July 14th 2011
>New mechanism in the regulation of human genes
Scientists at the Technical University of Munich and the Helmholtz Zentrum Muenchen and along with their colleagues from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory EMBL in Heidelberg and the Centre for Genomic Regulation in Barcelona have discovered how the U2AF protein enables the pre-mRNA to be spliced to form the mRNA, which serves as a template for protein synthesis in the body
Splicing requires the cooperation of different proteins, ie splicing factors One such splicing factor, U2AF, was examined by the Munich scientists It consists of two structural modules and binds to the RNA near the intron-exon boundary Professor Michael Sattler, Director of the Institute for Structural Biology at the Helmholtz Zentrum Muenchen and Professor of Biomolecular NMR Spectroscopy at the Technische Universitaet Muenchen, summarizes how the U2AF protein contributes towards splicing: The spatial structure of the U2AF protein alternates between a closed and an open conformation A matching RNA sequence in the intron causes the U2AF to assume an open conformation, which activates splicing and eventually leads to the removal of the intron
The introns RNA sequence determines how effectively this conformational change can be triggered This shift of balance between the closed and the open form of the U2AF protein occurs through a process of conformational selection, ie the RNA binds to a small fraction of the open conformation that already exists even in the absence of RNA
The scientists presume that similar mechanisms balanced between a closed, inactive and an open, active conformation play an important role in the regulation of many other signal pathways in the cell
The genes in the human genome have a specific structure Sections with relevant exons alternate with regions known as introns, which contain irrelevant information that does not encode the corresponding protein In order for a protein to be produced, pre-messenger RNA pre-mRNA first has to be transcribed from the DNA The pre-mRNA copy is then spliced and the introns are removed, leaving the mRNA; which consists solely of exons Splicing requires that the introns recognized and accurately excised Splicing is thus an essential process in the central dogma of molecular biology: genetic information flows in one direction: from the DNA to RNA to proteins
Genome / gene / DNA / mRNA: Genes are the basis for the synthesis of proteins In the first step, desoxyribonucleic acid DNA is transcribed to form a messenger ribonucleic acid messenger RNA or mRNA, which in turn provides a template for protein synthesis An organisms complete set of DNA is known as a genome
Splicing / exons / introns / pre- mRNA: Exons are the DNA sections that encode the amino acid sequence of a given protein The introns, which lie between the exons, are removed in the splicing process The pre-mRNA thus is processed to a more mature mRNA
This work has been supported by funds from the European Union 3D Repertoire, Functional and Structural Genomics of Viral RNA, Alternative Splicing Network of Excellence, NIM3, the European Molecular Biology Organization EMBO, the Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles ICSN and the Conseil rgional dAquitaine France, the Austrian Science Fund FWF, the American Institute for Cancer Research AICR and the Spanish Fundacin Marcelino Botn The EU NMR LSF in Frankfurt and the Bavarian NMR Centre BNMRZ in Munich provided NMR measurement time Prof Michael Sattler is member of the Cluster of Excellence Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich CIPSM
Cameron D Mackereth, Tobias Madl, Sophie Bonnal, Bernd Simon, Katia Zanier, Alexander Gasch, Vladimir Rybin, Juan Valcrcel, Michael Sattler Multi-domain conformational selection underlies pre-mRNA splicing regulation by U2AF, Nature, Advanced online publication 13 Juli 2011 DOI: 101038/nature10171
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