Lecture 6: Post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression Flashcards
1
Q
Describe some eukaryotic Pol II post-transcriptional events
A
- RNA Pol II complex
- Possible attenuation → RNA transcript aborts
- 5’ capping, splicing, 3’ end processing
- If these systems fail → non-functional RNA sequences
- Degraded in the nucleus
- Anything that passes these is modified further → exported through the nuclear export into the cytosol.
2
Q
What do eukaryotic Pol II post-transcriptional events require?
A
- Factors that bind to the phosphorylated C-terminal domain (CTD) of RNA Pol II
- CTD of RNA Pol II comprises multiple repeats of a 7 amino acid sequence YSPTSPS.
- Phosphorylation of seryls 2 and 5 → transition from transcriptional initiation to elongation
3
Q
Describe the addition of a 5’ cap
A
- Nascent RNA transcript w triphosphate at the front
- RNA triphosphate nibbles it and removes one phosphate
- Provides a site for guanylyl transferase to cleave diphosphate of a GTP
- Cleaved diphosphate is then attached to remaining pair of phosphates → triphosphate linkage
- Methyltransferase that produces a 7-methylguanosine
- Methylation of the first (n sometimes second) ribose
4
Q
What are the enzymes involved in capping?
A
- RNA triphosphatase
- Guanylyl transferase
- Methyltransferase(s)
- All recruited by the phosphorylated CTD of Pol II.
5
Q
What are the roles of the 5’ mRNA cap?
A
- Distinguishes Pol II transcripts from other RNA molecules
- Stabilises the RNA - there is no 5’ phosphate, so it is resistant to 5’ exonucleases
- Aids in further processing (exon definition hypothesis, later) and export to the cytosol (see later)
- Required for efficient translation of mRNAs (see later)
- 5’ capping is co-ordinated with transcription
6
Q
What is the role of the 5’ mRNA cap in protection, and how does mRNA degradation begin?
A
- A 5’ cap protects mRNAs from exonuclease activity.
- Regulation of cellular mRNA levels therefore depends in part on mRNA decapping pathways.
- A multi-subunit cytosolic ATP-dependent decapping enzyme complex removes the 5’ cap
- Restores a 5’ phosphate on the mRNA. The mRNA can now no longer be bound by ribosomes and so can no longer be translated.
- The mRNA is now degraded by a 5’-3’ RNAse
7
Q
What did Thomas Cech discover when rDNA from Tetrahymena strain 6UM was hybridized to its transcript?
A
- rDNA from Tetrahymena strain 6UM was hybridised to the transcript of this region.
- After electron microscopy, a displaced strand of DNA (orange) was replaced by a DNA (blue)-RNA (green) hybrid and there was a loop characteristic of an intron (ivs, intervening sequence)
8
Q
What is an ivs?
A
9
Q
How is the intron excised from the Tetrahymena primary transcript?
A