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A well-connected and conserved nucleoplasmic
helicase is required forproduction of box C/D and H/ACA snoRNAs and localization
of snoRNP proteins
King TH, Decatur WA, Bertrand E, Maxwell ES, Fournier MJ
MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY 21 (22): 7731-7746 NOV 2001
Abstract:
Biogenesis of small nucleolar RNA-protein complexes (snoRNPs) consists
of synthesis of the snoRNA and protein components, snoRNP assembly, and
localization to the nucleolus. Recently, two nucleoplasmic proteins from
mice were observed to bind to a model box C/D snoRNA in vitro, suggesting
that they function at an early stage in snoRNP biogenesis. Both proteins
have been described in other contexts. The proteins, called p50 and p55
in the snoRNA binding study, are highly conserved and related to each
other. Both have Walker A and B motifs characteristic of ATP- and GTP-binding
and nucleoside triphosphate-hydrolyzing domains, and the mammalian orthologs
have DNA helicase activity in vitro. Here, we report that the Saccharomyces
cerevisiae ortholog of p50 (Rvb2, Tih2p, and other names) is required
for production of C/D snoRNAs in vivo and, surprisingly, H/ACA snoRNAs
as well. Point mutations in the Walker A and B motifs cause temperature-sensitive
or lethal growth phenotypes and severe defects in snoRNA accumulation.
Notably, depletion of p50 (called Rvb2 in this study) also impairs localization
of CID and H/ACA core snoRNP proteins Nop1p and Gar1p, suggesting a defect(s)
in snoRNP assembly or trafficking to the nucleolus. Findings from other
studies link Rvb2 orthologs with chromatin remodeling and transcription.
Taken together, the present results indicate that Rvb2 is involved in
an early stage of snoRNP biogenesis and may play a role in coupling snoRNA
synthesis with snoRNP assembly and localization.
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