Publications

2011

Daugeron MC, Lenstra TL, Frizzarin M, El Yacoubi B, Liu X, Baudin-Baillieu A, Lijnzaad P, Decourty L, Saveanu C, Jacquier A, Holstege FC, de Crécy-Lagard V, van Tilbeurgh H, Libri D, (2011), Gcn4 misregulation reveals a direct role for the evolutionary conserved EKC/KEOPS in the t6A modification of tRNAs, Nucleic Acids Res, ,

[PubMed][Abstract]
The EKC/KEOPS complex is universally conserved in Archaea and Eukarya and has been implicated in several cellular processes, including transcription, telomere homeostasis and genomic instability. However, the molecular function of the complex has remained elusive so far. We analyzed the transcriptome of EKC/KEOPS mutants and observed a specific profile that is highly enriched in targets of the Gcn4p transcriptional activator. GCN4 expression was found to be activated at the translational level in mutants via the defective recognition of the inhibitory upstream ORFs (uORFs) present in its leader. We show that EKC/KEOPS mutants are defective for the N6-threonylcarbamoyl adenosine modification at position 37 (t(6)A(37)) of tRNAs decoding ANN codons, which affects initiation at the inhibitory uORFs and provokes Gcn4 de-repression. Structural modeling reveals similarities between Kae1 and bacterial enzymes involved in carbamoylation reactions analogous to t(6)A(37) formation, supporting a direct role for the EKC in tRNA modification. These findings are further supported by strong genetic interactions of EKC mutants with a translation initiation factor and with threonine biosynthesis genes. Overall, our data provide a novel twist to understanding the primary function of the EKC/KEOPS and its impact on several essential cellular functions like transcription and telomere homeostasis.

2010

Yao Y, Demoinet E, Saveanu C, Lenormand P, Jacquier A, Fromont-Racine M, (2010), Ecm1 is a new pre-ribosomal factor involved in pre-60S particle export., RNA, 16(5), 1007-1017

[PubMed][Abstract]
In eukaryotes, ribosome biogenesis is a highly conserved process that starts in the nucleus and ends in the cytoplasm. In actively growing yeast cells, it is estimated that each nuclear pore complex (NPC) contributes to the export of about 25 pre-ribosomal particles per minute. Such an extremely active process requires several redundant export receptors for the pre-60S particles. Here, we report the identification of a novel pre-60S factor, Ecm1, which partially acts like Arx1 and becomes essential when the NPC function is affected. Ecm1 depletion, combined with the deletion of NPC components led to pre-60S retention in the nucleus. Functional links that we identified between Ecm1, 60S biogenesis, pre-60S export, and the NPC were correlated with physical interactions of Ecm1 with pre-60S particles and nucleoporins. These results support that Ecm1 is an additional factor involved in pre-60S export. While Ecm1 and Arx1 have redundant functions, overproduction of either one could not complement the absence of the other, whereas overproduction of Mex67 was able to partially restore the growth defect resulting from the absence of Ecm1 or Arx1. These data highlight the involvement of many factors acting together to export pre-60S particles.

2009

Malabat C, Clément-Ziza M, Weber C, Moszer I, Aittokallio T, Letondal C, Rousseau S., (2009), Genoscape: a Cytoscape plug-in to automate the retrieval and integration of gene expression data and molecular networks, Bioinformatics, 25(19), 2617-8

[PubMed][Abstract]
Genoscape is an open-source Cytoscape plug-in that visually integrates gene expression data sets from GenoScript, a transcriptomic database, and KEGG pathways into Cytoscape networks. The generated visualisation highlights gene expression changes and their statistical significance. The plug-in also allows one to browse GenoScript or import transcriptomic data from other sources through tab-separated text files. Genoscape has been successfully used by researchers to investigate the results of gene expression profiling experiments. AVAILABILITY: Genoscape is an open-source software freely available from the Genoscape webpage (http://www.pasteur.fr/recherche/unites/Gim/genoscape/). Installation instructions and tutorial can also be found at this URL.

Holbein S, Wengi A, Decourty L, Freimoser FM, Jacquier A, Dichtl B, (2009), Cordycepin interferes with 3\’ end formation in yeast independently of its potential to terminate RNA chain elongation, RNA, 15(5), 837-49

[PubMed][Abstract]
Cordycepin (3\’ deoxyadenosine) is a biologically active compound that, when incorporated during RNA synthesis in vitro, provokes chain termination due to the absence of a 3\’ hydroxyl moiety. We were interested in the effects mediated by this drug in vivo and analyzed its impact on RNA metabolism of yeast. Our results support the view that cordycepin-triphosphate (CoTP) is the toxic component that is limiting cell growth through inhibition of RNA synthesis. Unexpectedly, cordycepin treatment modulated 3\’ end heterogeneity of ACT1 and ASC1 mRNAs and rapidly induced extended transcripts derived from CYH2 and NEL025c loci. Moreover, cordycepin ameliorated the growth defects of poly(A) polymerase mutants and the pap1-1 mutation neutralized the effects of the drug on gene expression. Our observations are consistent with an epistatic relationship between poly(A) polymerase function and cordycepin action and suggest that a major mode of cordycepin activity reduces 3\’ end formation efficiency independently of its potential to terminate RNA chain elongation. Finally, chemical-genetic profiling revealed genome-wide pathways linked to cordycepin activity and identified novel genes involved in poly(A) homeostasis.

Helen Neil, Christophe Malabat, Yves d\’Aubenton-Carafa, Zhenyu Xu, Lars M Steinmetz, Alain Jacquier, (2009), Widespread bidirectional promoters are the major source of cryptic transcripts in yeast., Nature, 457(7232), 1038-42

[PubMed][Abstract]
Pervasive and hidden transcription is widespread in eukaryotes, but its global level, the mechanisms from which it originates and its functional significance are unclear. Cryptic unstable transcripts (CUTs) were recently described as a principal class of RNA polymerase II transcripts in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. These transcripts are targeted for degradation immediately after synthesis by the action of the Nrd1-exosome-TRAMP complexes. Although CUT degradation mechanisms have been analysed in detail, the genome-wide distribution at the nucleotide resolution and the prevalence of CUTs are unknown. Here we report the first high-resolution genomic map of CUTs in yeast, revealing a class of potentially functional CUTs and the intrinsic bidirectional nature of eukaryotic promoters. An RNA fraction highly enriched in CUTs was analysed by a 3\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\’ Long-SAGE (serial analysis of gene expression) approach adapted to deep sequencing. The resulting detailed genomic map of CUTs revealed that they derive from extremely widespread and very well defined transcription units and do not result from unspecific transcriptional noise. Moreover, the transcription of CUTs predominantly arises within nucleosome-free regions, most of which correspond to promoter regions of bona fide genes. Some of the CUTs start upstream from messenger RNAs and overlap their 5\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\’ end. Our study of glycolysis genes, as well as recent results from the literature, indicate that such concurrent transcription is potentially associated with regulatory mechanisms. Our data reveal numerous new CUTs with such a potential regulatory role. However, most of the identified CUTs corresponded to transcripts divergent from the promoter regions of genes, indicating that they represent by-products of divergent transcription occurring at many and possibly most promoters. Eukaryotic promoter regions are thus intrinsically bidirectional, a fundamental property that escaped previous analyses because in most cases divergent transcription generates short-lived unstable transcripts present at very low steady-state levels.

2008

Marilyne Thiebautn, Jessie Colin, Helen Neil, Alain Jacquier, Bertrand Séraphin, François Lacroute and Domenico Libri, (2008), Futile cycle of transcription initiation and termination modulates the response to nucleotide shortage in S. cerevisiae, Mol Cell, 31 (5), 671-682

[PubMed][Abstract]
Hidden transcription in eukaryotes carries a large potential of regulatory functions that are only recently beginning to emerge. Cryptic unstable transcripts (CUTs) are generated by RNA polymerase II (Pol II) and rapidly degraded after transcription in wild-type yeast cells. Whether CUTs or the act of transcription without RNA production have a function is presently unclear. We describe here a nonconventional mechanism of transcriptional regulation that relies on the selection of alternative transcription start sites to generate CUTs or mRNAs. Transcription from TATA box proximal start sites generates unstable transcripts and downregulates expression of the URA2 gene under repressing conditions. Uracil deprivation activates selection of distal start sites, leading to the production of stable mRNAs. We describe the elements that govern degradation of the CUT and activation of mRNA production by downstream transcription initiation. Importantly, we show that a similar mechanism applies to other genes in the nucleotides biogenesis pathway.

