yet fully processed and therefore not ready for export to the cytoplasm.
3 types of RNA splicing
See onenote diagram
- major
- U12-type
- trans
trans-splicing
See onennote diagram
- generally rare but in Trypanosomes all mRNAs are trans-spliced
- allows a common region to be attached
If you want to put the same domain on many other proteins
Leader exon
- Proteins that you want to direct to a particular location in a cell e.g. traverse/tether itself to a membrane
- Only need one leader sequence instead of 5 individual leader sequence