ARTICLE
Received 10 Dec 2015 | Accepted 1 Sep 2016 | Published 11 Oct 2016
Numerous factors direct eukaryotic ribosome biogenesis, and defects in a single ribosome assembly factor may be lethal or produce tissue-specic human ribosomopathies. Pre-ribosomal RNAs (pre-rRNAs) must be processed stepwise and at the correct subcellular locations to produce the mature rRNAs. Nop9 is a conserved small ribosomal subunit biogenesis factor, essential in yeast. Here we report a 2.1- crystal structure of Nop9 and a small-angle X-ray-scattering model of a Nop9:RNA complex that reveals a C-shaped fold formed from 11 Pumilio repeats. We show that Nop9 recognizes sequence and structural features of the 20S pre-rRNA near the cleavage site of the nuclease, Nob1. We further demonstrate that Nop9 inhibits Nob1 cleavage, the nal processing step to produce mature small ribosomal subunit 18S rRNA. Together, our results suggest that Nop9 is critical for timely cleavage of the 20S pre-rRNA. Moreover, the Nop9 structure exemplies a new class of Pumilio repeat proteins.
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 OPEN
Nop9 is a PUF-like protein that prevents premature cleavage to correctly process pre-18S rRNA
Jun Zhang1, Kathleen L. McCann1,2, Chen Qiu1, Lauren E. Gonzalez1, Susan J. Baserga2,3,4 & Traci M. Tanaka Hall1
1 Epigenetics and Stem Cell Biology Laboratory, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, PO Box 12233, MD F3-05, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709, USA. 2 Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA.
3 Department of Therapeutic Radiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA. 4 Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA. Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to S.J.B. (email: mailto:[email protected]
Web End [email protected] ) or to T.M.T.H. (email: mailto:[email protected]
Web End [email protected] ).
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 7:13085 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =www.nature.com/naturecommunications 1
ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085
Ribosome biogenesis is a complex process wherein ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs) and ribosomal proteins are assembled to generate a large ribonucleoprotein complex for protein
synthesis14. The pre-ribosomal RNA (pre-rRNA) undergoes multiple cleavage and trimming steps to remove the external and internal transcribed spacers and generate the mature rRNAs. Decades of studies have claried the pathways of pre-rRNA processing and identied over 200 biogenesis factors. However, it is not known how many of these proteins facilitate proper processing of the pre-rRNA. One outstanding example is the cleavage step at site D of the 20S pre-rRNA to generate the mature 18S rRNA (Fig. 1a). Although cleavage occurs in the cytoplasm, Nob1, a nuclease that cleaves site D, is associated with the 20S pre-RNA in the nucleolus510. It is a mystery how Nob1 cleavage at site D is prevented before reaching the cytoplasm.
Nop9, a nucleolar protein conserved in humans, plants and yeast, is essential for 18S rRNA maturation11,12. Depletion of Nop9 in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae abolishes synthesis of the small ribosomal subunit and therefore is lethal11. During prerRNA processing in the nucleolus, cleavage of the 32S pre-rRNA at site A2 generates the 27SA2 large ribosomal subunit pre-rRNA, precursor for the 25S and 5.8S rRNAs and the 20S small ribosomal subunit pre-rRNA (Fig. 1a). The 20S pre-rRNA is released from the nucleolus to the nucleoplasm and is then exported to the cytoplasm where cleavage at site D by Nob1 produces the mature 18S rRNA5,6,10. Previous studies suggested that Nop9 is important for 20S processing. Nop9 was shown to be associated with the small subunit (SSU) processome/90S pre-ribosome and the 20S pre-rRNA in vivo9,11,13. When Nop9 is depleted, the 20S pre-rRNA and 18S rRNA levels decrease, and pre-ribosomal particles whose pre-rRNAs retain the D-A2 sequence accumulate in the nucleolus11,12. The functional importance of Nop9 appears to be conserved in humans, as mutation of NOP9 is linked to a language-learning impairment, a ribosomopathy14.
Nop9 represents one of three distinct subfamilies of Pumilio/fem-3 mRNA-binding factor (PUF) proteins, along with the classical PUF and the Puf-A/Puf6 subfamilies. Classical PUFs feature eight Pumilio (PUM) repeats arranged in a crescent shape15,16. By recognizing single-stranded RNA sequences with the concave surface17, classical PUF proteins regulate mRNA translation and stability1820. Distinct from classical PUFs, Puf-A/Puf6 subfamily proteins are involved in large ribosomal subunit biogenesis, adopt an L-shaped structure comprising 11 PUM repeats and bind single- or double-stranded nucleic acids without apparent sequence specicity12,21. The divergence between classical PUF proteins and Puf-A/Puf6 proteins suggests that the subfamilies of PUF proteins have distinct cellular functions, protein folds and RNA-binding preferences. Knowledge of the three-dimensional structure of the Nop9 subfamily and identication of target RNAs would provide insight into the evolution of the PUF protein subfamilies as well as guide the understanding of Nop9s functions in ribosome biogenesis.
To reveal the relationship between atomic structure and function in ribosome biogenesis, we determined a 2.1- crystal structure of yeast Nop9 and probed its activity in vitro and in vivo. Distinct from the two other PUF protein subfamilies, Nop9 adopts a C-shaped fold containing 11 PUM repeats. Consistent with a role in processing 20S pre-rRNA to mature 18S rRNA, we nd that Nop9 binds to the fragment of internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1) present in the 20S pre-rRNA. Different from the classical PUFs and Puf-A subfamilies, Nop9 binds specically to ITS1 RNA fragments that encompass both single-stranded and duplex regions. A small-angle X-ray-scattering (SAXS) model of the Nop9:ITS1 RNA complex
and biochemical probing conrm that Nop9 recognizes the base of the ITS1 RNA stem loop. Since the Nop9-binding site overlaps the binding site of Nob1, which processes 20S pre-rRNA to 18S rRNA in the cytoplasm, we examined whether Nop9 may play a role in stabilizing the 20S pre-rRNA in the nucleolus. We demonstrate that the levels of the 20S pre-rRNA are reduced upon depletion of Nop9 and restored to normal levels upon depletion of both Nop9 and Nob1 in vivo. Moreover, the presence of Nop9 reduces the cleavage efciency of Nob1 in vitro. Together, our results suggest that Nop9s essential role in SSU ribosome biogenesis is to prevent premature cleavage of the 20S pre-rRNA by Nob1 in the nucleolus.
ResultsNop9 is a C-shaped PUF-like protein with 11 PUM repeats. We determined a 2.1--resolution crystal structure of yeast Nop9 that revealed a new PUM repeat fold with 11 PUM repeats (R1 to R11) arranged in a C-like shape (Fig. 1b, Supplementary Fig. 1a and Table 1). The repeats form a twisted, incomplete ring with an B80- outer diameter, an B35 inner diameter and 3040 thickness. Most of the individual PUM repeats are similar to classical PUM repeats with three a helices, but with variability in the length of helices and interhelix loops (Supplementary Fig. 1b,c). The repeats form a curved overall structure, and twisting relative to imaginary repeat-to-repeat axes is focused at repeats R4 and R7 (Supplementary Fig. 1d). Most of the variable interhelix regions correspond to these locations where twisting occurs. Extended loops before and after repeat R4 and a long loop between repeats R7 and R8 each correspond to B25 twists. Repeat R11 diverges in structure from a classical
PUM repeat with two a helices at the C-terminal end that cap the structure. Two long loops between helices a2 and a3 in repeats R2 (residues 164174) and R3 (residues 220250) are disordered in the crystal structure (Supplementary Fig. 2).
The most-conserved residues across Nop9 family proteins are found on the inner concave surface at the positions that typically recognize RNA bases in classical PUF proteins (Fig. 1c). These ve-residue motifs are found near the N-terminal ends of the a2 helices (Supplementary Fig. 2). The most common motif in Nop9, SfxxE/D (where f is a stacking side chain and x is a hydrophobic side chain), species a G base in classical PUF proteins such as PUM1. This motif is found in repeats R1, R2, R5 and R8-R10 of Nop9. A C-recognition motif, sfxxR (where s is a small side chain and f is a stacking side chain), is present in repeats R3 and R6 of Nop9, although the motif in R6 is not conserved among the Nop9 family (Fig. 1c). In contrast to the divergent ve-residue motifs of Puf-A family proteins21, most of Nop9s PUM repeats bear motifs similar to the sequence-specic PUM repeats of classical PUF proteins17,22. We thus sought to identify an RNA target sequence for Nop9 in pre-rRNA.
Nop9 recognizes the sequence and structure of ITS1 pre-rRNA. We used electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs) and found that Nop9 binds to ITS1 pre-rRNA near site D, the site cleaved by Nob1 to produce the mature 18S rRNA from the 20S pre-rRNA. Previously, Nop9 had been shown to bind in vitro to an immobilized fragment of ITS1 from site D to site A2 (D-A2) at the 30 end of 20S rRNA11. However, Nop9 also associated with immobilized tRNA, suggesting a lack of specicity. Therefore, to identify a pre-rRNA-binding site for Nop9, we began by measuring binding afnities of Nop9 for three subdomains of the D-A2 fragment of ITS1 (labelled A, B and C in Fig. 2). We found that Nop9 bound with strong afnity to subdomain A (Kd 2.40.3 nM, indicates s.e.m., n 3), which contains the
50 and 30 single-stranded anking regions and the base of a long
2 NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 7:13085 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =www.nature.com/naturecommunications
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 ARTICLE
stem loop (Fig. 2, Supplementary Fig. 3 and Supplementary Table 1). Nop9 binds 3040-fold more weakly to Subdomain B or C.