Alice Lebreton, Jean-Claude Rousselle, Pascal Lenormand, Abdelkader Namane, Alain Jacquier, Micheline Fromont-Racine and Cosmin Saveanu, (2008), 60S ribosomal subunit assembly dynamics defined by semi-quantitative mass spectrometry of purified complexes, Nucleic Acids Res, 36(15), 4988–99

[PubMed][Abstract]
During the highly conserved process of eukaryotic ribosome formation, RNA follows a maturation path with well-defined, successive intermediates that dynamically associate with many pre-ribosomal proteins. A comprehensive description of the assembly process is still lacking. To obtain data on the timing and order of association of the different pre-ribosomal factors, a strategy consists in the use of pre-ribsomal particles isolated from mutants that block ribosome formation at different steps. Immunoblots, inherently limited to only a few factors, have been applied to evaluate the accumulation or decrease of pre-ribosomal intermediates under mutant conditions. For a global protein-level description of different 60S ribosomal subunit maturation intermediates in yeast, we have adapted a method of in vivo isotopic labelling and mass spectrometry to study pre-60S complexes isolated from strains in which rRNA processing was affected by individual depletion of five factors: Ebp2, Nog1, Nsa2, Nog2 or Pop3. We obtained quantitative data for 45 distinct pre-60S proteins and detected coordinated changes for over 30 pre-60S factors in the analysed mutants. These results led to the characterisation of the composition of early, intermediate and late pre-ribosomal complexes, specific for crucial maturation steps during 60S assembly in eukaryotes.

Laura Milligan, Laurence Decourty, Cosmin Saveanu, Juri Rappsilber, Hugo Ceulemans, Alain Jacquier, David Tollervey, (2008), A yeast exosome cofactor Mpp6 functions in RNA surveillance and in the degradation of ncRNA transcripts., Mol Cell Biol, 28(17), 5446–57

[PubMed][Abstract]
A genome-wide screen for synthetic lethal (sl) interactions with loss of the nuclear exosome cofactors Rrp47/Lrp1 or Air1 identified 3\\\’->5\\\’ exonucleases, the THO complex required for mRNP assembly and Ynr024w (Mpp6). Sl-interactions with mpp6Delta were confirmed for rrp47Delta and nuclear exosome component Rrp6. Bioinformatic analyses revealed homology between Mpp6 and a human exosome cofactor, underlining the high conservation of the RNA surveillance system. Mpp6 is an RNA binding protein that physically associates with the exosome and was localized throughout the nucleus. Functional analyses demonstrated roles for Mpp6 in the surveillance of both pre-rRNA and pre-mRNAs, and in the degradation of \\\”cryptic\\\” non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) derived from intergenic regions and the rDNA spacer heterochromatin. Strikingly, these ncRNAs are also targeted by other exosome cofactors Rrp47, the TRAMP complex (which includes Air1) and the Nrd1/Nab3 complex, and are degraded by both Rrp6 and the core exosome. Heterochromatic transcripts and other ncRNAs are characterized by very rapid degradation and we predict that functional redundancy is an important feature of ncRNA metabolism.

Laurence Decourty, Cosmin Saveanu, Kenza Zemam, Florence Hantraye, Emmanuel Frachon, Jean-Claude Rousselle, Micheline Fromont-Racine, Alain Jacquier, (2008), Linking functionally related genes by sensitive and quantitative characterization of genetic interaction profiles., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 105, 5821–5826

[PubMed][Abstract]
Describing at a genomic scale how mutations in different genes influence one another is essential to the understanding of how genotype correlates with phenotype and remains a major challenge in biology. Previous studies pointed out the need for accurate measurements of not only synthetic but also buffering interactions in the characterization of genetic networks and functional modules. We developed a sensitive and efficient method that allows such measurements at a genomic scale in yeast. In a pilot experiment (41 genome-wide screens), we quantified the fitness of 140,000 double deletion strains relative to the corresponding single mutants and identified many genetic interactions. In addition to synthetic growth defects (validated experimentally with factors newly identified as genetically interfering with mRNA degradation), most of the identified genetic interactions measured weak epistatic effects. These weak effects, rarely meaningful when considered individually, were crucial to defining specific signatures for many gene deletions and had a major contribution in defining clusters of functionally related genes.

2007

Axel B Berger, Laurence Decourty, Gwenael Badis, Ulf Nehrbass, Alain Jacquier, Olivier Gadal, (2007), Hmo1 is required for TOR-dependent regulation of ribosomal protein gene transcription., Mol Cell Biol, 27, 8015–8026

[PubMed][Abstract]
Ribosome biogenesis requires equimolar amounts of four rRNAs and all 79 ribosomal proteins (RP). Coordinated regulation of rRNA and RP synthesis by eukaryotic RNA polymerases (Pol) I, III, and II is a key requirement for growth control. Using a novel global genetic approach, we showed that the absence of Hmo1 becomes lethal when combined with mutations of components of either the RNA Pol II or Pol I transcription machineries, of specific RP, or of the TOR pathway. Hmo1 directly interacts with both the region transcribed by Pol I and a subset of RP gene promoters. Down-regulation of Hmo1 expression affects RP gene expression. Upon TORC1 inhibition, Hmo1 dissociates from ribosomal DNA (rDNA) and some RP gene promoters simultaneously. Finally, in the absence of Hmo1, TOR-dependent repression of RP genes is alleviated. Therefore, we show here that Saccharomyces cerevisiae Hmo1 is directly involved in coordinating rDNA transcription by Pol I and RP gene expression by Pol II under the control of the TOR pathway.

Emilie Demoinet, Alain Jacquier, Georges Lutfalla, Micheline Fromont-Racine, (2007), The Hsp40 chaperone Jjj1 is required for the nucleo-cytoplasmic recycling of preribosomal factors in Saccharomyces cerevisiae., RNA, 13, 1570–1581

[PubMed][Abstract]
Ribosome biogenesis is a major conserved cellular pathway that requires both ribosomal proteins and many preribosomal factors. Most of the pre-60S factors are recycled into the nucleus; some of them shuttle between the nucleus and the cytoplasm while a few others, like Rei1, are strictly cytoplasmic and are mostly involved in the dissociation/recycling of the pre-60S shuttling factors. Here, we investigated the role of the Jjj1 Hsp40 chaperone in ribosome biogenesis. The absence of Jjj1 leads to a cold sensitive phenotype, a defect in the relative amount of the large ribosomal subunit with the appearance of halfmers, and to cytoplasmic accumulation of shuttling factors such as Arx1 and Alb1, which stay bound to the pre-60S particles. Jjj1 is, thus, a novel pre-60S factor involved in the last cytoplasmic steps of the large ribosomal subunit biogenesis. We report the biochemical association of Jjj1 and Rei1 to similar pre-60S complexes, their two-hybrid interactions, and their functional links. Altogether, these results indicate that Rei1 and Jjj1 share many common features. However, while the functions of Jjj1 and Rei1 partially overlap, we could distinguish specific role of the two proteins in Arx1/Alb1 and Tif6 recycling. We propose that Jjj1 is preferentially required for the release of Arx1 and Alb1 shuttling factors from the cytoplasmic pre-60S particles while Rei1 is preferentially involved in their recycling.

Brigitte Pertschy, Cosmin Saveanu, Gertrude Zisser, Alice Lebreton, Martin Tengg, Alain Jacquier, Eva Liebminger, Berthold Nobis, Lisa Kappel, Ida van der Klei, Gregor Hägenauer, Micheline Fromont-Racine, Helmut Bergler, (2007), Cytoplasmic recycling of 60S preribosomal factors depends on the AAA protein Drg1., Mol Cell Biol, 27, 6581–6592

[PubMed][Abstract]
Allelic forms of DRG1/AFG2 confer resistance to the drug diazaborine, an inhibitor of ribosome biogenesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Our results show that the AAA-ATPase Drg1 is essential for 60S maturation and associates with 60S precursor particles in the cytoplasm. Functional inactivation of Drg1 leads to an increased cytoplasmic localization of shuttling pre-60S maturation factors like Rlp24, Arx1, and Tif6. Surprisingly, Nog1, a nuclear pre-60S factor, was also relocalized to the cytoplasm under these conditions, suggesting that it is a previously unsuspected shuttling preribosomal factor that is exported with the precursor particles and very rapidly reimported. Proteins that became cytoplasmic under drg1 mutant conditions were blocked on pre-60S particles at a step that precedes the association of Rei1, a later-acting preribosomal factor. A similar cytoplasmic accumulation of Nog1 and Rlp24 in pre-60S-bound form could be seen after overexpression of a dominant-negative Drg1 variant mutated in the D2 ATPase domain. We conclude that the ATPase activity of Drg1 is required for the release of shuttling proteins from the pre-60S particles shortly after their nuclear export. This early cytoplasmic release reaction defines a novel step in eukaryotic ribosome maturation.

