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Discovery of a Splicing Regulator Required for Cell Cycle Progression

In the G1 phase of the cell division cycle, eukaryotic cells prepare many of the resources necessary for a new round of growth including renewal of the transcriptional and protein synthetic capacities and building the machinery for chromosome replication. The function of G1 has an early evolutionary...

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Autores principales: Suvorova, Elena S., Croken, Matthew, Kratzer, Stella, Ting, Li-Min, de Felipe, Magnolia Conde, Balu, Bharath, Markillie, Meng L., Weiss, Louis M., Kim, Kami, White, Michael W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3578776/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23437009
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1003305
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author Suvorova, Elena S.
Croken, Matthew
Kratzer, Stella
Ting, Li-Min
de Felipe, Magnolia Conde
Balu, Bharath
Markillie, Meng L.
Weiss, Louis M.
Kim, Kami
White, Michael W.
author_facet Suvorova, Elena S.
Croken, Matthew
Kratzer, Stella
Ting, Li-Min
de Felipe, Magnolia Conde
Balu, Bharath
Markillie, Meng L.
Weiss, Louis M.
Kim, Kami
White, Michael W.
author_sort Suvorova, Elena S.
collection PubMed
description In the G1 phase of the cell division cycle, eukaryotic cells prepare many of the resources necessary for a new round of growth including renewal of the transcriptional and protein synthetic capacities and building the machinery for chromosome replication. The function of G1 has an early evolutionary origin and is preserved in single and multicellular organisms, although the regulatory mechanisms conducting G1 specific functions are only understood in a few model eukaryotes. Here we describe a new G1 mutant from an ancient family of apicomplexan protozoans. Toxoplasma gondii temperature-sensitive mutant 12-109C6 conditionally arrests in the G1 phase due to a single point mutation in a novel protein containing a single RNA-recognition-motif (TgRRM1). The resulting tyrosine to asparagine amino acid change in TgRRM1 causes severe temperature instability that generates an effective null phenotype for this protein when the mutant is shifted to the restrictive temperature. Orthologs of TgRRM1 are widely conserved in diverse eukaryote lineages, and the human counterpart (RBM42) can functionally replace the missing Toxoplasma factor. Transcriptome studies demonstrate that gene expression is downregulated in the mutant at the restrictive temperature due to a severe defect in splicing that affects both cell cycle and constitutively expressed mRNAs. The interaction of TgRRM1 with factors of the tri-SNP complex (U4/U6 & U5 snRNPs) indicate this factor may be required to assemble an active spliceosome. Thus, the TgRRM1 family of proteins is an unrecognized and evolutionarily conserved class of splicing regulators. This study demonstrates investigations into diverse unicellular eukaryotes, like the Apicomplexa, have the potential to yield new insights into important mechanisms conserved across modern eukaryotic kingdoms.
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spelling pubmed-35787762013-02-22 Discovery of a Splicing Regulator Required for Cell Cycle Progression Suvorova, Elena S. Croken, Matthew Kratzer, Stella Ting, Li-Min de Felipe, Magnolia Conde Balu, Bharath Markillie, Meng L. Weiss, Louis M. Kim, Kami White, Michael W. PLoS Genet Research Article In the G1 phase of the cell division cycle, eukaryotic cells prepare many of the resources necessary for a new round of growth including renewal of the transcriptional and protein synthetic capacities and building the machinery for chromosome replication. The function of G1 has an early evolutionary origin and is preserved in single and multicellular organisms, although the regulatory mechanisms conducting G1 specific functions are only understood in a few model eukaryotes. Here we describe a new G1 mutant from an ancient family of apicomplexan protozoans. Toxoplasma gondii temperature-sensitive mutant 12-109C6 conditionally arrests in the G1 phase due to a single point mutation in a novel protein containing a single RNA-recognition-motif (TgRRM1). The resulting tyrosine to asparagine amino acid change in TgRRM1 causes severe temperature instability that generates an effective null phenotype for this protein when the mutant is shifted to the restrictive temperature. Orthologs of TgRRM1 are widely conserved in diverse eukaryote lineages, and the human counterpart (RBM42) can functionally replace the missing Toxoplasma factor. Transcriptome studies demonstrate that gene expression is downregulated in the mutant at the restrictive temperature due to a severe defect in splicing that affects both cell cycle and constitutively expressed mRNAs. The interaction of TgRRM1 with factors of the tri-SNP complex (U4/U6 & U5 snRNPs) indicate this factor may be required to assemble an active spliceosome. Thus, the TgRRM1 family of proteins is an unrecognized and evolutionarily conserved class of splicing regulators. This study demonstrates investigations into diverse unicellular eukaryotes, like the Apicomplexa, have the potential to yield new insights into important mechanisms conserved across modern eukaryotic kingdoms. Public Library of Science 2013-02-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3578776/ /pubmed/23437009 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1003305 Text en © 2013 Suvorova et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Suvorova, Elena S.
Croken, Matthew
Kratzer, Stella
Ting, Li-Min
de Felipe, Magnolia Conde
Balu, Bharath
Markillie, Meng L.
Weiss, Louis M.
Kim, Kami
White, Michael W.
Discovery of a Splicing Regulator Required for Cell Cycle Progression
title Discovery of a Splicing Regulator Required for Cell Cycle Progression
title_full Discovery of a Splicing Regulator Required for Cell Cycle Progression
title_fullStr Discovery of a Splicing Regulator Required for Cell Cycle Progression
title_full_unstemmed Discovery of a Splicing Regulator Required for Cell Cycle Progression
title_short Discovery of a Splicing Regulator Required for Cell Cycle Progression
title_sort discovery of a splicing regulator required for cell cycle progression
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3578776/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23437009
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1003305
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