We next sought to narrow the Nop9-binding site within Subdomain A and found that the base of the stemloop region and the adjacent 50 anking region were critical for Nop9 binding.
The 50 single-stranded nucleotides 116 were necessary, but are not sufcient for binding: deleting 50 nucleotides 116 abrogated binding, but nucleotides 116 alone did not bind Nop9 (Supplementary Table 1). We could trim 50 nucleotides 16 without affecting binding afnity, indicating the importance of 50 nucleotides closer to the stem. Deleting the 30 single-stranded region reduced binding afnity 6.5-fold, suggesting that it contributes to binding afnity, but not to the same extent as
the 50 anking nucleotides and stem loop. Classical PUF proteins such as PUM1 recognize RNA bases using hydrogen bond and stacking interactions, and binding is insensitive to salt concentration17. In contrast, interaction of Puf-A/Puf6 proteins with phosphate groups of single- or double-stranded RNA is highly sensitive to salt concentration21. Nop9:ITS1 RNA binding was only modestly sensitive to salt concentration (Supplementary Table 2), consistent with specic H-bond or base-stacking interactions that recognize RNA sequence elements.
We systematically mutated an ITS1 pre-rRNA fragment and found that Nop9 is selective for both the sequence and structure of ITS1 (Fig. 3 and Supplementary Table 3). We rst analysed the importance of the 50 anking sequence, whose deletion abrogated
a
5ETS ITS1 ITS2 3ETS
Initial cleavage at A0
a b 003 y
35S
18S 25S
5.8S
A0 A1 A2 A3
D
Initial cleavage at A3
18S
23S
A0, A1 cleavage
A2 cleavage
A0 A1 A2 A3
D
A1 cleavage
32S
18S 25S
5.8S
A1 A2 A3
D
A2 cleavage
18S
20S 25S
5.8S
27SA2
A1 A2
D A2 A3
5.8S
25S
Nucleus
Cytoplasm
Export
Export
20S
D cleavage
18S
5.8S
25S
A1 A2
D
Nob1
18S
b
R8 R9 R10
R7
R6
R5
R4
C
90 90
80
35
R3
R2 R1
R11
N
30
c
SK R
LLME SHVCLCE SHT V I L
R N
S
PVLQ SHRFLLE FYVV L V K SLFLALEQ SRHVVLQE SHIVVDY
GR
R1 (107111)
SKLME
R2 (143147)
IYGRQ
Figure 1 | Crystal structure of S. cerevisiae Nop9 protein. (a) Diagram of pre-rRNA-processing steps in yeast. The pre-rRNA is transcribed as a 35S polycistronic precursor and is processed through a series of cleavage events to produce the mature 18S, 5.8S and 25S rRNAs. Oligonucleotide probes, 003, a, b and y for northern blotting are indicated. The 20S pre-rRNA is produced by cleavage at site A2, and after export to the cytoplasm, it is cleaved at site D to produce the mature 18S rRNA. (b) Ribbon drawing of Nop9. The 11 PUM repeats are coloured sequentially and denoted R1 through R11. N- and C-terminal capping helices are shown in grey. Three orientations are shown, rotated 90 with respect to one another. The molecular graphics for this gure (Figs 4 and 7) and Supplementary Figs 1 and 4 were prepared with PyMol (Schrdinger). (c) Conservation of Nop9 RNA-recognition motifs.
The sequence logos of putative RNA-binding motifs in Nop9 family members (top) and the residue numbers (middle) and corresponding sequences (bottom) in S. cerevisiae Nop9 are shown. The sequence logos were generated by WebLogo52 using 108 Nop9 family sequences from different organisms. The alignment was carried out using ClustalX 2.1.
SHVLE
R3 (203207)
SHVLR
R4 (301305)
SPVIQ
R5 (349353)
SHFLE
R6 (387391)
AFVVR
R7 (421435)
MDFGT
R8 (488492)
SVFLE
R9 (527531)
SHVVE
R10 (565569)
SHIMD
R11 (600604)
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 7:13085 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =www.nature.com/naturecommunications 3
ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085
binding. Trimming up to 12 nucleotides from the 50 single-stranded region had a minor effect on binding afnity (Fig. 3b); similarly, mutating the RNA sequence in the distal part of the 50 anking region (nucleotides 79 and 1012) had little to no effect on Nop9 binding (Fig. 3c). In contrast, removing 15 nucleotides from the 50 single-stranded region diminished binding afnity 29-fold (Fig. 3b), and sequence mutations nearing the base of the duplex (nucleotides 1315) reduced RNA-binding afnity (Fig. 3c). We next analysed the importance of the sequence of the
duplex region for Nop9 binding and found that the lower stem and base U16 are critical for RNA-binding afnity. Mutating nucleotides 1618 from UUU to GGC while preserving base pairing (Figs 3a, I) reduced afnity approximately ninefold (Fig. 3c). We separated the U16G mutation in the 50 anking sequence (Fig. 3a, II) from the UU17-18GC mutation (Fig. 3a,III), which switches the two UA base pairs at the base of the stem to GC base pairs, and found that either mutation reduced RNA-binding afnity approximately fourfold (Fig. 3c). Mutation of U16 to A or C also weakened RNA-binding afnity (Supplementary Table 3). In contrast, reversing the sequence of the 50 and 30 strands at the base of the duplex (Fig. 3a, IV), which maintains UA versus GC base pairs, had no effect on Nop9 binding (Fig. 3c). Preference for RNAs with UA or AU versus GC base pairs is not because of weaker hydrogen bonding because mutations that result in UG base pairs at the base of the duplex reduce RNA-binding afnity approximately threefold (Fig. 3a, V). The sequence of the upper stem is not critical for Nop9 interaction; mutation of nucleotides 2022 or 2730 while maintaining base pairing had little effect on Nop9 RNA-binding afnity (Fig. 3c). Taken together, we found that Nop9 prefers uridine at position 16 in the 50 single-stranded region of the ITS1 pre-rRNA and UA or AU base pairs at the base of the duplex region, suggesting that specic protein:RNA interaction may be focused in this region.
Nop9 binds at the base of the ITS1 stem loop. To build a Nop9:ITS1 RNA complex structure, we calculated a SAXS model of the complex that placed the open end of the RNA duplex near Nop9s N-terminal repeats. We collected SAXS data for Nop9 alone, ITS1 RNA (Subdomain A) and a Nop9:ITS1 RNA complex (Supplementary Fig. 4 and Supplementary Table 4). We rst conrmed that the crystal structure of Nop9 matches the SAXS data for Nop9 alone and that a model for the ITS1 RNA matches that of the RNA alone. We then employed rigid body modelling with the Nop9 crystal structure and the ITS1 RNA model, assuming no large conformational changes to build a protein:RNA complex that best ts the SAXS data for the
Table 1 | Data collection and renement statistics.
SeMet Nop9 (46645) Nop9 (46645)
Data collection
Space group P21 P21Cell dimensionsa, b, c () 67.58, 109.14, 115.04 67.50, 110.47, 114.85 b () 93.3 92.2
Resolution () 502.65 (2.72.65)* 502.1 (2.142.1) Rsym 0.114 (0.54) 0.086 (0.43)
I/sI 14.3 (2.75) 12.5 (3.34) Completeness (%) 96.4 (72.0) 97.5 (86.4)
Redundancy 13.2 (6.8) 7.0 (4.0)
Renement
Resolution () 32.02.1 No. of reections 96,076 Rwork/Rfree 18.5%/22.6%
No. of atoms 9,186
Protein 8,809 Water/ion 377 B-factors
Protein 58.4 Water/ion 53.7 R.m.s. deviations
Bond lengths () 0.009 Bond angles () 1.11
SeMet, selenomethionine.*Values in parentheses are for the highest-resolution shell.
50 60 70
G C A A G A G C A U G A G A
GC U U U U A C U G G G C A A G A A G A C
A
GAGA UG
G A
G A G U
CC A
G
CC G
G G
CC U
G
C G
CU
U
A
A
U A
U
U
C
U
G
U
U
U
U
C
G
U
C U
G
U
U
U
G A
A
G
A
G
U
G
G
C
C
G
U
U
C
U
U
U
A
A
40
180
170
160
A
140 150
C
C
U
U
80
Kd 105 nM
U
U
G
1.0
Subdomain B
AA
G
U
190
200
U
G
U
Fraction RNA bound
130
U
30
U
A U
A
CAA U
U
AAA A
C C G U U U
CA A U A C A A C
U U
U
U
C
G
0.5
Subdomain A Kd 2.4 nM
AG
90 Subdomain C
Kd 74 nM
G
U
G
C
U
UG
A
A
0.0
120
U
C
D A2
A A
U
G
0.1 1 10 100 1,000
G
U
Nop9 concentration (nM)
G
100
A A G A A A U U U A A U A A U U U
C
G
1 10
20
210
C
UG
110
G
Figure 2 | Nop9 binds specically to the ITS1 D-A2 fragment of 20S pre-rRNA. The secondary structure of the ITS1 D-A2 pre-rRNA (1212) is shown. WatsonCrick base pairs are denoted by single (AU) or double (GC) dashes, and GU wobble base pairs are denoted by dots. We divided the ITS1 D-A2 pre-rRNA into three stemloop subdomains: A (orange), B (grey) and C (black). The ends of subdomains A and B were closed by connecting nucleotides 40 and 184 or nucleotides 77 and 140, respectively (ovals). Representative binding curves for Nop9 and ITS1 D-A2 subdomains A, B and C are shown (inset). The mean Kd values for three technical replicate experiments are noted, and the mean Kds.e.m. are summarized in Supplementary Table 1.