Sandrine Boisset, Thomas Geissmann, Eric Huntzinger, Pierre Fechter, Nadia Bendridi, Maria Possedko, Clément Chevalier, Anne Catherine Helfer, Yvonne Benito, Alain Jacquier, Christine Gaspin, François Vandenesch, Pascale Romby, (2007), Staphylococcus aureus RNAIII coordinately represses the synthesis of virulence factors and the transcription regulator Rot by an antisense mechanism., Genes Dev, 21, 1353–1366

[PubMed][Abstract]
RNAIII is the intracellular effector of the quorum-sensing system in Staphylococcus aureus. It is one of the largest regulatory RNAs (514 nucleotides long) that are known to control the expression of a large number of virulence genes. Here, we show that the 3\’ domain of RNAIII coordinately represses at the post-transcriptional level, the expression of mRNAs that encode a class of virulence factors that act early in the infection process. We demonstrate that the 3\’ domain acts primarily as an antisense RNA and rapidly anneals to these mRNAs, forming long RNA duplexes. The interaction between RNAIII and the mRNAs results in repression of translation initiation and triggers endoribonuclease III hydrolysis. These processes are followed by rapid depletion of the mRNA pool. In addition, we show that RNAIII and its 3\’ domain mediate translational repression of rot mRNA through a limited number of base pairings involving two loop-loop interactions. Since Rot is a transcriptional regulatory protein, we proposed that RNAIII indirectly acts on many downstream genes, resulting in the activation of the synthesis of several exoproteins. These data emphasize the multitude of regulatory steps affected by RNAIII and its 3\’ domain in establishing a network of S. aureus virulence factors.

Cosmin Saveanu, Jean-Claude Rousselle, Pascal Lenormand, Abdelkader Namane, Alain Jacquier, Micheline Fromont-Racine, (2007), The p21-activated protein kinase inhibitor Skb15 and its budding yeast homologue are 60S ribosome assembly factors., Mol Cell Biol, 27, 2897–2909

[PubMed][Abstract]
Ribosome biogenesis is driven by a large number of preribosomal factors that associate with and dissociate from the preribosomal particles along the maturation pathway. We have previously shown that budding yeast Mak11, whose homologues in other eukaryotes were described as modulating a p21-activated protein kinase function, accumulates in Rlp24-associated pre-60S complexes when their maturation is impeded in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The functional inactivation of WD40 repeat protein Mak11 interfered with the 60S rRNA maturation, led to a cell cycle delay in G(1), and blocked green fluorescent protein-tagged Rpl25 in the nucleoli of yeast cells, indicating an early role of Mak11 in ribosome assembly. Surprisingly, Mak11 inactivation also led to a dramatic destabilization of Rlp24. The suppression of the thermosensitive phenotype of a mak11 mutant by RLP24 overexpression and a direct in vitro interaction between Rlp24 and Mak11 suggest that Mak11 acts as an Rlp24 cofactor during early steps of 60S ribosomal subunit assembly. Moreover, we found that Skb15, the Mak11 homologue in Schizosaccharomyces pombe, also associated with preribosomes and affected 60S biogenesis in fission yeast. It is thus likely that the previously observed phenotypes for MAK11 homologues in other eukaryotes are secondary to the main function of these proteins in ribosome formation.

Olivier Garcia, Cosmin Saveanu, Melissa Cline, Micheline Fromont-Racine, Alain Jacquier, Benno Schwikowski, Tero Aittokallio, (2007), GOlorize: a Cytoscape plug-in for network visualization with Gene Ontology-based layout and coloring., Bioinformatics, 23, 394–396

[PubMed][Abstract]
We have implemented a graph layout algorithm that exposes Gene Ontology (GO) class structure on the network nodes. It can be used in conjunction with BiNGO plug-in to Cytoscape, which finds the GO categories over-represented in a given network. Our plug-in, named GOlorize, first highlights the class members with category-specific color-coding and then constructs an enhanced visualization of the network using a class-directed layout algorithm. Availability: http://www.cytoscape.org/plugins2.php. Supplementary information: Installation instructions and tutorial at http://www.cytoscape.org/plugins/GOlorize/GOlorizeUserGuide.pdf.

2006

Alice Lebreton, Cosmin Saveanu, Laurence Decourty, Alain Jacquier, Micheline Fromont-Racine, (2006), Nsa2 is an unstable, conserved factor required for the maturation of 27 SB pre-rRNAs., J Biol Chem, 281, 27099–27108

[PubMed][Abstract]
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a large variety of pre-ribosomal factors have been identified recently, a number of which are still of unknown function. The essential pre-ribosomal 30-kDa protein, Nsa2, was characterized as one of the most conserved proteins from yeast to human. We show here that the expression of the human orthologue TINP1 complements the repression of NSA2 in yeast. Nsa2 was co-purified in several pre-ribosomal complexes and found to be essential for the large ribosomal subunit biogenesis. Like several other factors of the pre-60 S particles, the absence of Nsa2 correlated with a decrease in the 25 S and 5.8 S ribosomal RNA levels, and with an accumulation of 27 SB pre-ribosomal RNA intermediates. We show that Nsa2 is a functional partner of the putative GTPase Nog1. In the absence of Nsa2, Nog1 was still able to associate with pre-ribosomal complexes blocked in maturation. In contrast, in the absence of Nog1, Nsa2 disappeared from pre-60 S complexes. Indeed, when ribosome biogenesis was blocked upstream of Nsa2, this short half-lived protein was largely depleted, suggesting that its cellular levels are tightly regulated.

Alice Lebreton, Cosmin Saveanu, Laurence Decourty, Jean-Christophe Rain, Alain Jacquier, Micheline Fromont-Racine, (2006), A functional network involved in the recycling of nucleocytoplasmic pre-60S factors., J Cell Biol, 173, 349–360

[PubMed][Abstract]
Eukaryotic pre-ribosomes go through cytoplasmic maturation steps before entering translation. The nucleocytoplasmic proteins participating in these late stages of maturation are reimported to the nucleus. In this study, we describe a functional network focused on Rei1/Ybr267w, a strictly cytoplasmic pre-60S factor indirectly involved in nuclear 27S pre-ribosomal RNA processing. In the absence of Rei1, the nuclear import of at least three other pre-60S factors is impaired. The accumulation in the cytoplasm of a small complex formed by the association of Arx1 with a novel factor, Alb1/Yjl122w, inhibits the release of the putative antiassociation factor Tif6 from the premature large ribosomal subunits and its recycling to the nucleus. We propose a model in which Rei1 is a key factor for the coordinated dissociation and recycling of the last pre-60S factors before newly synthesized large ribosomal subunits enter translation.

2005

Simon Lebaron, Carine Froment, Micheline Fromont-Racine, Jean-Christophe Rain, Bernard Monsarrat, Michèle Caizergues-Ferrer, Yves Henry, (2005), The splicing ATPase prp43p is a component of multiple preribosomal particles., Mol Cell Biol, 25, 9269–9282

[PubMed][Abstract]
Prp43p is a putative helicase of the DEAH family which is required for the release of the lariat intron from the spliceosome. Prp43p could also play a role in ribosome synthesis, since it accumulates in the nucleolus. Consistent with this hypothesis, we find that depletion of Prp43p leads to accumulation of 35S pre-rRNA and strongly reduces levels of all downstream pre-rRNA processing intermediates. As a result, the steady-state levels of mature rRNAs are greatly diminished following Prp43p depletion. We present data arguing that such effects are unlikely to be solely due to splicing defects. Moreover, we demonstrate by a combination of a comprehensive two-hybrid screen, tandem-affinity purification followed by mass spectrometry, and Northern analyses that Prp43p is associated with 90S, pre-60S, and pre-40S ribosomal particles. Prp43p seems preferentially associated with Pfa1p, a novel specific component of pre-40S ribosomal particles. In addition, Prp43p interacts with components of the RNA polymerase I (Pol I) transcription machinery and with mature 18S and 25S rRNAs. Hence, Prp43p might be delivered to nascent 90S ribosomal particles during pre-rRNA transcription and remain associated with preribosomal particles until their final maturation steps in the cytoplasm. Our data also suggest that the ATPase activity of Prp43p is required for early steps of pre-rRNA processing and normal accumulation of mature rRNAs.

