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Mutually Exclusive CBC-Containing Complexes Contribute to RNA Fate
Author(s) -
Simone Giacometti,
Nour El Houda Benbahouche,
Michal Domanski,
Marie-Cécile Robert,
Nicola Meola,
Michał Lubas,
Jakob Bukenborg,
Jens Andersen,
Wiebke Manuela Schulze,
Céline Verheggen,
Grzegorz Kudla,
Torben Heick Jensen,
Édouard Bertrand
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.02.046
Subject(s) - rna , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , biology , computational biology , genetics , gene
The nuclear cap-binding complex (CBC) stimulates processing reactions of capped RNAs, including their splicing, 3'-end formation, degradation, and transport. CBC effects are particular for individual RNA families, but how such selectivity is achieved remains elusive. Here, we analyze three main CBC partners known to impact different RNA species. ARS2 stimulates 3'-end formation/transcription termination of several transcript types, ZC3H18 stimulates degradation of a diverse set of RNAs, and PHAX functions in pre-small nuclear RNA/small nucleolar RNA (pre-snRNA/snoRNA) transport. Surprisingly, these proteins all bind capped RNAs without strong preferences for given transcripts, and their steady-state binding correlates poorly with their function. Despite this, PHAX and ZC3H18 compete for CBC binding and we demonstrate that this competitive binding is functionally relevant. We further show that CBC-containing complexes are short lived in vivo, and we therefore suggest that RNA fate involves the transient formation of mutually exclusive CBC complexes, which may only be consequential at particular checkpoints during RNA biogenesis.

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