4 NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 7:13085 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =www.nature.com/naturecommunications
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 ARTICLE
a b
a b
40
A U
184
35
U A G G A C A A
U U
C C G
U U
U
30
U
U
K rel
25
G
1.5
U
1.0
190
0.5
R5
0.0
U
U
16 112 115
U
R4 R3 R2 R1
ITS1 truncation
C-G G-C C-G G-C
c
10
I
8
G
G
K rel
6
II III
IV
U
200
4
G C-G C-G
C
A
V
2
G-C U-G U-G
A
V
0
20
30
AAA(2022)CCC AUUU(2730)GCGC
10
16
5-
UUU AAU
AAU
C-G A-U A-U
IV
Wild-type RNA
UUU(79)GGG
AAU(1012)CCC
AAU(1315)CCC
UUU(1618)GGC
U16G
UU(1718)GC
UUG(1719)AAC
AA(205206)GG
Figure 4 | SAXS model of the Nop9 protein and ITS1 D-A2 subdomain A pre-rRNA. (a) Rigid body SAXS model of the Nop9:ITS1 D-A2 subdomain A pre-rRNA complex. The crystal structure of Nop9 and a predicted model of the ITS1 D-A2 Subdomain A pre-rRNA from SAXS data of the RNA alone are shown. Positively and negatively charged surfaces are shown in blue and red, respectively. The vacuum electrostatic surface potential was calculated using the APBS module within PyMol. (b) ITS1 D-A2 pre-rRNA contacts the conserved Nop9 repeats. The extent of amino-acid sequence conservation was calculated using the ConSurf server53 with default settings, and the results are displayed on a ribbon diagram of Nop9 (highly conserved residues are coloured maroon and less conserved residues are cyan).
The most highly conserved residues are shown with space-lling spheres.
GGG
CCC
CCC
G-C C-G G-C
III
A C
I
ITS1 mutant
Figure 3 | Nop9 recognizes sequence and structural elements of ITS1 RNA. (a) RNA sequence and secondary structure of ITS1 subdomain A. Mutations tested in c are indicated by the boxed sequences and coloured according to the effect on relative Kd (Krel). Krel was set equal to 1 for Nop9 binding to the ITS1 subdomain A D5016, D30 (mean Kds.e.m. 11.80.4 nM
for four technical replicate experiments). Krel43, dark orange; 2oKrelo3, light orange; 1oKrelo2, dark grey; Krelr1, light grey. As noted in the text, the mutation at the base of the stem region (I) was probed further with additional mutants (II, III, IV and V). (b) RNA nucleotides 1315 are critical for Nop9 binding to ITS1 subdomain A. A bar graph created in GraphPad PRISM plots the mean binding afnities of Nop9 and 50 truncated ITS1 subdomain A RNAs relative to Nop9 binding to ITS1 subdomain A D5016,
D30 calculated from three technical replicate experiments with error bars representing the s.e.m. (c) RNA nucleotides 1318 are important for Nop9 binding to ITS1 subdomain A. A bar graph created in GraphPad PRISM plots the mean binding afnities of Nop9 and mutated ITS1 RNAs relative to Nop9 binding to ITS1 subdomain A D5016, D30 calculated from three technical replicate experiments with error bars representing the s.e.m.
Krel for Nop9 and ITS1 mutants are labelled as in a. For mutations in the stem region, base pairing was maintained by corresponding mutations to the opposite strand. The mean Kds.e.m., Krel, and P values are summarized in Supplementary Table 3.
N
C
protein:RNA complex (Fig. 4 and Supplementary Fig. 4). The Nop9:ITS1 RNA SAXS model places the open end of the ITS1 duplex on the surface of Nop9 near the loops between the a1 and a2 helices of repeats R2 and R3. Indeed, a basic patch on this surface of Nop9 complements the negatively charged RNA phosphate backbone (Fig. 4a). In addition, the N terminus of Nop9 is near the major groove of the RNA (Fig. 4a). The sequence of the N terminus is highly conserved (Fig. 4b), suggesting a possible role in RNA interaction. The low resolution of SAXS modelling and the exible nature of single-stranded RNA prevented visualization of the 50 anking RNA of ITS1.
Nop9 impedes Nob1 cleavage in 20S pre-rRNA processing. The endonuclease Nob1 processes 20S pre-rRNA to 18S rRNA in the cytoplasm; however, its cleavage activity must be prevented in the nucleolus. Since Nob1s recognition site includes the base of the stem in ITS1 where we found that Nop9 binds6,23,
we hypothesized that Nop9 might compete with Nob1 substrate recognition and consequently inhibit Nob1 cleavage of the 20S pre-rRNA at site D in the nucleolus. To test this hypothesis, we generated three distinct yeast strains where endogenous, chromosomal NOP9, NOB1 or both NOP9 and NOB1 were encoded with a triple-haemagglutinin (HA) epitope tag and were placed under the control of a galactose-inducible, glucoserepressible promoter (Fig. 5a, Nop9, Nob1 and Nop9 Nob1). When these strains are grown in the presence of glucose, expression of Nop9, Nob1 or both Nop9 and Nob1 is inhibited and the protein is depleted (Supplementary Fig. 5a). Since both Nop9 and Nob1 are essential for small ribosomal subunit assembly, depletion of Nop9, Nob1 or both Nop9 and Nob1 should impair growth5,11. We assessed yeast growth rate after depletion of endogenous Nop9, Nob1 or both Nop9 and Nob1 for 24 h at 30 C (Fig. 5b, Nop9, Nob1, Nop9 Nob1). As expected, depletion of Nop9 ( Nop9), Nob1
( Nob1) or both Nop9 and Nob1 ( Nop9 Nob1) impaired
growth relative to the parental strain YPH499 ( Nop9 Nob1)11.
To probe the in vivo role of Nop9 in preventing premature 20S pre-rRNA cleavage, we analysed the effects of Nop9, Nob1 or Nop9 and Nob1 depletion on pre-rRNA processing by northern blot analysis. We quantitated the changes in the abundance of the mature rRNAs or pre-rRNA intermediates relative to a loading control, Scr1 (Fig. 5c,d and Supplementary Fig. 5b). Depletion of Nop9 did not affect mature 25S rRNA levels, but did result in a signicant decrease in mature 18S rRNA levels compared with the parental strain (Fig. 5c,d, Nop9 Nob1 versus Nop9),
consistent with its role in small ribosomal subunit assembly11,12. Nop9 depletion did not signicantly affect the levels of the 35S or the 23S pre-rRNA intermediates, yet the levels of the 32S, 27SA2, 21S and 20S pre-rRNAs were decreased compared with the
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 7:13085 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =www.nature.com/naturecommunications 5
ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085
a
+Nop9 +Nob1 Nop9 Nob1 Nop9 Nob1
+Nop9 +Nob1
Nop9
Nob1
Nop9 Nob1
0
b c
+Nop9 +Nob1
Nop9
Nob1
Nop9 Nob1
Oligo b
+Nop9 +Nob1
Nop9
Nob1
Nop9 Nob1
+Nop9 +Nob1
Nop9
Nob1
Nop9 Nob1
32S
21S
10
Log 2OD600
5
25S
18S
35S
23S
20S
27SA2
0
Oligo a+y
Oligo c
5
10Hours in glucose at 30 C
20
30
Scr1
d
25S/Scr1
Nop9 Nob1
Nob1
35S/Scr1 27SA2/Scr1 21S/Scr1
18S/Scr1 32S/Scr1 23S/Scr1 20S/Scr1
2.5
0.0
2.5
0.0
2.5
0.0
2.5
0.0
2.01.51.00.5
2.01.51.00.5
2.01.51.00.5
2.01.51.00.5
**** ****
**
*** **
****
** **
Nop9
+Nop9 +Nob1
Nob1
Nop9
+Nop9 +Nob1
Nop9 Nob1
Nop9
+Nop9 +Nob1
Nop9 Nob1
Nob1
Nop9
+Nop9 +Nob1
Nop9 Nob1
Nob1
2.5
0.0
2.5
0.0
2.5
0.0
2.01.51.00.5
2.01.51.00.5
2.01.51.00.5
20
60 *
*
40
1.0
*
**
**
0.5
0.0
Nop9
+Nop9 +Nob1
Nop9 Nob1
Nob1
Nop9
+Nop9 +Nob1
Nop9 Nob1
Nob1
Nop9 Nob1
Nob1
Nop9
+Nop9 +Nob1
Nop9 Nob1
Nob1
Nop9
+Nop9 +Nob1
Figure 5 | Probing the in vivo function of Nop9. (a) Schematic drawings of the yeast strains used for testing the effects of Nop9 and/or Nob1 depletion. Chromosomal Nop9 and/or Nob1 expression was placed under the control of the inducible GAL promoter and sequences encoding triple-HA tags were inserted. (b) Depletion of Nop9 and/or Nob1 expression impairs growth. Representative growth curves of yeast strains grown at 30 C for 24 h in glucose to deplete endogenous Nop9 and/or Nob1 expression. Three biological replicates were conducted. (c) Northern blot analysis of Nop9/Nob1 double depletion indicates restoration of normal 20S pre-rRNA levels. Representative northern blots detecting precursor and mature rRNA in total RNA from parental YPH499 ( Nop9 Nob1) or yeast depleted of Nop9 ( Nop9), Nob1 ( Nob1) or both Nop9 and Nob1 ( Nop9 Nob1) in glucose for 24 h at
30 C. The pre-rRNA intermediates and mature rRNAs were detected using a series of oligonucleotide probes, a, b, c and y, that are indicated in Fig. 1a. Oligos a y were used to detect 25S and 18S rRNAs, oligo b was used to detect the 20S pre-rRNA and oligo c was used to detect the 35S, 32S, 27SA2, 23S
and 21S pre-rRNAs. An oligo complementary to Scr1 was used as a loading control. (d) Quantitation of replicates of the northern blots presented in c. The intensities of the mature rRNAs and pre-rRNA intermediates relative to Scr1, the loading control, were plotted. Bar graphs created in GraphPad PRISM plot the mean intensities calculated from three biological replicate experiments with error bars representing the s.e.m. The signicance of the levels of mature and pre-rRNAs in Nop9, Nob1 or Nop9 Nob1 compared with Nop9 Nob1 YPH499 was assessed by an unpaired, two-sided t-test, and
P values are indicated (*Pr0.05, **Pr0.01, ***Pr0.001 and ****Pr0.0001 nonsignicant differences have P values 40.05). The analysis of the 35S, 32S and 23S pre-rRNAs using oligo c is shown; however, similar results are obtained when analysing the blot probed with oligo b.