Françoise Wyers, Mathieu Rougemaille, Gwenaël Badis, Jean-Claude Rousselle, Marie-Elisabeth Dufour, Jocelyne Boulay, Béatrice Régnault, Frédéric Devaux, Abdelkader Namane, Bertrand Séraphin, Domenico Libri, Alain Jacquier, (2005), Cryptic pol II transcripts are degraded by a nuclear quality control pathway involving a new poly(A) polymerase., Cell, 121, 725–737

[PubMed][Abstract]
Since detection of an RNA molecule is the major criterion to define transcriptional activity, the fraction of the genome that is expressed is generally considered to parallel the complexity of the transcriptome. We show here that several supposedly silent intergenic regions in the genome of S. cerevisiae are actually transcribed by RNA polymerase II, suggesting that the expressed fraction of the genome is higher than anticipated. Surprisingly, however, RNAs originating from these regions are rapidly degraded by the combined action of the exosome and a new poly(A) polymerase activity that is defined by the Trf4 protein and one of two RNA binding proteins, Air1p or Air2p. We show that such a polyadenylation-assisted degradation mechanism is also responsible for the degradation of several Pol I and Pol III transcripts. Our data strongly support the existence of a posttranscriptional quality control mechanism limiting inappropriate expression of genetic information.

John LaCava, Jonathan Houseley, Cosmin Saveanu, Elisabeth Petfalski, Elizabeth Thompson, Alain Jacquier, David Tollervey, (2005), RNA degradation by the exosome is promoted by a nuclear polyadenylation complex., Cell, 121, 713–724

[PubMed][Abstract]
The exosome complex of 3′-5′ exonucleases participates in RNA maturation and quality control and can rapidly degrade RNA-protein complexes in vivo. However, the purified exosome showed weak in vitro activity, indicating that rapid RNA degradation requires activating cofactors. This work identifies a nuclear polyadenylation complex containing a known exosome cofactor, the RNA helicase Mtr4p; a poly(A) polymerase, Trf4p; and a zinc knuckle protein, Air2p. In vitro, the Trf4p/Air2p/Mtr4p polyadenylation complex (TRAMP) showed distributive RNA polyadenylation activity. The presence of the exosome suppressed poly(A) tail addition, while TRAMP stimulated exosome degradation through structured RNA substrates. In vivo analyses showed that TRAMP is required for polyadenylation and degradation of rRNA and snoRNA precursors that are characterized exosome substrates. Poly(A) tails stimulate RNA degradation in bacteria, suggesting that this is their ancestral function. We speculate that this function was maintained in eukaryotic nuclei, while cytoplasmic mRNA poly(A) tails acquired different roles in translation.

Claire Torchet, Gwenaël Badis, Frédéric Devaux, Ginny Costanzo, Michel Werner, Alain Jacquier, (2005), The complete set of H/ACA snoRNAs that guide rRNA pseudouridylations in Saccharomyces cerevisiae., RNA, 11, 928–938

[PubMed][Abstract]
Conversion of uridines into pseudouridines (Psis) is the most frequent base modification in ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs). In eukaryotes, the pseudouridylation sites are specified by base-pairing with specific target sequences within H/ACA small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs). The yeast rRNAs harbor 44 Psis, but, when this work began, 15 Psis had completely unknown guide snoRNAs. This suggested that many snoRNAs remained to be discovered. To address this problem and further complete the snoRNA assignment to Psi sites, we identified the complete set of RNAs associated with the H/ACA snoRNP specific proteins Gar1p and Nhp2p by coupling TAP-tag purifications with genomic DNA microarrays experiments. Surprisingly, while we identified all the previously known H/ACA snoRNAs, we selected only three new snoRNAs. This suggested that most of the missing Psi guides were present in previously known snoRNAs but had been overlooked. We confirmed this hypothesis by systematically investigating the role of previously known, as well as of the newly identified snoRNAs, in specifying rRNA Psi sites and found all but one missing guide RNAs. During the completion of this work, another study, based on bioinformatic predictions, also reported the identification of most missing guide RNAs. Altogether, all Psi guides are now identified and we can tell that, in budding yeast, the 44 Psis are guided by 28 snoRNAs. Finally, aside from snR30, an atypical small RNA of heterogeneous length and at least one mRNA, all Gar1p and Nhp2p associated RNAs characterized by our work turned out to be snoRNAs involved in rRNA Psi specification.

Eric Huntzinger, Sandrine Boisset, Cosmin Saveanu, Yvonne Benito, Thomas Geissmann, Abdelkader Namane, Gérard Lina, Jerome Etienne, Bernard Ehresmann, Chantal Ehresmann, Alain Jacquier, François Vandenesch, Pascale Romby, (2005), Staphylococcus aureus RNAIII and the endoribonuclease III coordinately regulate spa gene expression., EMBO J, 24, 824–835

[PubMed][Abstract]
Staphylococcus aureus RNAIII is one of the largest regulatory RNAs, which controls several virulence genes encoding exoproteins and cell-wall-associated proteins. One of the RNAIII effects is the repression of spa gene (coding for the surface protein A) expression. Here, we show that spa repression occurs not only at the transcriptional level but also by RNAIII-mediated inhibition of translation and degradation of the stable spa mRNA by the double-strand-specific endoribonuclease III (RNase III). The 3′ end domain of RNAIII, partially complementary to the 5′ part of spa mRNA, efficiently anneals to spa mRNA through an initial loop-loop interaction. Although this annealing is sufficient to inhibit in vitro the formation of the translation initiation complex, the coordinated action of RNase III is essential in vivo to degrade the mRNA and irreversibly arrest translation. Our results further suggest that RNase III is recruited for targeting the paired RNAs. These findings add further complexity to the expression of the S. aureus virulon.

2004

Gwenael Badis, Cosmin Saveanu, Micheline Fromont-Racine, Alain Jacquier, (2004), Targeted mRNA degradation by deadenylation-independent decapping., Mol Cell, 15, 5–15

[PubMed][Abstract]
Modulating the rate of mRNA degradation is a fast and efficient way to control gene expression. In a yeast strain deleted of EDC3, a component of the decapping machinery conserved in eukaryotes, the transcript coding the ribosomal protein Rps28b is specifically stabilized, as demonstrated by microarray and time course experiments. This stabilization results from the loss of RPS28B autoregulation, which occurs at the level of mRNA decay. Using mutants of the major deadenylase, we show that this regulation occurs at the level of decapping and bypasses deadenylation. Rps28b interacts with a conserved hairpin structure within the 3′UTR of its own mRNA and with components of the decapping machinery, including Edc3. We conclude that Rps28b, in the presence of Edc3, directly recruits the decapping machinery on its own mRNA. These findings show that specific modulation of the decapping efficiency on natural transcripts can control mRNA turnover.

Isabelle Léger-Silvestre, Philipp Milkereit, Sébastien Ferreira-Cerca, Cosmin Saveanu, Jean-Claude Rousselle, Valérie Choesmel, Cécile Guinefoleau, Nicole Gas, Pierre-Emmanuel Gleizes, (2004), The ribosomal protein Rps15p is required for nuclear exit of the 40S subunit precursors in yeast., EMBO J, 23, 2336–2347

[PubMed][Abstract]
We have conducted a genetic screen in order to identify ribosomal proteins of Saccharomyces cerevisiae involved in nuclear export of the small subunit precursors. This has led us to distinguish Rps15p as a protein dispensable for maturation of the pre-40S particles, but whose assembly into the pre-ribosomes is a prerequisite to their nuclear exit. Upon depletion of Rps15p, 20S pre-rRNA is released from the nucleolus and retained in the nucleus, without alteration of the pre-rRNA early cleavages. In contrast, Rps18p, which contacts Rps15p in the small subunit, is required upstream for pre-rRNA processing at site A2. Most pre-40S specific factors are correctly associated with the intermediate particles accumulating in the nucleus upon Rps15p depletion, except the late-binding proteins Tsr1p and Rio2p. Here we show that these two proteins are dispensable for nuclear exit; instead, they participate in 20S pre-rRNA processing in the cytoplasm. We conclude that, during the final maturation steps in the nucleus, incorporation of the ribosomal protein Rps15p is specifically required to render the pre-40S particles competent for translocation to the cytoplasm.

