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Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg • Tymoczko • Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

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Page 1: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Chapter 29:RNA Synthesis and Processing

Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company

Berg • Tymoczko • Stryer

BiochemistrySixth Edition

Page 2: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Eucaryotic pre-mRNAContains introns and exons.

Page 3: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

TranscriptionTranscription is a DNA directed RNA synthesis.

Gene/cistron: A DNA segment that carries information for a protein, rRNA or tRNA….or a transcribed segment of DNA. There does not seem to be a consensus definition but excludes non-transcribed regions.

In procaryotes, polycistronic transcripts are common (1 promoter:several genes).

In eucaryotes, most mRNAs are monocistronic (1 promoter:1 gene).

Page 4: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

TranscriptionOperon: a segment of DNA transcribed as a

single mRNA strand. It includes promoter and operator and is called a transcription unit (TU).

Promoter: a region of DNA where initiation occurs, unique for a given transcription unit, TU.

Operator: DNA sequence close to promoter that regulates procaryotic transcription.

Enhancer: Eucaryotic regulatory sequence, may be upstream or downstream from promoter, some are bidirectional.

Page 5: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Conventions

dsDNA: 5' ----------- top strand --------------3' 3' ----------lower strand -------------5'

upstream(-) downstream(+) there is no 0 (zero) in DNA numbering

Top strand = coding strand = sense strand (+) Bottom strand = template = anti-sense strand (-)

So, the RNA formed (+) has the same relative sequence as the DNA sense strand and is formed form the template strand.

Page 6: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

RNA Polymerase

Page 7: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

E.Coli RNA Polymerase

The core polymerase is: α2ββ'ω

The holoenzyme is: α2ββ'ωσ

ω is a subunit of unknown function.

Page 8: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Polymerase Subunits

E.Coli has a number of different σ subunits.

These seek out different promoters when bound to the core enzyme then bind to promoter to start initiation.

Binding: Kd t½

Holoenzyme + random DNA 10-7 ~3 sec Holoenzyme + promoter 10-14 ~2-3 hr Core enzyme + random DNA 10-12 ~60 min

Page 9: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Initiation

Holoenzyme binds loosely to ds DNA and tracks downstream until σ recognizes the promoter region. It then locks on to DNA to form a closed promoter complex.

There are two consensus sequences within the promoter region.

-10 TATA box (Pribnow box) 5'-TATAAT-3' -35 box 5'-TTGACA-3'

When the polymerase is bound, bubble opening occurs ~-9 to +3 forming an open promoter. Unwinding and synthesis of first residues is slow.

Page 10: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Promoter Regions

Page 11: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Consensus Sequence

Page 12: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Promoter Regions and Transcription Start Site

Page 13: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Bubble Opening

Page 14: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Elongation

RNA polymerase needs supercoiled, dsDNA and Mg++. NTPs are substrate and PPi is released at each polymerization step.

RNA is synthesized in the 5' to 3' direction and copies only one DNA strand while moving downstream.

The polymerase does not require a primer but does appear to have some exonuclease (proofreading) activity.

The transcription product has leader and trailer segments.

Page 15: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Elongation

Polymerization starts at +1. The first residue is usually a purine. After RNA polymerase clears the promoter region (~6-10 residues) the σ subunit dissociates. Elongation uses the core polymerase and moves ~ 50 bp/sec.

DNA continually unwinds ahead of the bubble and rewinds behind so the bubble moves remaining about the same size. Two topoisomerases are needed, one ahead and one behind to introduce and remove supercoils.

When polymerase is free of promoter, another initiation may begin.

Page 16: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Magnesium Complex

Looks very much like the Mg++ complex for DNA.

Page 17: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Polymerization

This process is similar to that for DNA.

Page 18: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

5' Residue

The 5' end is usually pppA or pppG and retains the phosphates.

Page 19: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Schematic of Elongation

Page 20: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Termination - Hairpin

Hairpin: This is a pause site. A G:C rich, inverted repeat region of DNA prior to the termination sequence. The inverted repeats are separated by a few A:Ts. There is a short A:T region at the end of the transcription unit.

A hairpin is formed in the RNA transcript using the G:C inverted repeats (tight binding). The protein NusA facilitates pause at the termination site. The polyU segment subsequent to the hairpin is loosely held and permits dissociation from the DNA template.

Page 21: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Hairpin and PolyU Segments

The RNA transcript.

Page 22: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Termination - rho

Rho () factor: is a hexameric protein which also acts as an ATP dependent helicase.

It binds at a specific recognition sequence in the transcribed RNA (upstream of the termination site). then follows the strand 5'-3' until it catches the transcription bubble and then unwinds the RNA from the template using its helicase activity to end transcription.

Page 23: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Termination and Rho

The RNA transcript.

Page 24: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Rho Tracking on RNA

Page 25: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Post-Transcription

Procaryotes:

mRNA shows little or no post transcriptional modification.

rRNAs and tRNAs are cleaved from the primary transcript and modified.

E.coli has about 7 rRNA genes and about 60 tRNA genes that are not auxillary to an rRNA gene. About 30-40% of the bases in tRNA are modified by methylation or other. CCA is added to the 3‘ end of those tRNAs in which it was not coded using a nucleotidyl transferase, 2 CTP and 1 ATP.

Page 26: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

E.Coli Primary transcript

RNase III cleaves 5S, 16S and 23S precursors and RNases M 5, M 16 and M 23 trim these to yield mature mRNAs (except for CCA).

RNase P cleaves the 5' end of pre-tRNAs, RNase E & F cleave the 3' ends and RNase D trims.