parental strain (Fig. 5c,d, Nop9 Nob1 versus Nop9).
These results are consistent with previous results that depletion of Nop9 affects the early U3-dependent cleavages at A0, A1 and A2 (ref. 11).
However, we also examined depletion of Nop9 for 72 h at 17 C, an optimized temperature at which ribosome biogenesis defects are enhanced (Supplementary Fig. 6a)24,25. Under these
conditions, cleavage at site A2, which generates the 20S pre-rRNA, does not appear to be dramatically inhibited, since the levels of 27SA2 and 23S pre-rRNA were only mildly affected by Nop9 depletion (Supplementary Fig. 6b,c), consistent with ndings from a screen to identify additional ribosome biogenesis genes12. Yet, we observed a signicant reduction in the levels of the 20S pre-rRNA relative to the loading control, Scr1
6 NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 7:13085 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =www.nature.com/naturecommunications
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 ARTICLE
(Supplementary Fig. 6b,c). As a result, the decrease in the 20S pre-rRNA includes a defect in its further processing and/or stability, not only in its production. This is consistent with our hypothesis that Nop9 prevents premature cleavage of the 20S pre-rRNA in the nucleolus.
Depletion of Nob1 also impaired small ribosomal subunit assembly. The levels of the mature 18S rRNA but not the mature 25S rRNA were signicantly decreased relative to the parental strain (Fig. 5c,d, Nop9 Nob1 versus Nob1). Depletion of
Nob1 resulted in a reduction of the 35S and the 23S pre-rRNA intermediates, while the levels of the 32S, 27SA2 or 21S pre-rRNA intermediates were not signicantly affected. Strikingly, Nob1 depletion did result in a signicant accumulation of the 20S pre-rRNA relative to the parental strain (Fig. 5c,d, Nop9 Nob1 versus Nob1). This is consistent with previous results
and demonstrates the importance of Nob1 for 20S pre-rRNA processing5.
On the basis of our hypothesis that Nop9 might compete with Nob1 substrate recognition and consequently reduce Nob1 cleavage at site D in the nucleolus, we expected that depleting Nob1 together with Nop9 in vivo would restore the levels of the 20S pre-rRNA. We found that co-depletion of Nop9 and Nob1 resulted in a SSU defect, as the levels of mature 25S rRNA were not affected, but the levels of mature 18S rRNA were signicantly reduced (Fig. 5c,d, Nop9 Nob1 versus Nop9 Nob1).
Similar to depletion of Nop9, co-depletion of Nop9 and Nob1 did not affect the levels of the 35S or the 23S pre-rRNAs, while the levels of the 32S, 27SA2 and 21S pre-rRNAs were reduced. Importantly, as predicted, although the 18S rRNA levels were diminished upon co-depletion of Nop9 and Nob1, the 20S pre-rRNA level was restored to the parental strain level (Fig. 5c,d,
Nop9 Nob1 versus Nop9 Nob1). These in vivo
observations support the proposal that Nop9 restricts Nob1 substrate recognition in the nucleolus.
To directly test whether Nop9 inhibits Nob1 cleavage of ITS1 RNA at site D, we performed an in vitro assay and demonstrated that Nop9 reduces Nob1 cleavage efciency. We incubated a prerRNA substrate with puried Nob1 and used primer extension analysis to identify Nob1 cleavage products8. As was observed in previous studies8,10, we found a major product at cleavage site D, and the efciency of in vitro Nob1 cleavage was modest (Fig. 6a,b and Supplementary Fig. 7a). Cleavage at site D was produced by Nob1 activity, not contaminating nuclease activity, as we did not observe this product with the catalytically inactive Nob1 mutant D15N (Fig. 6a,b and Supplementary Fig. 7a). We next measured the effect of Nop9 on Nob1 cleavage, and we detected reduced site D product in the presence of Nop9 after 10 min of reaction (Fig. 6c). Longer incubation times increased the efciency of site D cleavage, and the presence of Nop9 reduced cleavage by B50%.
This level of inhibition was reached with 1:1 or 0.5:1 molar ratios of Nop9 to the pre-rRNA substrate. To assure that inhibition was specic to Nop9, we conrmed that the presence of SUMONop9 fusion protein reduced Nob1 site D cleavage efciency by B50%
relative to cleavage efciency in the presence of SUMO alone (Supplementary Fig. 7b,c).
DiscussionPre-rRNA processing is a multistep process that requires a series of cleavages by endo- and exonucleases to generate mature rRNA transcripts. These cleavage steps occur within large ribonucleo-protein complexes whose component proteins and RNAs are dynamically changing. Pre-rRNAs also undergo modication and refolding to reach their mature forms, and ribosomal proteins and assembly factors associate with the pre-ribosome throughout its biogenesis. Our results here suggest that Nop9 plays an essential
role in preventing Nob1 from cleaving pre-rRNA at site D in the nucleolus, since Nob1 is associated with pre-ribosomes and the 20S pre-rRNA and it is present in both the nucleus and cytoplasm5,8,9.
We propose that Nop9 protects ITS1 from premature cleavage in the nucleolus by blocking access of Nob1 to its binding site near site D and therefore inhibiting substrate recognition and cleavage. Nop9 appears to join the assembling SSU processome/90S pre-ribosome before Nob1, which is consistent with this inhibitory role9. Nop9 may rst associate with the pre-ribosome via proteinprotein interactions or through another RNA site, since it associates with pre-rRNA fragments lacking ITS1. It may also participate in regulating early processing of the 35S pre-rRNA at the A0, A1 and A2 sites11,12. Nop9 would not prevent association of Nob1 with the 20S pre-rRNA in the nucleolus, as Nob1 binds to recognition sites located upstream of site D (nucleotides 46 to 34) as well as to other sites within
ITS1 (refs 6,23). Nop9 dissociates from the pre-ribosome before or during export to the cytoplasm, as green uorescent protein-tagged Nop9 is nucleolar and not associated with cytoplasmic pre-40S particles7,11,26. When Nop9 leaves the pre-ribosome, the region near site D of 20S pre-rRNA becomes accessible for Nob1 recognition and cleavage. Additional mechanisms then control maturation to 18S rRNA in cytoplasmic pre-40S particles and assure that translationally competent pre-40S ribosomes associate with mature 60S ribosomal subunits. For example, cytoplasmic pre-40S assembly factors prevent premature association of translation initiation factors and regulate pre-rRNA structural changes, and site D cleavage requires ATP binding by Rio1 (refs 7,8,23,2729). Thus, Nop9s role in controlling site D cleavage in the nucleolus is an important part of the orchestrated process of pre-rRNA maturation progressing through different cellular compartments.
PUM repeat-containing proteins fall into three classes based on sequence homology: (1) the classical PUM/FBF family, (2) the Puf-A/Puf6 family and (3) the Nop9 family. With this study, we establish that the three classes display different structures with distinct RNA-recognition properties (Fig. 7). Classical crescent-shaped PUF proteins contain eight PUM repeats and recognize single-stranded RNA through sequence-specic contacts with the RNA bases16,17. Puf-A/Puf6 family proteins, which are L-shaped, contain 11 PUM repeats and interact with single- or double-stranded RNA through non-sequence-specic contacts with the phosphate backbone21. Puf-A/Puf6 proteins use residues from the a2 helices to recognize double-stranded RNA; however, the RNA interaction motifs are divergent. The study here reveals that Nop9s 11 PUM repeats form a C shape and interact with an ITS1 pre-rRNA target comprising 50 and 30 single-stranded regions anking a duplex region. Nop9 recognizes both single-stranded and duplex elements, and both sequence and structure appear to be important for high-afnity binding. All PUM repeat-containing proteins may utilize their distinct recognition properties to function in mRNA regulation, as NOP9/c14orf21 and Puf-A/KIAA0020 have been identied as mRNA-binding proteins in mammals30,31. Protein:protein interactions are also critical to establish effector complexes on RNA targets, and it is likely that Puf-A/Puf6 and Nop9 proteins, like classical PUF proteins, form complexes with other proteins. Nop9 may associate with the SSU processome/90S pre-ribosome through proteinprotein interactions before its 20S pre-rRNA target site is transcribed9. Identication of these interactions will facilitate the discovery of mechanisms in ribosome assembly or additional cellular processes.