Martino Donnini, Andrea Lapucci, Laura Papucci, Ewa Witort, Alain Jacquier, Gary Brewer, Angelo Nicolin, Sergio Capaccioli, Nicola Schiavone, (2004), Identification of TINO: a new evolutionarily conserved BCL-2 AU-rich element RNA-binding protein., J Biol Chem, 279, 20154–20166

[PubMed][Abstract]
Modulation of mRNA stability by regulatory cis-acting AU-rich elements (AREs) and ARE-binding proteins is an important posttranscriptional mechanism of gene expression control. We previously demonstrated that the 3′-untranslated region of BCL-2 mRNA contains an ARE that accounts for rapid BCL-2 down-regulation in response to apoptotic stimuli. We also demonstrated that the BCL-2 ARE core interacts with a number of ARE-binding proteins, one of which is AU-rich factor 1/heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein D, known for its interaction with mRNA elements of others genes. In an attempt to search for other BCL-2 mRNA-binding proteins, we used the yeast RNA three-hybrid system assay and identified a novel human protein that interacts with BCL-2 ARE. We refer to it as TINO. The predicted protein sequence of TINO reveals two amino-terminal heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein K homology motifs for nucleic acid binding and a carboxyl-terminal RING domain, endowed with a putative E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase activity. In addition the novel protein is evolutionarily conserved; the two following orthologous proteins have been identified with protein-protein BLAST: posterior end mark-3 (PEM-3) of Ciona savignyi and muscle excess protein-3 (MEX-3) of Caenorhabditis elegans. Upon binding, TINO destabilizes a chimeric reporter construct containing the BCL-2 ARE sequence, revealing a negative regulatory action on BCL-2 gene expression at the posttranscriptional level.

Vincent Galy, Olivier Gadal, Micheline Fromont-Racine, Alper Romano, Alain Jacquier, Ulf Nehrbass, (2004), Nuclear retention of unspliced mRNAs in yeast is mediated by perinuclear Mlp1., Cell, 116, 63–73

[PubMed][Abstract]
The molecular mechanism underlying the retention of intron-containing mRNAs in the nucleus is not understood. Here, we show that retention of intron-containing mRNAs in yeast is mediated by perinuclearly located Mlp1. Deletion of MLP1 impairs retention while having no effect on mRNA splicing. The Mlp1-dependent leakage of intron-containing RNAs is increased in presence of ts-prp18 delta, a splicing mutant. When overall pre-mRNA levels are increased by deletion of RRP6, a nuclear exosome component, MLP1 deletion augments leakage of only the intron-containing portion of mRNAs. Our data suggest, moreover, that Mlp1-dependent retention is mediated via the 5′ splice site. Intriguingly, we found Mlp-proteins to be present only on sections of the NE adjacent to chromatin. We propose that at this confined site the perinuclear Mlp1 implements a quality control step prior to export, physically retaining faulty pre-mRNAs.

2003

Micheline Fromont-Racine, Bruno Senger, Cosmin Saveanu, Franco Fasiolo, (2003), Ribosome assembly in eukaryotes., Gene, 313, 17–42

[PubMed][Abstract]
Ribosome synthesis is a highly complex and coordinated process that occurs not only in the nucleolus but also in the nucleoplasm and the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells. Based on the protein composition of several ribosomal subunit precursors recently characterized in yeast, a total of more than 170 factors are predicted to participate in ribosome biogenesis and the list is still growing. So far the majority of ribosomal factors have been implicated in RNA maturation (nucleotide modification and processing). Recent advances gave insight into the process of ribosome export and assembly. Proteomic approaches have provided the first indications for a ribosome assembly pathway in eukaryotes and confirmed the dynamic character of the whole process.

Gwenael Badis, Micheline Fromont-Racine, Alain Jacquier, (2003), A snoRNA that guides the two most conserved pseudouridine modifications within rRNA confers a growth advantage in yeast., RNA, 9, 771–779

[PubMed][Abstract]
Ribosomal RNAs contain a number of modified nucleotides. The most abundant nucleotide modifications found within rRNAs fall into two types: 2′-O-ribose methylations and pseudouridylations. In eukaryotes, small nucleolar guide RNAs, the snoRNAs that are the RNA components of the snoRNPs, specify the position of these modifications. The 2′-O-ribose methylations and pseudouridylations are guided by the box C/D and box H/ACA snoRNAs, respectively. The role of these modifications in rRNA remains poorly understood as no clear phenotype has yet been assigned to the absence of specific 2′-O-ribose methylations or pseudouridylations. Only very recently, a slight translation defect and perturbation of polysome profiles was reported in yeast for the absence of the Psi at position 2919 within the LSU rRNA. Here we report the identification and characterization in yeast of a novel intronic H/ACA snoRNA that we called snR191 and that guides pseudouridylation at positions 2258 and 2260 in the LSU rRNA. Most interestingly, these two modified bases are the most conserved pseudouridines from bacteria to human in rRNA. The corresponding human snoRNA is hU19. We show here that, in yeast, the presence of this snoRNA, and hence, most likely, of the conserved pseudouridines it specifies, is not essential for viability but provides a growth advantage to the cell.

Cosmin Saveanu, Abdelkader Namane, Pierre-Emmanuel Gleizes, Alice Lebreton, Jean-Claude Rousselle, Jacqueline Noaillac-Depeyre, Nicole Gas, Alain Jacquier, Micheline Fromont-Racine, (2003), Sequential protein association with nascent 60S ribosomal particles., Mol Cell Biol, 23, 4449–4460

[PubMed][Abstract]
Ribosome biogenesis in eukaryotes depends on the coordinated action of ribosomal and nonribosomal proteins that guide the assembly of preribosomal particles. These intermediate particles follow a maturation pathway in which important changes in their protein composition occur. The mechanisms involved in the coordinated assembly of the ribosomal particles are poorly understood. We show here that the association of preribosomal factors with pre-60S complexes depends on the presence of earlier factors, a phenomenon essential for ribosome biogenesis. The analysis of the composition of purified preribosomal complexes blocked in maturation at specific steps allowed us to propose a model of sequential protein association with, and dissociation from, early pre-60S complexes for several preribosomal factors such as Mak11, Ssf1, Rlp24, Nog1, and Nog2. The presence of either Ssf1 or Nog2 in complexes that contain the 27SB pre-rRNA defines novel, distinct pre-60S particles that contain the same pre-rRNA intermediates and that differ only by the presence or absence of specific proteins. Physical and functional interactions between Rlp24 and Nog1 revealed that the assembly steps are, at least in part, mediated by direct protein-protein interactions.

Andreas Braunwarth, Micheline Fromont-Racine, Pierre Legrain, F. Ralf Bischoff, Thomas Gerstberger, Ed Hurt, Markus Kunzler, (2003), Identification and characterization of a novel RanGTP-binding protein in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae., J Biol Chem, 278, 15397–15405

[PubMed][Abstract]
The small Ras-like GTPase Ran plays an essential role in the transport of macromolecules in and out of the nucleus and has been implicated in spindle (1,2 ) and nuclear envelope formation (3,4 ) during mitosis in higher eukaryotes. We identified Saccharomyces cerevisiae open reading frame YGL164c encoding a novel RanGTP-binding protein, termed Yrb30p. The protein competes with yeast RanBP1 (Yrb1p) for binding to the GTP-bound form of yeast Ran (Gsp1p) and is, like Yrb1p, able to form trimeric complexes with RanGTP and some of the karyopherins. In contrast to Yrb1p, Yrb30p does not coactivate but inhibits RanGAP1(Rna1p)-mediated GTP hydrolysis on Ran, like the karyopherins. At steady state, Yrb30p localizes exclusively to the cytoplasm, but the presence of a functional nuclear export signal and the localization of truncated forms of Yrb30p suggest that the protein shuttles between nucleus and cytoplasm and is exported via two alternative pathways, dependent on the nuclear export receptor Xpo1p/Crm1p and on RanGTP binding. Whereas overproduction of the full-length protein and complete deletion of the open reading frame reveal no obvious phenotype, overproduction of C-terminally truncated forms of the protein inhibits yeast vegetative growth. Based on these results and the exclusive conservation of the protein in the fungal kingdom, we hypothesize that Yrb30p represents a novel modulator of the Ran GTPase switch related to fungal lifestyle.

2002

Gregory J Cost, Qinghua Feng, Alain Jacquier, Jef D Boeke, (2002), Human L1 element target-primed reverse transcription in vitro., EMBO J, 21, 5899–5910

[PubMed][Abstract]
L1 elements are ubiquitous human transposons that replicate via an RNA intermediate. We have reconstituted the initial stages of L1 element transposition in vitro. The reaction requires only the L1 ORF2 protein, L1 3′ RNA, a target DNA and appropriate buffer components. We detect branched molecules consisting of junctions between transposon 3′ end cDNA and the target DNA, resulting from priming at a nick in the target DNA. 5′ junctions of transposon cDNA and target DNA are also observed. The nicking and reverse transcription steps in the reaction can be uncoupled, as priming at pre-existing nicks and even double-strand breaks can occur. We find evidence for specific positioning of the L1 RNA with the ORF2 protein, probably mediated in part by the polyadenosine portion of L1 RNA. Polyguanosine, similar to a conserved region of the L1 3′ UTR, potently inhibits L1 endonuclease (L1 EN) activity. L1 EN activity is also repressed in the context of the full-length ORF2 protein, but it and a second cryptic nuclease activity are released by ORF2p proteolysis. Additionally, heterologous RNA species such as Alu element RNA and L1 transcripts with 3′ extensions are substrates for the reaction.

