Active Yeast Telomerase Shares Subunits with Ribonucleoproteins RNase P and RNase MRP
Author(s) -
Bruno Lemieux,
Nancy Laterreur,
Anna Perederina,
Jean-François Noël,
Marie-Line Dubois,
Andrey S. Krasilnikov,
Raymund J. Wellinger
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2016.04.018
Subject(s) - biology , ribonucleoprotein , rnase mrp , rnase p , telomerase , yeast , rnase ph , rnase h , protein subunit , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , rna , gene
Telomerase is the ribonucleoprotein enzyme that replenishes telomeric DNA and maintains genome integrity. Minimally, telomerase activity requires a templating RNA and a catalytic protein. Additional proteins are required for activity on telomeres in vivo. Here, we report that the Pop1, Pop6, and Pop7 proteins, known components of RNase P and RNase MRP, bind to yeast telomerase RNA and are essential constituents of the telomerase holoenzyme. Pop1/Pop6/Pop7 binding is specific and involves an RNA domain highly similar to a protein-binding domain in the RNAs of RNase P/MRP. The results also show that Pop1/Pop6/Pop7 function to maintain the essential components Est1 and Est2 on the RNA in vivo. Consistently, addition of Pop1 allows for telomerase activity reconstitution with wild-type telomerase RNA in vitro. Thus, the same chaperoning module has allowed the evolution of functionally and, remarkably, structurally distinct RNPs, telomerase, and RNases P/MRP from unrelated progenitor RNAs.
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