Our SAXS model of the Nop9:RNA complex in conjunction with biochemical probing suggests that Nop9 recognizes specic sequence and structural elements within ITS1 of the pre-rRNA.
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 7:13085 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =www.nature.com/naturecommunications 7
ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085
a b
Experimental data Deconvoluted data
Nob1/Nop9 0.5 M
Nob1/Nop9 1.0 M
Nob1
D15N Nob1
RNA alone
A
C
G
U
Counts
600
700
800
900
1,000
1,100
1,200
0
50,000
100,000
0
50,000
100,000
0
50,000
100,000
0
50,000
0
50,000
Nob1/Nop90.5 M
Nob1/Nop91.0 M
Nob1
D15N
Nob1
RNA alone
Pixel position
Site D
*
c
Nob1 Nob1/Nop9 0.5 M Nob1/Nop9 1.0 M
10
1
Cleavage efficiency
P =0.0037
P =0.0014
P =0.0040
P =0.0015
P =0.0012
P =0.0016
0
30 60
Incubation time (min)
Figure 6 | Nop9 reduces Nob1 cleavage efciency. (a) Primer extension analysis of Nob1 cleavage. A pre-rRNA substrate containing the 30 end of 20S pre-rRNA (1 mM) was incubated with Nob1 (3.5 mM) for 60 min in the presence or absence of Nop9 (0.5 or 1.0 mM) and products detected using primer extension analysis. Control reactions with a catalytically inactive Nob1 D15N mutant or RNA substrate alone are included. A representative gel is shown.
An arrow indicates a major product with cleavage at site D. An asterisk indicates a minor product at an alternative cleavage site. Sequencing reactions are shown in the right lanes. The full gel is shown in Supplementary Fig. 6a. (b) Proling of the sequencing gel lanes surrounding site D. SAFA was used to deconvolute the sequencing gel in a. (c) Nob1 cleavage efciencies at different time points and concentrations of Nop9. Cleavage efciencies were calculated as the ratio of site D cleavage product to total RNA and the efciency of cleavage by Nob1 alone was set to 1 for each time point. The mean cleavage efcienciess.e.m. for Nob1 were 1.150.06% at 10 min, 3.540.23% at 30 min and 7.730.50% at 60 min. Bar graphs created in GraphPad PRISM plot the means calculated from three technical replicate experiments with error bars representing the s.e.m. The signicance of the cleavage efciencies in the presence of Nop9 relative to Nob1 cleavage alone was assessed by an unpaired, two-sided t-test, and P values are indicated.
The N-terminal residues of Nop9 preceding repeat R10 (residues 5058) are packed along the a1 helices of repeats R1 and R2, and the sequence is well conserved. The SAXS model suggests that this peptide might interact with the major groove of the double-stranded region of ITS1. In addition, interaction of the N-terminal repeats of Nop9 with the duplex region of the RNA includes residues at the junction between the a1 and a2 helices of repeats R1R3. This interaction may be similar to minor groove interaction by equivalent residues of Puf-A21, suggesting a conserved feature. The SAXS model cannot resolve single-stranded RNA-recognition features of Nop9. SfxxE/D motifs are the most frequently occurring RNA-recognition motif on the concave surface of Nop9. In the context of classical PUF proteins, the SfxxE/D motif would recognize G (for example, repeat 7 of
Caenorhabditis elegans FBF-2)32. However, the only guanine found in the Nop9-binding site in ITS1 is G19, base-paired with C204, and mutation to cytosine (G19C/C204G) did not affect binding afnity. In addition, NMR analyses suggested that short G-rich RNAs show only very weak binding to Nop9 (Supplementary Fig. 8). Surprisingly, Nop9 binds to short A-rich RNAs, as shown by saturation-transfer difference NMR (Supplementary Fig. 8d). Therefore, the SfxxE/D motifs in Nop9
may have different recognition properties than selecting guanine bases, as in classical PUF proteins and as selected by the plant Nop9 homologue, APUM23 (refs 17,33). A crystal structure of Nop9 in complex with ITS1 RNA will aid in deciphering its base-specic recognition code.
The extended PUF family of proteins has achieved a remarkable degree of functional diversity for its small size. Most eukaryotic organisms possess a set of classical PUF proteins that regulate mRNA translation of specic targets, one Puf-A/Puf6 protein involved in large ribosomal subunit biogenesis and one Nop9 protein involved in small ribosomal subunit biogenesis. Our results here suggest that Nop9 may represent an evolutionary bridge between the sequence-specic classical PUF proteins and sequence-independent Puf-A/Puf6 proteins (Fig. 7). Nop9s11 PUM repeats form a C shape, extending the classical PUF protein curvature, but with twists focused at some repeats. As the protein family evolved, introducing twists might have buried some classical PUM repeat RNA-recognition residues, thus diminishing sequence-specic recognition. Arabidopsis thaliana APUM23, a Nop9 family member, appears to have evolved distinct RNA sequence recognition properties from yeast Nop9, further diversifying this group of proteins33. The Puf-A/Puf6
8 NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 7:13085 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =www.nature.com/naturecommunications
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 ARTICLE
R8 C-R8
R8
R11
R4
R1
N
C-R1
N
R1
N-R3 N-R1
N
PUM1 Nop9 Puf-A
Figure 7 | PUM repeats form three distinct classes of RNA-binding proteins. Schematic drawings of the crystal structures of human PUM1 (left), yeast Nop9 (centre) and human Puf-A (right). PUM repeats at structural junctions in Nop9 and Puf-A are coloured yellow, and pseudorepeats at the N- and C termini are coloured grey. Puf-A comprises11 PUM repeats, which are numbered N-R1 to N-R3 and C-R1 to C-R8 to indicate that its C-terminal repeats C-R1 to C-R8 form a curved structure similar to PUM1 (ref. 21).
proteins exaggerate a twist to produce a joint and a distinctive L shape. This small family of proteins provides an example of natural engineering of curvature change to evolve distinct ligand specicity. Understanding PUF protein curvature changes may serve as a template to guide design of synthetic proteins comprising a-helical repeats to recognize specic ligands as well as presenting the opportunity to engineer PUF RNA-binding proteins that recognize structural as well as sequence features34,35.
Methods
Nop9 expression and purication. A cDNA fragment encoding full-length Nop9 (residues 1666) was amplied from S. cerevisiae genomic DNA and cloned into pSMT3 (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center) using SacI and NotI restriction sites. A cDNA fragment encoding a truncated protein (residues 46645) was cloned similarly. Nop9 proteins were expressed at 22 C overnight in Escherichia coli strain BL21-CodonPlus (DE3) in the presence of 0.4 mM isopropyl-b-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG), which was added when the OD600 reached 0.6. Cell pellets were resuspended in sonication buffer (25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 1 M NaCl, 1 mM TCEP [tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine], 25 mM imidazole) plus 1 mg ml 1 lysozyme and lysed by sonication, followed by centrifugation to remove cell debris. The supernatant was applied to 5 ml of HisPur Ni-NTA resin (Thermo Scientic), washed with 200 ml of sonication buffer and eluted with 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 500 mM NaCl, 1 mM TCEP and 500 mM imidazole. The N-terminal SUMO-tagged protein was cleaved overnight with 2 mg ml 1 of Ulp1 at 4 C. The cleaved sample was diluted into 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 20 mM NaCl and 1 mM TCEP, and then it was loaded on a 5-ml HiTrap Heparin column (GE Healthcare). The sample was eluted with a linear gradient from 0 to 2 M NaCl in 20 mM HEPES and 1 mM TCEP. Nop9 eluted from the heparin column when the salt concentration reached B600 mM NaCl and was further puried using a HiLoad 16/60 Superdex200 column (GE Healthcare) equilibrated with 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 500 mM NaCl and 1 mM TCEP. Truncated proteins were expressed and puried with the same protocol. Uncleaved SUMONop9 or SUMO was puried using the same protocol with minor modications: the Ulp1 cleavage step was omitted and SUMO protein was eluted from the heparin column when the salt concentration reached 300 mM NaCl. The identities of the proteins were conrmed using mass spectrometry, and the purities were 495% based on SDSPAGE. Selenomethionine (SeMet)-substituted Nop9 was prepared by growing cells in M9 medium supplemented with SeMet (50 mg l 1), Lys (100 mg l 1), Thr (100 mg l 1), Phe (100 mg l 1),
Leu (50 mg l 1), Ile (50 mg l 1) and Val (50 mg l 1). SeMet-containing protein was puried with the same protocol as for native protein, except all buffers were degassed for 2 h. Incorporation of selenium was 497% according to mass spectrometry. Nucleotide sequences for all plasmids were conrmed using DNA sequencing.