Cosmin Saveanu, Simona Miron, Tudor Borza, Constantin T Craescu, Gilles Labesse, Cristina Gagyi, Aurel Popescu, Francis Schaeffer, Abdelkader Namane, Christine Laurent-Winter, Octavian Bârzu, Anne-Marie Gilles, (2002), Structural and nucleotide-binding properties of YajQ and YnaF, two Escherichia coli proteins of unknown function., Protein Sci, 11, 2551–2560

[PubMed][Abstract]
Structural genomics is a new approach in functional assignment of proteins identified via whole-genome sequencing programs. Its rationale is that nonhomologous proteins performing similar or related biological functions might have similar tertiary structure. We used dye pseudoaffinity chromatography, two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, and mass spectrometry to identify two novel Escherichia coli nucleotide-binding proteins, YnaF and YajQ. YnaF exhibited significant sequence identity with MJ0577, an ATP-binding protein from a hyperthermophile (Methanococcus jannaschii), and with UspA, a protein from Haemophilus influenzae that belongs to the Universal Stress Protein family. YnaF conserves the ATP-binding site and the dimeric structure observed in the crystal of MJ0577. The protein YajQ, present in many bacterial genomes, is missing in eukaryotes. In the absence of significant similarities of YajQ to any solved structure, we determined its structural and ligand-binding properties by NMR and isothermal titration calorimetry. We demonstrate that YajQ is composed of two domains, each centered on a beta-sheet, that are connected by two helical segments. NMR studies, corroborated with local sequence conservation among YajQ homologs in various bacteria, indicate that one of the beta-sheets is mostly involved in biological activity.

Micheline Fromont-Racine, Jean-Christophe Rain, Pierre Legrain, (2002), Building protein-protein networks by two-hybrid mating strategy., Methods Enzymol, 350, 513–524

Ivan Le Masson, Cosmin Saveanu, Anne Chevalier, Abdelkader Namane, Renée Gobin, Micheline Fromont-Racine, Alain Jacquier, Carl Mann, (2002), Spc24 interacts with Mps2 and is required for chromosome segregation, but is not implicated in spindle pole body duplication., Mol Microbiol, 43, 1431–1443

[PubMed][Abstract]
Mps2 (monopolar spindle protein) is a coiled-coil protein found at the spindle pole body (SPB) and at the nuclear envelope that is required for insertion of the SPB into the nuclear envelope. We identified three proteins that interact with Mps2 in a two-hybrid screen: Bbp1, Ynl107w and Spc24. All three proteins contain coiled-coil motifs that appear to be required for their interaction with Mps2. In this work, we verified the Mps2-Spc24 interaction by co-immunoprecipitation in vivo and by the in vitro interaction of recombinant proteins. Previous two-hybrid screens with Spc24 as bait had identified Spc25 and Ndc80 as putative interacting partners, and we verified these interactions in vivo by purification of TAP-tagged derivatives of Spc24 and Ndc80. Finally, we found that spc24 thermosensitive mutants had a chromosome segregation defect, but no apparent defect in SPB duplication. These results are consistent with recently published data showing that Spc24, Spc25 and Ndc80 are peripheral kinetochore com-ponents required for chromosome segregation. The Mps2-Spc24 interaction may contribute to the localization of Spc24 and other kinetochore components to the inner plaque of the SPB.

Frank Feuerbach, Vincent Galy, Edgar Trelles-Sticken, Micheline Fromont-Racine, Alain Jacquier, Eric Gilson, Jean-Christophe Olivo-Marin, Harry Scherthan, Ulf Nehrbass, (2002), Nuclear architecture and spatial positioning help establish transcriptional states of telomeres in yeast., Nat Cell Biol, 4, 214–221

[PubMed][Abstract]
Recent experiments have shown that gene repression can be correlated with relocation of genes to heterochromatin-rich silent domains. Here, we investigate whether nuclear architecture and spatial positioning can contribute directly to the transcriptional activity of a genetic locus in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. By disassembling telomeric silent domains without altering the chromatin-mediated silencing machinery, we show that the transcriptional activity of silencer–reporter constructs depends on intranuclear position. This demonstrates that telomeric silent domains are actively involved in transcriptional silencing. Employing fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) in combination with genetic assays, we demonstrate that telomeres control the establishment of transcriptional states by reversible partitioning with the perinuclear silencing domains. Anchoring telomeres interferes with their ability to assume an active state, whereas disassembly of silencing domains prevents telomeres from assuming a repressed state. Our data support a model in which domains of enriched transcriptional regulators allow genes to determine transcriptional states by spatial positioning.

2001

A. L. Page, M. Fromont-Racine, P. Sansonetti, P. Legrain, C. Parsot, (2001), Characterization of the interaction partners of secreted proteins and chaperones of Shigella flexneri., Mol Microbiol, 42, 1133–1145

[PubMed][Abstract]
The type III secretion (TTS) system of Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria is composed of proteins that assemble into the TTS machinery, proteins that are secreted by this machinery and specific chaperones that are required for storage and sometimes secretion of these proteins. Many sequential protein interactions are involved in the TTS pathway to deliver effector proteins to host cells. We used the yeast two-hybrid system to investigate the interaction partners of the Shigella flexneri effectors and chaperones. Libraries of preys containing random fusions with fragments of the TTS proteins were screened using effectors and chaperones as baits. Interactions between the effectors IpaB and IpaC and their chaperone IpgC were detected by this method, and interaction domains were identified. Using a His-tagged IpgC protein to co-purify truncated IpaB and IpaC proteins, we showed that the chaperone-binding domain was unique and located in the N-terminus of these proteins. This domain was not required for the secretion of recombinant proteins but was involved in the stability of IpaC and instability of IpaB. Homotypic interactions were identified with the baits IpaA, IpaB and IpaC. Interactions between effectors and components of the TTS machinery were also selected that might give insights into regulation of the TTS process.

S. Schaper, M. Fromont-Racine, P. Linder, J. de la Cruz, A. Namane, M. Yaniv, (2001), A yeast homolog of chromatin assembly factor 1 is involved in early ribosome assembly., Curr Biol, 11, 1885–1890

[PubMed][Abstract]
Cells have a recurrent need for the correct assembly of protein-nucleic acid complexes. We have studied a yeast homolog of the smallest subunit of chromatin assembly factor 1 (CAF1), encoded by YMR131c and termed “RRB1″. Unlike other yeast homologs, Msi1p, and Hat2p, Rrb1p is essential for cell viability. Impairment of Rrb1p function results in decreased levels of free 60S ribosomal subunits and the appearance of half-mer polysomes, suggesting its involvement in ribosome biogenesis. Using tandem affinity purification (TAP ) combined with mass spectrometry, we show that Rrb1p is associated with ribosomal protein L3. A fraction of Rrb1p is also found in a protein-precursor rRNA complex containing at least ten other early-assembling ribosomal proteins. We propose that Rrb1p is required for proper assembly of preribosomal particles during early ribosome biogenesis, presumably by targeting L3 onto the 35S precursor rRNA. This action may resemble the mechanism by which CAF1 assembles histones H3/H4 onto newly replicated DNA.

C. Saveanu, D. Bienvenu, A. Namane, P. E. Gleizes, N. Gas, A. Jacquier, M. Fromont-Racine, (2001), Nog2p, a putative GTPase associated with pre-60S subunits and required for late 60S maturation steps., EMBO J, 20, 6475–6484

[PubMed][Abstract]
Eukaryotic ribosome maturation depends on a set of well ordered processing steps. Here we describe the functional characterization of yeast Nog2p (Ynr053cp), a highly conserved nuclear protein. Nog2p contains a putative GTP-binding site, which is essential in vivo. Kinetic and steady-state measurements of the levels of pre-rRNAs in Nog2p-depleted cells showed a defect in 5.8S and 25S maturation and a concomitant increase in the levels of both 27SB(S) and 7S(S) precursors. We found Nog2p physically associated with large pre-60S complexes highly enriched in the 27SB and 7S rRNA precursors. These complexes contained, besides a subset of ribosomal proteins, at least two additional factors, Nog1p, another putative GTP-binding protein, and Rlp24p (Ylr009wp), which belongs to the Rpl24e family of archaeal and eukaryotic ribosomal proteins. In the absence of Nog2p, the pre-60S ribosomal complexes left the nucleolus, but were retained in the nucleoplasm. These results suggest that transient, possibly GTP-dependent association of Nog2p with the pre-ribosomes might trigger late rRNA maturation steps in ribosomal large subunit biogenesis.

