34
Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA

Replication

Mahta NiliBMCB 625

June 13, 2007

Page 2: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

60 kDa Ro Autoantigen

Y RNA Sequence and Structure

DNA Replication Review

“Functional Requirement of Noncoding Y RNAs for Human Chromosomal DNA Replication”

Conclusions / Remaining Questions

Page 3: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Ro 60kD Autoantigen

Major target of the immune response in rheumatic disease

Lupus (anti-Ro antibodies 25-60% of patients)

Photosensitive skin lesions

Neonatal – congenital heart block

Sjogren’s Syndrome (anti-Ro antibodies 50-90% of patients)

Mice lacking Ro develop autoimmune syndrome similar to lupus

Page 4: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Possible Roles for Ro / Ro-Y RNA Complex

RNA stability

QC - Ro binds incorrectly folded small RNAs

Facilitates cell survival after exposure to UV

Prevention of autoimmune disease

Page 5: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Ro 60kD Autoantigen RNP

Stein et al. Cell. 2005

Page 6: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Noncoding Y RNAs

4 human Y RNAs (hY1, hY3, hY4, hY5)

Little primary sequence conservation

Highly conserved structural elements

Found in all vertebrates and highly conserved across species

Not in yeast, plants, or insects

Approximately 100 nucleotides long

Page 7: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Noncoding Y RNAs

Transcribed by PolIII

Y RNAs most abundant in heart and brain tissue

Ro / Y RNA complex may contain additional proteins

La – protein which binds new RNA PolIII transcripts

Page 8: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Y Genes

All hY genes on chromosome 7

hY genes all have class III promoters

Numerous hY-homologous pseudogenes

Page 9: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Noncoding Y RNAs

Van Gelder et al. Nuc Acids Res. 1994

Page 10: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Noncoding Y RNAs

Teunissen et al. Nuc Acids Res. 2000

Page 11: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Noncoding Y RNAs Possible Secondary Structures

Chen and Wolin. J Mol Med. 2005

Page 12: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

DNA Replication Initiation

http://users.ox.ac.uk/~kearsey/

Page 13: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007
Page 14: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007
Page 15: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Methods I: Cell Synchronization

HeLa, EJ30, and NIH3T3 cells

Cells arrested in G1 with mimosine

Iron/Zinc chelator

Causes DNA strand breaks

Impairs DNA replication initiation or elongation?

Synchronization verified by flow cytometry

Page 16: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Methods II: Preparation of NucleiNuclei from HeLa, EJ30, and NIH3T3

cells swollen in hypotonic buffer

mitotic cells lost

interphase cells

Homogenized, pelleted,

washed in PBS and re-pelleted

concentration -

hemocytometer

Permeabilization in triton x-100,

sucrose, spermidine

Page 17: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Methods III: Fractionation

Figure 1A

HeLa Cell Extracts from 4C Biotech

Cleared by ultracentrifugation

Pre-equilibrated in buffer containing 200mM KCl

Page 18: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Purification of RNA Necessary for Replication

Figure 1

Propidium Iodide Fab

Page 19: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Identification of RNAs

Figure 2

Out of 19 cDNA clones: 4 – 5S rRNA 8 – U2 snRNA 2 – hY4 5 – hY5

Page 20: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Human Y RNA Required for Replication

Figure 4

Page 21: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Table 1

Page 22: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Secondary Structures Revisited

Figure 3

Page 23: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Degradation of hY RNAs

Figure 5A

Page 24: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Inhibition of Chromosomal DNA Replication

Figure 5

Page 25: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Table 2

Mouse NIH3T3 template nuclei from cells synchronized in late G1 phase naturally by the release of contact-inhibited quiescent cells through sub-cultivation

Page 26: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Human Y RNAs Required for Semi-Conservative Replication

Figure 6

Page 27: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Are Y RNAs Acting as Primers?

Y RNAs have ss 3’ polyU tail and unmodified 3’ OH end

Used radioactive hY RNAs to initiate DNA replication

Not able to detect extensions by in vitro reactions

Also capped 3’ OH end of hY1 with 3’ deoxyuridine

Capped hY1 RNA also initiated DNA replication

Page 28: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Are Y RNAs Acting as Primers?

Y RNAs have ss 3’ polyU tail and unmodified 3’ OH end

Used radioactive hY RNAs to initiate DNA replication

Not able to detect extensions by in vitro reactions

Also capped 3’ OH end of hY1 with 3’ deoxyuridine

Capped hY1 RNA also initiated DNA replication

Y RNAs not acting as primers

Page 29: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Is Binding to Ro Necessary for DNA Replication?

Figure 7

Page 30: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Ro Binding Not Essential for Replication

Figure 7

Page 31: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

KD of hY1 by RNAi Inhibits DNA Replication

Figure 8

Page 32: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Conclusions

Deletion of hY RNAs inhibits DNA replication in late G1 phase nuclei

Y RNAs required for reconstitution of semi-conservative DNA replication

Y RNAs not primers

Y RNA role in replication is Ro independent

Y RNAs required for replication in vivo

Page 33: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

What’s the Y doing?

http://users.ox.ac.uk/~kearsey/

Y?

?

Page 34: Noncoding Y RNAs: A Functional Role in DNA Replication Mahta Nili BMCB 625 June 13, 2007

Remaining Questions

This paper makes no mention of Ro (other than knocking out the binding site on Y RNAs) in terms of functional role in replication – how stable are the Y RNAs without this association? Are they associated with another factor in the nucleus that stabilizes them?

What other effects are mimosine having on the nuclei?

The functional replacement of hY1 and hY3 with other Ys. Is it just a numbers issue?

Mechanisms by which Y RNAs regulate replication?