Nob1 expression and purication. Wild-type S. cerevisiae Nob1 and inactive Nob1 D15N mutant proteins were cloned, expressed and puried similarly to Nop9 with minor modications. Briey, a cDNA encoding Nob1 was cloned into pSMT3 using SacI and NotI restriction sites. Inactive Nob1 D15N mutant was prepared by site-directed mutagenesis PCR. Nucleotide sequences for both plasmids were conrmed using DNA sequencing. Nob1 proteins were expressed at 22 C overnight in E. coli strain BL21-CodonPlus (DE3) in the presence of 0.5 mM IPTG, which was added when the OD600 reached 0.6 and 1 mM ZnCl26. Wild-type Nob1
and its D15N mutant were puried using the same buffers and columns as Nop9. Puried proteins were concentrated to 150 mM in a buffer containing 25 mM
HEPES, pH 7.5, 500 mM NaCl and 1 mM TCEP. The wild-type and mutant Nob1 proteins were puried with the same batch of buffers and the same set of chromatography columns using the same fast protein liquid chromatography system to control for any possible nuclease contamination.
Protein crystallization and structure determination. A truncated construct of Nop9 (residues 46645) was expressed and puried for crystallization. Truncation did not affect RNA binding (full-length Nop9 binds to Subdomain A D5016, D30
with a Kd of 10.11.0 nM versus 11.80.4 nM for the truncated protein, indicates s.e.m., n 3, P value 0.14). Initial crystals were obtained by hanging
drop vapour diffusion at 22 C, mixing 2 ml of 10 mg ml 1 Nop9 with 2 ml of a crystallization solution containing 18% (w/v) PEG 3350 and 0.2 M ammonium citrate. Crystals were improved by iterative microseeding. Crystallization solution was supplemented with 7.5% (v/v) MPD as a cryoprotectant. SeMet-substituted Nop9 crystallized in the same space group with slight changes in unit cell dimensions (Table 1).
X-ray diffraction data were collected at beamline 22-ID of the Advanced Photon Source at 100 K with a wavelength of 1.000 for native crystals and 0.979 for SeMet derivatives. The data were processed using HKL 2000 (ref. 36).
Rpim (0.046 overall and 0.303 for 2.172.09 ) and CC1/2 (0.996 overall and 0.769 for 2.172.09 ) were calculated for unmerged data using Phenix.merging_statistics37. A SeMet crystal diffracted to 2.64 , and the resolution limit of the anomalous signal was 3.2 . Phases were determined by single-wavelength anomalous dispersion experiments using Phenix AutoSol, followed by AutoBuild to generate the initial model. With the initial single-wavelength anomalous dispersion model and the 2.1 native data, iterative renement and model building using Phenix.Rene37 and WinCoot38 yielded nal R and free R factors of 20.1% and 23.6%, respectively. There are two molecules in an asymmetric unit, and 57 residues (4549, 164v174, 220250 and 635645) are not modelled. Over 96% of dihedral angles are in favoured regions of the Ramachandran plot, and only 0.19% are Ramachandran plot outliers.
RNA preparation. DNA templates for in vitro transcription of ITS1_D-A2 (nucleotides 1212) and pre-rRNA corresponding to the region containing nucleotides 164 to 212 were prepared by PCR amplication from S. cerevisiae
genomic DNA (Supplementary Table 5) and puried with 1.2% agarose gel. DNA templates for ITS1 Subdomains A (nucleotides 138_184212), B (nucleotides 3977_141183) and C (nucleotides 77140) and ITS1 RNA mutants were purchased from Eurons MWG Operon (Supplementary Table 5) and puried by denaturing PAGE gel. The T7 promoter sequence (50-GAAATTAATACGACTCA
CTATA-30) was used for in vitro transcription of RNA using T7 RNA polymerase, and two guanine bases were included to promote transcription. In vitro transcription samples were incubated at 37 C overnight in 100 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 20 mM MgCl2, 1 mM TCEP, 2 mM spermidine, 3% (w/v) PEG 8000, 0.01%
(v/v) Triton X-100, 4 mM nucleotide triphosphates (NTPs), 2 units of inorganic pyrophosphatase, 0.6 mM double-stranded DNA template and 0.06 mg ml 1 T7
RNA polymerase. In vitro transcription samples were treated with 10 units of alkaline phosphatase (New England Biolabs) at 37 C for 30 min and puried by 15% polyacrylamide gel (30 cm 40 cm 1.6 mm) in the presence of 8 M urea and
1 TBE. The gels were pre-run for 1 h to a temperature of 50 C, and RNA
samples were resolved under a constant power of 80 watts for 10 h, during which RNAs travel about three quarters of the gel length. The excised slices of gel containing target RNAs were dialysed overnight in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8, and1 mM EDTA. The puried RNAs were incubated at 90 C for 2 min and snap-cooled on ice to refold the RNA. The homogeneity of refolded RNA was conrmed by single bands on 10% polyacrylamide native TBE gels (Invitrogen). Short RNAs corresponding to ITS1 nucleotides 46 to 34 (50-AAAGUCGUAACAA-30),
nucleotides 116 (50-AAGAAAUUUAAUAAUU-30) and nucleotides 201212 (50-UUUCAAUACAAC-30) were purchased from Dharmacon (Thermo Scientic), de-protected according to the vendors instructions and used without further purication. RNA secondary structures were predicted using Mfold39, and the graphics in Figs 2 and 3 were prepared using VARNA40. In order to assess sequence changes without disrupting overall RNA folding, we used a fragment lacking the 50 nucleotides 16 and the 30 single-stranded region, nucleotides 201212, for mutational analysis.
EMSAs. RNAs were labelled at the 50 end with 32P-g-ATP (PerkinElmer Life Science) with T4 polynucleotide kinase for 1 h at 37 C. Unincorporated
32P-g-ATP was removed using Illustra MicroSpin G-25 columns. Radiolabelled RNAs (o50 pM) were incubated with protein samples at 4 C for 40 min in 10 mM
HEPES, 150 mM NaCl, 0.01% (v/v) Tween-20, 0.1 mg ml 1 bovine serum albumin (BSA) and 1 mM TCEP. The samples were resolved on 10% polyacrylamide native
TBE gels at constant voltage (100 V) with 1 TBE buffer at 4 C for 35 min. The
gels were dried and exposed overnight to storage phosphor screens that were then scanned on a Molecular Dynamics Typhoon PhosphorImager. Band intensities were quantied with ImageQuant 5.2. The data were t using the Hill equation with GraphPad Prism 6. EMSAs were performed at least three times, and the mean Kds and s.e.m. are reported. We conducted triplicate technical replicates for
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 7:13085 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =www.nature.com/naturecommunications 9
ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085
EMSAs, a customary sample size that provides the power to detect statistically signicant difference, if present.
SAXS analysis. SAXS data (0.013 1oqo0.328 1) were collected at the SIBYLS beamline (12.3.1) of the Advanced Light Source at room temperature.
Nop9 (46645) was exchanged into 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 500 mM NaCl and2 mM dithiothreitol (DTT) using size exclusion chromatography. ITS1 RNA (nucleotides 738_184206) was dialysed into 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 100 mM NaCl and 2 mM DTT. To purify the Nop9:ITS1 RNA complex, RNA and Nop9 were mixed at a 2:1 molar ratio and unbound RNA was removed by a Superdex 75 10/300 GL column (GE Healthcare) equilibrated in 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 250 mM NaCl and 2 mM DTT. All samples were prepared at three concentrations (Supplementary Table 4), and the corresponding chromatography buffer or dialysate was used as SAXS reference.
SAXS data were analysed with the ATSAS package (2.5.2; ref. 41). Guinier analysis was carried out using PRIMUS to determine the radius of gyration (Rg).
An ITS1 RNA model (nucleotides 738_184206) was predicted using the RNAComposer server42. The crystal structure of Nop9 lacked 57 loop residues (4649, 164174, 220250 and 635645) that could not be modelled. Ca atoms were built using the EOM package of ATSAS. We found that inclusion of the loop Ca atoms built into arbitrary conformations improved SAXS data tting for the model of Nop9 protein alone. Rigid body modelling using the crystal structureof Nop9 and the predicted structure of ITS1 RNA as input models to t the SAXS data of the Nop9:ITS1 RNA complex was carried out with SASREF43. The 50 single-stranded region of ITS1 (nucleotides 716) was not included in the rigid body modelling, since the lack of conformational adjustment for this exible region may make it a steric hindrance in rigid body modelling. Constraints were included to place the articial loop-bridging RNA nucleotides 38 and 184 away from Nop9, since truncation of the extended RNA stem loop did not affect the Nop9:ITS1 RNA interaction. For all models, w2-values for the t of the experimental model to the corresponding SAXS data were calculated using the FoXS web server that optimizes hydration layer, and excluded volume and implicit hydrogens44,45 (Supplementary Fig. 4).