N. Belgareh, G. Rabut, S. W. Baï, M. van Overbeek, J. Beaudouin, N. Daigle, O. V. Zatsepina, F. Pasteau, V. Labas, M. Fromont-Racine, J. Ellenberg, V. Doye, (2001), An evolutionarily conserved NPC subcomplex, which redistributes in part to kinetochores in mammalian cells., J Cell Biol, 154, 1147–1160

[PubMed][Abstract]
The nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are evolutionarily conserved assemblies that allow traffic between the cytoplasm and the nucleus. In this study, we have identified and characterized a novel human nuclear pore protein, hNup133, through its homology with the Saccharomyces cerevisiae nucleoporin scNup133. Two-hybrid screens and immunoprecipitation experiments revealed a direct and evolutionarily conserved interaction between Nup133 and Nup84/Nup107 and indicated that hNup133 and hNup107 are part of a NPC subcomplex that contains two other nucleoporins (the previously characterized hNup96 and a novel nucleoporin designated as hNup120) homologous to constituents of the scNup84 subcomplex. We further demonstrate that hNup133 and hNup107 are localized on both sides of the NPC to which they are stably associated at interphase, remain associated as part of a NPC subcomplex during mitosis, and are targeted at early stages to the reforming nuclear envelope. Throughout mitosis, a fraction of hNup133 and hNup107 localizes to the kinetochores, thus revealing an unexpected connection between structural NPCs constituents and kinetochores. Photobleaching experiments further showed that the mitotic cytoplasm contains kinetochore-binding competent hNup133 molecules and that in contrast to its stable association with the NPCs the interaction of this nucleoporin with kinetochores is dynamic.

C. Saveanu, M. Fromont-Racine, A. Harington, F. Ricard, A. Namane, A. Jacquier, (2001), Identification of 12 new yeast mitochondrial ribosomal proteins including 6 that have no prokaryotic homologues., J Biol Chem, 276, 15861–15867

[PubMed][Abstract]
Mitochondrial ribosomal proteins were studied best in yeast, where the small subunit was shown to contain about 35 proteins. Yet, genetic and biochemical studies identified only 14 proteins, half of which were predictable by sequence homology with prokaryotic ribosomal components of the small subunit. Using a recently described affinity purification technique and tagged versions of yeast Ykl155c and Mrp1, we isolated this mitochondrial ribosomal subunit and identified a total of 20 proteins, of which 12 are new. For a subset of the newly described ribosomal proteins, we showed that they are localized in mitochondria and are required for the respiratory competency of the yeast cells. This brings to 26 the total number of proteins described as components of the mitochondrial small ribosomal subunit. Remarkably, almost half of the previously and newly identified mitochondrial ribosomal components showed no similarity to any known ribosomal protein. Homologues could be found, however, in predicted protein sequences from Schizosaccharomyces pombe. In more distant species, putative homologues were detected for Ykl155c, which shares conserved motifs with uncharacterized proteins of higher eukaryotes including humans. Another newly identified ribosomal protein, Ygl129c, was previously shown to be a member of the DAP-3 family of mitochondrial apoptosis mediators.

2000

M. Fromont-Racine, A. E. Mayes, A. Brunet-Simon, J. C. Rain, A. Colley, I. Dix, L. Decourty, N. Joly, F. Ricard, J. D. Beggs, P. Legrain, (2000), Genome-wide protein interaction screens reveal functional networks involving Sm-like proteins., Yeast, 17, 95–110

[PubMed][Abstract]
A set of seven structurally related Sm proteins forms the core of the snRNP particles containing the spliceosomal U1, U2, U4 and U5 snRNAs. A search of the genomic sequence of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has identified a number of open reading frames that potentially encode structurally similar proteins termed Lsm (Like Sm) proteins. With the aim of analysing all possible interactions between the Lsm proteins and any protein encoded in the yeast genome, we performed exhaustive and iterative genomic two-hybrid screens, starting with the Lsm proteins as baits. Indeed, extensive interactions amongst eight Lsm proteins were found that suggest the existence of a Lsm complex or complexes. These Lsm interactions apparently involve the conserved Sm domain that also mediates interactions between the Sm proteins. The screens also reveal functionally significant interactions with splicing factors, in particular with Prp4 and Prp24, compatible with genetic studies and with the reported association of Lsm proteins with spliceosomal U6 and U4/U6 particles. In addition, interactions with proteins involved in mRNA turnover, such as Mrt1, Dcp1, Dcp2 and Xrn1, point to roles for Lsm complexes in distinct RNA metabolic processes, that are confirmed in independent functional studies. These results provide compelling evidence that two-hybrid screens yield functionally meaningful information about protein-protein interactions and can suggest functions for uncharacterized proteins, especially when they are performed on a genome-wide scale.

G. Chanfreau, M. Buckle, A. Jacquier, (2000), Recognition of a conserved class of RNA tetraloops by Saccharomyces cerevisiae RNase III., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 97, 3142–3147

[PubMed][Abstract]
Ribonucleases III are double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) endonucleases required for the processing of a large number of prokaryotic and eukaryotic transcripts. Although the specificity of bacterial RNase III cleavage relies on antideterminants in the dsRNA, the molecular basis of eukaryotic RNase III specificity is unknown. All substrates of yeast RNase III (Rnt1p) are capped by terminal tetraloops showing the consensus AGNN and located within 13-16 bp to Rnt1p cleavage sites. We show that these tetraloops are essential for Rnt1p cleavage and that the distance to the tetraloop is the primary determinant of cleavage site selection. The presence of AGNN tetraloops also enhances Rnt1p binding, as shown by surface plasmon resonance monitoring and modification interference studies. These results define a paradigm of RNA loops and show that yeast RNase III behaves as a helical RNA ruler that recognizes these tetraloops and cleaves the dsRNA at a fixed distance to this RNA structure. These results also indicate that proteins belonging to the same class of RNA endonucleases require different structural elements for RNA cleavage.

1999

G. Chanfreau, C. Gouyette, B. Schwer, A. Jacquier, (1999), Trans-complementation of the second step of pre-mRNA splicing by exogenous 5′ exons., RNA, 5, 876–882

[PubMed][Abstract]
During splicing of nuclear pre-mRNAs, the first step liberates the 5′ exon (exon 1) and yields a lariat intron-3′exon (intron-exon 2) intermediate. The second step results in exon ligation. Previous results indicated that severe truncations of the 5′ exon of the actin pre-mRNA result in a block to the second splicing step in vitro in yeast extracts, leading to an accumulation of intron-exon 2 lariat intermediates. We show that exogenous exon 1 RNA oligonucleotides can chase these stalled intermediates into lariat intron and spliced exons. This reaction requires some of the cis elements and trans-acting factors that are required for a normal second step. There is no strong sequence requirement for the exon 1 added in trans, but oligonucleotides with complementarity to the U5 snRNA conserved loop perform the chase more efficiently. Using a dominant negative mutant of the DEAH-box ATPase Prp16p and ATP depletion, we show that the stalled intermediate is blocked after the Prp16p-dependent step. These results show that exogenous RNAs with various sequences but containing no splicing signals can be incorporated into spliceosomes and undergo RNA recombination and exon shuffling during the second step of pre-mRNA splicing.

E. Dème, A. Nolte, A. Jacquier, (1999), Unexpected metal ion requirements specific for catalysis of the branching reaction in a group II intron., Biochemistry, 38, 3157–3167

[PubMed][Abstract]
The splicing process catalyzed by group II intron ribozymes follows the same two-step pathway as nuclear pre-mRNA splicing. In vivo, the first splicing step of wild-type introns is a transesterification reaction giving rise to a branched lariat intron-3′-exon intermediate characteristic of this splicing mode. In the wild-type introns, the ribozyme core and the substrate intron-exon junctions are carried by the same precursor molecule, making it difficult to distinguish between RNA folding and catalysis under normal splicing reactions. To characterize the catalytic step of the first transesterification reaction, we studied the reversal of this reaction, reverse branching. In this reverse reaction, the excised lariat intron and the substrate 5′-exon can be preincubated and folded separately, allowing the measure of the catalytic rate of the reaction. To measure the catalytic rate of the second splicing step, purified lariat intron-3′-exon intermediate molecules were preincubated and folded prior to the addition of 5′-exon. Conditions could be found where chemistry appeared rate limiting for both catalytic steps. Study of the metal ion requirements under these conditions resulted in the unexpected finding that, for the intron studied, substitution of magnesium ions by manganese ions enhanced the rate of the first transesterification reaction by two orders of magnitude but had virtually no effect on the second transesterification reaction or the 5′ splice site cleavage by hydrolysis. Finally, the catalytic rates measured under optimal conditions for both splicing steps were faster by three orders of magnitude in the branching pathway than in the hydrolytic pathway.

