학술논문

Structural toggle in the RNaseH domain of Prp8 helps balance splicing fidelity and catalytic efficiency
Document Type
article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 114(18)
Subject
Genetics
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Generic health relevance
Alleles
Mutation
Protein Domains
RNA Splicing
RNA
Fungal
Ribonuclease H
Ribonucleoprotein
U4-U6 Small Nuclear
Ribonucleoprotein
U5 Small Nuclear
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
spliceosome
Prp8
splicing fidelity
splicing efficiency
lariat sequencing
Language
Abstract
Pre-mRNA splicing is an essential step of eukaryotic gene expression that requires both high efficiency and high fidelity. Prp8 has long been considered the "master regulator" of the spliceosome, the molecular machine that executes pre-mRNA splicing. Cross-linking and structural studies place the RNaseH domain (RH) of Prp8 near the spliceosome's catalytic core and demonstrate that prp8 alleles that map to a 17-aa extension in RH stabilize it in one of two mutually exclusive structures, the biological relevance of which are unknown. We performed an extensive characterization of prp8 alleles that map to this extension and, using in vitro and in vivo reporter assays, show they fall into two functional classes associated with the two structures: those that promote error-prone/efficient splicing and those that promote hyperaccurate/inefficient splicing. Identification of global locations of endogenous splice-site activation by lariat sequencing confirms the fidelity effects seen in our reporter assays. Furthermore, we show that error-prone/efficient RH alleles suppress a prp2 mutant deficient at promoting the first catalytic step of splicing, whereas hyperaccurate/inefficient RH alleles exhibit synthetic sickness. Together our data indicate that prp8 RH alleles link splicing fidelity with catalytic efficiency by biasing the relative stabilities of distinct spliceosome conformations. We hypothesize that the spliceosome "toggles" between such error-prone/efficient and hyperaccurate/inefficient conformations during the splicing cycle to regulate splicing fidelity.