Yeast analysis. GAL::3HA-NOP9, GAL::3HA-NOB1 and GAL::3HA-NOP9,3HANOB1 strains carrying a chromosomally integrated galactose-inducible/glucoserepressible promoter with a 3 HA epitope tag at the N terminus of the protein
product of NOP9 and/or NOB1 were created in the parent strain YPH499 (MAT a ura3-52 lys2-80 ade2-101 trp1-D63 his3-D200 leu2-D1)46 using the plasmids pFA6a-kanMX6-PGAL1-3xHA (GAL::3HA-NOP9 and GAL::3HA-NOB1) or pFA6a-His3MX6-PGAL1-3xHA (GAL::3HA-NOP9 (Kan); GAL::3HA-NOB1 (His)) and oligonucleotide primers complementary to NOP9 or NOB1 (ref. 47); Supplementary Table 5). To assess the effect of depletion of Nop9 and/or Nob1 expression, parent YPH499, GAL::3HA-NOP9, GAL::3HA-NOB1 and GAL::3HANOP9; GAL::3HA-NOB1 yeast strains were rst grown (YPG/R; 1% (w/v) yeast extract, 2% (w/v) peptone, 2% (w/v) galactose and 2% (w/v) rafnose) to early log phase at 30 C and then shifted to YPD (1% (w/v) yeast extract, 2% (w/v) peptone and 2% (w/v) glucose (dextrose)) for 24 h to repress expression of endogenous Nop9 and/or Nob1. The cells were maintained in mid-log phase (OD600o0.8) by
dilution of the culture with fresh YPD medium. Growth was monitored by OD600
measurement for 24 h. Depletion of endogenous Nop9 and/or Nob1 was conrmed with anti-HA (Abcam, catalogue number ab9110, 1:20,000 dilution) and anti-MPP10 (1:5,000 dilution48) western blot (Supplementary Fig. 5b). RNAwas harvested and analysed by northern blot49 using oligonucleotide probes complementary to either the 18S rRNA (oligo a) or to the 25S rRNA (oligo y) to ITS1 between sites D and A2 (oligo b), or to ITS1 between sites A2 and A3 (oligo c; Fig. 1a and Supplementary Table 5). As a loading control, a probe complementary to the Scr1 RNA (oligo Scr1) was used. The mature and pre-rRNAs were quantied on a Molecular Dynamics Typhoon 8600 Variable Mode Imager. Representative full northern blots of the portions shown in Fig. 5c are presented in Supplementary Fig. 5b. We conducted triplicate biological replicates, a customary sample size that provides the power to detect statistically signicant differences, if present.
The Nop9 cDNA was recombinantly cloned (Gateway, Invitrogen) into a modied version of the yeast expression vector p414GPD-3xFLAG-GW (ref. 21). The nucleotide sequence was conrmed using DNA sequencing. For depletion experiments performed at 17 C, the GAL::3HA-NOP9 yeast strain was transformed with the empty vector ( Nop9) or Nop9 ( Nop9) in p414GPD-3xFLAG.
To assay growth in liquid medium, yeast strains were rst grown in medium containing 2% (w/v) galactose and 2% (w/v) rafnose and lacking tryptophan (SG/R-Trp) to early log phase at 30 C and then shifted to medium containing 2% (w/v) glucose (dextrose) and lacking tryptophan (SD-Trp) at 17 C for 72 h to repress expression of endogenous Nop9. The cells were maintained in the mid-log phase (OD600o0.8) by dilution of the culture with fresh SD-Trp medium. Growth was monitored by OD600 measurement for 72 h. RNA was harvested 72 h after the shift and analysed on a northern blot using oligonucleotide probes complementary to either the 18S rRNA (oligo a) or to the 25S rRNA (oligo y), to ITS1 between site D and site A2 (oligo b), or to ITS1 between sites A2 and A3 (oligo 003; Fig. 1a and Supplementary Table 5). As a loading control, a probe complementary to the Scr1 RNA (oligo Scr1) was used. The mature and pre-rRNAs were quantied on a Bio-Rad Personal Molecular Imager. We conducted triplicate biological replicates,
a customary sample size that provides the power to detect statistically signicant differences, if present.
In vitro Nob1 cleavage assays. Nob1 cleavage assays were carried out as described previously8 with minor modications. Briey, in a 20-ml reaction system, 3.5 mM Nob1, with or without Nop9, SUMONop9 (0.5 or 1 mM) or SUMO (1 mM), was pre-incubated at 30 C for 5 min in 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 75 mM NaCl, 2 mM DDT, 0.1 mg ml 1 BSA, 0.8 unit ml 1 RNasin (Promega), 4.5% (v/v) glycerol,0.3 mM yeast tRNA and 5 mM MnCl2, before addition of 1 mM pre-rRNA substrate including 164 nucleotides from the 30 end of 18S rRNA and the nucleotides in ITS1 from sites D to A2 (nucleotides 164 to 212). Cleavage reactions were incubated
for 10, 30 and 60 min, followed by proteinase K treatment at 37 C for 90 min. After phenol/chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation, the samples were dissolved in 10 ml TE buffer. Typically, 2 ml of cleavage reaction were mixed with 1 ml 0.5 mM 32P-labelled DNA primer (ITS1 nucleotides 6284, Supplementary Table 5), incubated at 65 C for 5 min and then placed immediately on ice. Primer extension was carried out at 57 C for 20 min with 1 Superscript IV buffer
(Invitrogen), 2.5 mM DTT, 0.5 mM of each dNTP, 0.8 unit ml 1 RNasin (Promega) and 20 units of Superscript IV reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen). For sequencing lanes, reactions were supplemented with 0.4 mM of the respective ddNTP. At the end of primer extension, RNA templates were removed by incubating the samples with 50 mM NaOH at 95 C for 2 min. Samples were neutralized with 50 mM HCl, 300 mM sodium acetate and ethanol precipitated. Two-microlitre samples dissolved in formamide loading buffer were resolved on 8% polyacrylamidedenaturing gels (31.0 cm 38.5 cm 0.4 mm) at a constant power of 65 W for
150 min. The dried gels were exposed to storage phosphor screens for 2 h and scanned using a Molecular Dynamics Typhoon PhosphorImager. Band intensities were quantied with ImageQuant 5.2. Cleavage proles were generated using SAFA50. The full gel of the portion shown in Fig. 6a is presented in Supplementary Fig. 7a. We conducted triplicate technical replicates, a customary sample size that provides the power to detect statistically signicant differences, if present.
Saturation-transfer difference NMR. Short RNA (1 mM), 50-CGG-30 or 50-CAA-30(Dharmacon, Thermo Scientic), was mixed with 40 mM Nop9 (46645) in D2O buffer containing 50 mM sodium phosphate pH 7.2, 200 mM NaCl and1 mM TCEP. STD-NMR data were collected on a 600 MHz magnet at 298 K using the reported pulse sequence51. Overall, 4,096 transients were accumulated for all experiments.
Data availability. Coordinates and structure factors have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank with accession ID 5SVD. The authors declare that all other data supporting the ndings of this study are available within the article and its Supplementary Information les or from the corresponding author upon request.
References
1. de la Cruz, J., Karbstein, K. & Woolford, Jr J. L. Functions of ribosomal proteins in assembly of eukaryotic ribosomes in vivo. Annu. Rev. Biochem. 84, 93129 (2015).
2. Henras, A. K., Plisson-Chastang, C., ODonohue, M. F., Chakraborty, A. & Gleizes, P. E. An overview of pre-ribosomal RNA processing in eukaryotes. Wiley Interdiscip. Rev. RNA 6, 225242 (2015).
3. Lafontaine, D. L. Noncoding RNAs in eukaryotic ribosome biogenesis and function. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 22, 1119 (2015).
4. Woolford, Jr J. L. & Baserga, S. J. Ribosome biogenesis in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genetics 195, 643681 (2013).
5. Fatica, A., Oefnger, M., Dlakic, M. & Tollervey, D. Nob1p is required for cleavage of the 30 end of 18S rRNA. Mol. Cell Biol. 23, 17981807 (2003).
6. Lamanna, A. C. & Karbstein, K. Nob1 binds the single-stranded cleavage site D at the 30-end of 18S rRNA with its PIN domain. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 106, 1425914264 (2009).
7. Strunk, B. S. et al. Ribosome assembly factors prevent premature translation initiation by 40S assembly intermediates. Science 333, 14491453 (2011).
8. Lebaron, S. et al. Proofreading of pre-40S ribosome maturation by a translation initiation factor and 60S subunits. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 19, 744753 (2012).
9. Chaker-Margot, M., Hunziker, M., Barandun, J., Dill, B. D. & Klinge, S. Stage-specic assembly events of the 6-MDa small-subunit processome initiate eukaryotic ribosome biogenesis. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 22, 920923 (2015).
10. Pertschy, B. et al. RNA helicase Prp43 and its co-factor Pfa1 promote 20 to 18S rRNA processing catalyzed by the endonuclease Nob1. J. Biol. Chem. 284, 3507935091 (2009).
11. Thomson, E., Rappsilber, J. & Tollervey, D. Nop9 is an RNA binding protein present in pre-40S ribosomes and required for 18S rRNA synthesis in yeast. RNA 13, 21652174 (2007).
12. Li, Z. et al. Rational extension of the ribosome biogenesis pathway using network-guided genetics. PLoS Biol. 7, e1000213 (2009).
13. Zhang, L., Wu, C., Cai, G., Chen, S. & Ye, K. Stepwise and dynamic assembly of the earliest precursors of small ribosomal subunits in yeast. Genes Dev. 30, 718732 (2016).
10 NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 7:13085 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =www.nature.com/naturecommunications
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 ARTICLE
14. Nudel, R. et al. Genome-wide association analyses of child genotype effects and parent-of-origin effects in specic language impairment. Genes Brain Behav. 13, 418429 (2014).
15. Edwards, T. A., Pyle, S. E., Wharton, R. P. & Aggarwal, A. K. Structure of Pumilio reveals similarity between RNA and peptide binding motifs. Cell 105, 281289 (2001).