1998

G. Chanfreau, P. Legrain, A. Jacquier, (1998), Yeast RNase III as a key processing enzyme in small nucleolar RNAs metabolism., J Mol Biol, 284, 975–988

[PubMed][Abstract]
The variety of biogenesis pathways for small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) reflects the diversity of their genomic organization. We have searched for yeast snoRNAs which are affected by the depletion of the yeast ortholog of bacterial RNase III, Rnt1. In a yeast strain inactivated for RNT1, almost half of the snoRNAs tested are depleted with significant accumulation of monocistronic or polycistronic precursors. snoRNAs from both major families of snoRNAs (C/D and H/ACA) are affected by RNT1 disruption. In vitro, recombinant Rnt1 specifically cleaves pre-snoRNA precursors in the absence of other factors, generating intermediates which require the action of other enzymes for processing to the mature snoRNA. Most Rnt1 cleavage sites fall within potentially double-stranded regions closed by tetraloops with a novel consensus sequence AGNN. These results demonstrate that biogenesis of a large number of snoRNAs from the two major families of snoRNAs requires a common RNA endonuclease and a putative conserved structural motif.

G. Chanfreau, G. Rotondo, P. Legrain, A. Jacquier, (1998), Processing of a dicistronic small nucleolar RNA precursor by the RNA endonuclease Rnt1., EMBO J, 17, 3726–3737

[PubMed][Abstract]
Small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) are intron encoded or expressed from monocistronic independent transcription units, or, in the case of plants, from polycistronic clusters. We show that the snR190 and U14 snoRNAs from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae are co-transcribed as a dicistronic precursor which is processed by the RNA endonuclease Rnt1, the yeast ortholog of bacterial RNase III. RNT1 disruption results in a dramatic decrease in the levels of mature U14 and snR190 and in accumulation of dicistronic snR190-U14 RNAs. Addition of recombinant Rnt1 to yeast extracts made from RNT1 disruptants induces the chase of dicistronic RNAs into mature snoRNAs, showing that dicistronic RNAs correspond to functional precursors stalled in the processing pathway. Rnt1 cleaves a dicistronic transcript in vitro in the absence of other factors, separating snR190 from U14. Thus, one of the functions of eukaryotic RNase III is, as for the bacterial enzyme, to liberate monocistronic RNAs from polycistronic transcripts.

A. Nolte, G. Chanfreau, A. Jacquier, (1998), Influence of substrate structure on in vitro ribozyme activity of a group II intron., RNA, 4, 694–708

[PubMed][Abstract]
Substrate sequences surrounding catalytic RNAs but not involved in specific, conserved interactions can severely interfere with in vitro ribozyme activity. Using model group II intron precursor transcripts with truncated or randomized exon sequences, we show that unspecific sequences within the 5′ exon are particularly prone to inhibit both the forward and the reverse first splicing step (branching). Using in vitro selection, we selected efficient 5′ exons for the reverse branching reaction. Precursor RNAs carrying these selected 5′ exons reacted more homogeneously and faster than usual model precursor transcripts. This suggests that unfavorable structures induced by the 5′ exon can introduce a folding step that limits the rate of in vitro self-splicing. These results stress how critical is the choice of the sequences retained or discarded when isolating folding domains from their natural sequence environments. Moreover, they suggest that exon sequences not involved in specific interactions are more evolutionarily constrained with respect to splicing than previously envisioned.

R. J. Cho, M. Fromont-Racine, L. Wodicka, B. Feierbach, T. Stearns, P. Legrain, D. J. Lockhart, R. W. Davis, (1998), Parallel analysis of genetic selections using whole genome oligonucleotide arrays., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 95, 3752–3757

[PubMed][Abstract]
Thousands of genes have recently been sequenced in organisms ranging from Escherichia coli to human. For the majority of these genes, however, available sequence does not define a biological role. Efficient functional characterization of these genes requires strategies for scaling genetic analyses to the whole genome level. Plasmid-based library selections are an established approach to the functional analysis of uncharacterized genes and can help elucidate biological function by identifying, for example, physical interactors for a gene and genetic enhancers and suppressors of mutant phenotypes. The application of these selections to every gene in a eukaryotic genome, however, is generally limited by the need to manipulate and sequence hundreds of DNA plasmids. We present an alternative approach in which identification of nucleic acids is accomplished by direct hybridization to high-density oligonucleotide arrays. Based on the complete sequence of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, high-density arrays containing oligonucleotides complementary to every gene in the yeast genome have been designed and synthesized. Two-hybrid protein-protein interaction screens were carried out for S. cerevisiae genes implicated in mRNA splicing and microtubule assembly. Hybridization of labeled DNA derived from positive clones is sufficient to characterize the results of a screen in a single experiment, allowing rapid determination of both established and previously unknown biological interactions. These results demonstrate the use of oligonucleotide arrays for the analysis of two-hybrid screens. This approach should be generally applicable to the analysis of a range of genetic selections.

1997

M. Fromont-Racine, J. C. Rain, P. Legrain, (1997), Toward a functional analysis of the yeast genome through exhaustive two-hybrid screens., Nat Genet, 16, 277–282

[PubMed][Abstract]
The genome of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is now completely sequenced. Despite successful genetic work in recent years, 60

J. L. Jestin, E. Dème, A. Jacquier, (1997), Identification of structural elements critical for inter-domain interactions in a group II self-splicing intron., EMBO J, 16, 2945–2954

[PubMed][Abstract]
Thus far, conventional biophysical techniques, such as NMR spectroscopy or X-ray crystallography, allow the determination, at atomic resolution, of only structural domains of large RNA molecules such as group I introns. Determination of their overall spatial organization thus still relies on modeling. This requires that a relatively high number of tertiary interactions are defined in order to get sufficient topological constraints. Here, we report the use of a modification interference assay to identify structural elements involved in interdomain interactions. We used this technique, in a group II intron, to identify the elements involved in the interactions between domain V and the rest of the molecule. Domain V contains many of the active site components of these ribozymes. In addition to a previously identified 11 nucleotide motif involved in the binding of the domain V terminal GAAA tetraloop, a small number of elements were shown to be essential for domain V binding. In particular, we show that domain III is specifically required for the interaction with sequences encompassing the conserved 2 nucleotide bulge of domain V.

M. Costa, E. Déme, A. Jacquier, F. Michel, (1997), Multiple tertiary interactions involving domain II of group II self-splicing introns., J Mol Biol, 267, 520–536

[PubMed][Abstract]
The ribozyme core of group II introns is organized into six domains of secondary structure. Of these, domain II was long thought to be relatively unimportant for group II self-splicing. However, we now demonstrate the existence, in both major subdivisions of the group II family, of essential tertiary interactions involving domain II. theta-theta’ is a novel tertiary interaction between the terminal loop of the IC1 stem of domain I and the basal stem of domain II. The theta-theta’ interaction appears to stabilize the group II ribozyme core: it is essential for efficient self-splicing at elevated temperatures but, as shown by the use of a bimolecular reaction system, molecules with a defective theta-theta’ contact are not affected in catalysis. An interaction, eta-eta’, between domains II and VI of subgroup IIB introns was recently reported to mediate a conformational rearrangement between the two steps of the self-splicing reaction. We now show that domains II and VI of subgroup IIA introns also contact each other, although in a somewhat different way. Reinforcement of the eta-eta’ interaction of a subgroup IIA intron prevents the use of a specific 2′-hydroxyl group in domain VI to initiate splicing by transesterification at the 5′ splice site; the 5′ intron-exon junction is hydrolyzed instead. Since disruption of eta-eta’ has exactly opposite effects, and promotes reversal of the first transesterification step, it is concluded that formation of eta-eta’ mediates a conformational change in subgroup IIA introns as well. Just like the eta-eta’ interaction of subgroup IIB introns, the eta-eta’ interaction of subgroup IIA introns (and the theta-theta’ interaction) involves terminal loops of the GNRA family and their RNA receptors. Therefore, these motifs are used by nature not only to stabilize three-dimensional RNA architectures, but also in situations that require dynamic interactions.