Page 27: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

E.Coli Primary transcript

Page 28: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Methylation

Methylation in rRNA:

N6,N6-diMe Adenine

Page 29: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Modificationsto Uracil

Common in tRNA:

Methylation.

Moving ribose from N1 to C5.

Page 30: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Eucaryotic RNA Polymerases

All three polymerases require transcription factors to interact with promoters. These are DNA binding proteins that initiate transcription at a specific promoter sequence

Page 31: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Eucaryotic PromotersPromoter and other regulatory sites on the same DNA molecule as the gene to be transcribed are referred to as “cis acting” elements.

Pol I uses a ribosomal initiator element (rInr) which is TATA-like sequence. In addition it uses an upstream promoter element about 150 bp from the start site.

Page 32: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Eucaryotic PromotersPol II uses a set of conserved sequences at the start site. These may be a TATA box found with an initiator element (Inr) to define the start site. In absence of a TATA box a downstream promoter element works with Inr. Other elements including an enhancer which can be 1 kbp from the start site may be used.

Page 33: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Bases from 100 Promoters

Eucaryotic TATA boxes, consensus relationships.

Page 34: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Other Promoter ElementsRecognized by proteins other than polymerase.

Page 35: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Eucaryotic PromotersOther cis-acting elements observed with Pol II are a CAAT box and/or a GC box. Several transcription factors associate with Pol II and its functioning is regulated by phosphorylation of a carboxyl-terminal domain (CTD).

Pol III promoters are within the gene itself downstream of the start site and are different for tRNA and rRNA.

Page 36: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

General - Regulation

Activator = positive regulator that binds to promoter and stimulates transcription.

Case I: ligand binds to activator. This prevents binding to promoter and transcription does not occur.

Case II: ligand binds to activator. Ligand enhances binding of activator promoter and transcription is enhanced.

Page 37: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

General - Regulation

Repressor = negative regulator that binds to promoter and prevents transcription.

Case I: ligand (inducer) binds to repressor. This prevents repressor binding to promoter, so transcription occurs.

Case II: ligand (corepressor) binds to repressor. Repressor will not bind promoter without ligand and transcription does not occur.

Page 38: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Modification of Pre-rRNAEucaryotic pre-rRNA: note the different size rRNAs compared to procaryotic rRNA.

Page 39: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Modification of Pre-tRNAProcessing eucaryotic pre-tRNA

Page 40: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Modification of Pre-mRNA

Primary mRNA transcripts are anywhere from 2000 to 20000 residues and sometimes called heterogeneous nuclear RNA (hnRNA).

Processing eucaryotic pre-mRNA: 1. The 5' end is capped: Remove P, add GTP with loss of PPi. Protects 5' from exonuclease. 2. A poly(A) tail is added: Cleavage and poly adenylation specificity factor (CPSF) binds specific sequence, endonuclease activity cleaves downstream and dissociation occurs. Poly(A) polymerase adds 150-250 residues to 3'. 3. Splicing occurs: Remove introns, join exons.

Page 41: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

5' Capping pre-mRNA

Cap 0 = N7-Me G at 5'

Cap 1 = N7-Me G at 5' + O2'-Me ribosyl at 2nd residue.

Cap 2 = N7-Me G at 5' + O2'-Me ribosyl at 2nd and 3rd residue.

rRNA and tRNA are not capped.

Page 42: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Poly A Tail

Page 43: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Splicing

Introns are intervening sequences. These vary with size and number. E.g. ovalbumin has 7 introns whereas procollagen has 50.

Exons are expressed sequences.

All introns have conserved 5'GU …………AG3' termini and a branching sequence (splice start site) between these ends. Both of the ends are in consensus sequences. In mammals, there is more variability in the branch sequence.

Page 44: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Splicing

O2' of A at branch site attacks P at 3' end of AG in the upstream exon. Cleavage occurs by transesterification. The 3' OH of the upstream exon is released and attacks P at the 3' end of the intron. This joins the two exons by a second transesterification reaction.

Page 45: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Cleavage by Branch Point

An alcohol attacks a phosphodiester bond producing a new phosphodiester and a new alcohol. No ATP is involved in these reaction steps.

Page 46: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

LariatIntermediate

The lariat occurs here.

Page 47: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Splicing Steps

Page 48: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Splicing Requires snRNA

snRNAs combine with proteins to form snRNPs. Assembly and binding of these “snurps” as well as helicase activity does require ATP. snRNAs have 2,2,7-triMeG-pppN cap at the 5' end.

Page 49: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Use of snRNAsMature mRNAs are considerably smaller than the original pre-mRNA transcripts. Some are reduced in size as much as 75-90%

Page 50: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Detail of events with snRNAs

snRNPs, splicing factors & pre-mRNA constitute a “spliceosome”.

Page 51: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition
Page 52: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

Proposed events of Pol II

Transcription and processing of pre-mRNA requires the carboxyl-terminal domain (CTD) of Pol II.

CTD brings in protein required for capping, splicing and polyadenylation. The sequential occurrence of these events depends on the state of phosphorylation of CTD.

Note that in some cases alternate splicing of pre-mRNA can generate different mature transcripts and eventually peptides.

Page 53: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition
Page 54: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition
Page 55: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition
Page 56: Chapter 29: RNA Synthesis and Processing Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company Berg Tymoczko Stryer Biochemistry Sixth Edition

End of Chapter 29

Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company

Berg • Tymoczko • Stryer

BiochemistrySixth Edition