16. Wang, X., Zamore, P. D. & Hall, T. M. T. Crystal structure of a Pumilio homology domain. Mol. Cell 7, 855865 (2001).
17. Wang, X., McLachlan, J., Zamore, P. D. & Hall, T. M. T. Modular recognition of RNA by a human pumilio-homology domain. Cell 110, 501512 (2002).
18. Miller, M. A. & Olivas, W. M. Roles of Puf proteins in mRNA degradation and translation. Wiley Interdiscip. Rev. RNA 2, 471492 (2011).
19. Wharton, R. P. & Aggarwal, A. K. mRNA regulation by Puf domain proteins. Sci. STK. 2006, pe37 (2006).
20. Wickens, M., Bernstein, D. S., Kimble, J. & Parker, R. A PUF family portrait:
30UTR regulation as a way of life. Trends Genet. 18, 150157 (2002).
21. Qiu, C., McCann, K. L., Wine, R. N., Baserga, S. J. & Hall, T. M. T. A divergent Pumilio repeat protein family for pre-rRNA processing and mRNA localization. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 111, 1855418559 (2014).
22. Cheong, C. G. & Hall, T. M. T. Engineering RNA sequence specicity of Pumilio repeats. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 103, 1363513639 (2006).
23. Turowski, T. W. et al. Rio1 mediates ATP-dependent nal maturation of 40S ribosomal subunits. Nucleic Acids Res. 42, 1218912199 (2014).
24. Guthrie, C., Nashimoto, H. & Nomura, M. Structure and function of E. coli ribosomes. 8. Cold-sensitive mutants defective in ribosome assembly. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 63, 384391 (1969).
25. Noble, S. M. & Guthrie, C. Identication of novel genes required for yeast pre-mRNA splicing by means of cold-sensitive mutations. Genetics 143, 6780 (1996).
26. Schafer, T., Strauss, D., Petfalski, E., Tollervey, D. & Hurt, E. The path from nucleolar 90S to cytoplasmic 40S pre-ribosomes. EMBO J. 22, 13701380 (2003).
27. Garcia-Gomez, J. J. et al. Final pre-40S maturation depends on the functional integrity of the 60S subunit ribosomal protein L3. PLoS Genet. 10, e1004205 (2014).
28. Strunk, B. S., Novak, M. N., Young, C. L. & Karbstein, K. A translation-like cycle is a quality control checkpoint for maturing 40S ribosome subunits. Cell 150, 111121 (2012).
29. Hector, R. D. et al. Snapshots of pre-rRNA structural exibility reveal eukaryotic 40S assembly dynamics at nucleotide resolution. Nucleic Acids Res. 42, 1213812154 (2014).
30. Baltz, A. G. et al. The mRNA-bound proteome and its global occupancy prole on protein-coding transcripts. Mol. Cell 46, 674690 (2012).
31. Castello, A. et al. Insights into RNA biology from an atlas of mammalian mRNA-binding proteins. Cell 149, 13931406 (2012).
32. Wang, Y., Opperman, L., Wickens, M. & Hall, T. M. Structural basis for specic recognition of multiple mRNA targets by a PUF regulatory protein. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 106, 2018620191 (2009).
33. Zhang, C. & Muench, D. G. A nucleolar PUF RNA-binding proteinwith specicity for a unique RNA sequence. J. Biol. Chem. 290, 3010830118 (2015).
34. Javadi, Y. & Itzhaki, L. S. Tandem-repeat proteins: regularity plus modularity equals design-ability. Curr. Opin. Struct. Biol. 23, 622631 (2013).
35. Park, K. et al. Control of repeat-protein curvature by computational protein design. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 22, 167174 (2015).
36. Otwinowski, Z. & Minor, W. Processing of X-ray diffraction data collected in oscillation mode. Method Enzymol. 276, 307326 (1997).
37. Adams, P. D. et al. PHENIX: a comprehensive Python-based system for macromolecular structure solution. Acta Crystallogr. D Biol. Crystallogr. 66, 213221 (2010).
38. Emsley, P., Lohkamp, B., Scott, W. G. & Cowtan, K. Features and development of Coot. Acta Crystallogr. D Biol. Crystallogr. 66, 486501 (2010).
39. Zuker, M. Mfold web server for nucleic acid folding and hybridization prediction. Nucleic Acids Res. 31, 34063415 (2003).
40. Darty, K., Denise, A. & Ponty, Y. VARNA: interactive drawing and editing of the RNA secondary structure. Bioinformatics 25, 19741975 (2009).
41. Petoukhov, M. V., Konarev, P. V., Kikhney, A. G. & Svergun, D. I. ATSAS2.1towards automated and websupported small-angle scattering data analysis. J. Appl. Cryst. 40, 6 (2007).42. Popenda, M. et al. Automated 3D structure composition for large RNAs. Nucleic Acids Res. 40, e112 (2012).
43. Petoukhov, M. V. & Svergun, D. I. Global rigid body modeling of macromolecular complexes against small-angle scattering data. Biophys. J. 89, 12371250 (2005).
44. Schneidman-Duhovny, D., Hammel, M., Tainer, J. A. & Sali, A. Accurate SAXS prole computation and its assessment by contrast variation experiments. Biophys. J. 105, 962974 (2013).
45. Schneidman-Duhovny, D., Hammel, M. & Sali, A. FoXS: a web server for rapid computation and tting of SAXS proles. Nucleic Acids Res. 38, W540W544 (2010).
46. Sikorski, R. S. & Hieter, P. A system of shuttle vectors and yeast host strains designed for efcient manipulation of DNA in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genetics 122, 1927 (1989).
47. Charette, J. M. & Baserga, S. J. The DEAD-box RNA helicase-like Utp25 is an SSU processome component. RNA 16, 21562169 (2010).
48. Dunbar, D. A., Wormsley, S., Agentis, T. M. & Baserga, S. J. Mpp10p,a U3 small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein component required for pre-18S rRNA processing in yeast. Mol. Cell Biol. 17, 58035812 (1997).
49. Wehner, K. A. & Baserga, S. J. The sigma(70)-like motif: a eukaryotic RNA binding domain unique to a superfamily of proteins required for ribosome biogenesis. Mol. Cell 9, 329339 (2002).
50. Das, R., Laederach, A., Pearlman, S. M., Herschlag, D. & Altman, R. B. SAFA: Semi-automated footprinting analysis software for high-throughput quantication of nucleic acid footprinting experiments. RNA 11, 344354 (2005).
51. Mayer, M. & Meyer, B. Group epitope mapping by saturation transfer difference NMR to identify segments of a ligand in direct contact with a protein receptor. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 123, 61086117 (2001).
52. Schneider, T. D. & Stephens, R. M. Sequence logos: a new way to display consensus sequences. Nucleic Acids Res. 18, 60976100 (1990).
53. Ashkenazy, H., Erez, E., Martz, E., Pupko, T. & Ben-Tal, N. ConSurf 2010: calculating evolutionary conservation in sequence and structure of proteins and nucleic acids. Nucleic Acids Res. 38, W529W533 (2010).
Acknowledgements
We thank L. Pedersen and the staff of the Southeast Regional Collaborative Access Team beamlines for assistance with X-ray data collection and the staff of SIBYLS for assistance with SAXS data collection. We thank J. Williams and the staff of the NIEHS Protein Microcharacterization Core Facility for mass spectrometric analysis and our colleagues,K. Adelman, R. Stanley, H. Wang and R.S. Williams, for stimulating discussion and critical comments. This work was supported in part by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (T.M.T.H.) and NIH GM11570 to S.J.B. The Advanced Photon Source used for this study is supported by the US Department of Energy, Ofce of Science, Ofce of Basic Energy Sciences, under contract no. W-31109-Eng-38. The SAXS work was conducted at the Advanced Light Source (ALS), a national user facility operated by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory on behalf of the Department of Energy, Ofce of Basic Energy Sciences, through the Integrated Diffraction Analysis Technologies (IDAT) programme, supported by DOE Ofce of Biological and Environmental Research. Additional support comes from the National Institute of Health project MINOS (R01GM105404).
Author contributions
J.Z., K.L.M., C.Q., S.J.B. and T.M.T.H. designed research; J.Z., K.L.M., C.Q. and L.E.G. performed research; J.Z., K.L.M., C.Q., S.J.B. and T.M.T.H. analysed data; and J.Z., K.L.M., L.E.G., S.J.B. and T.M.T.H. wrote the paper.
Additional information
Supplementary Information accompanies this paper at http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =http://www.nature.com/ http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =naturecommunications
Competing nancial interests: The authors declare no competing nancial interests.
Reprints and permission information is available online at http://npg.nature.com/reprintsandpermissions/
Web End =http://npg.nature.com/ http://npg.nature.com/reprintsandpermissions/
Web End =reprintsandpermissions/
How to cite this article: Zhang, J. et al. Nop9 is a PUF-like protein that prevents premature cleavage to correctly process pre-18S rRNA. Nat. Commun. 7, 13085 doi: 10.1038/ncomms13085 (2016).
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the articles Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Web End =http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
r The Author(s) 2016
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 7:13085 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13085 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
Web End =www.nature.com/naturecommunications 11
You have requested "on-the-fly" machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer
Neither ProQuest nor its licensors make any representations or warranties with respect to the translations. The translations are automatically generated "AS IS" and "AS AVAILABLE" and are not retained in our systems. PROQUEST AND ITS LICENSORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES FOR AVAILABILITY, ACCURACY, TIMELINESS, COMPLETENESS, NON-INFRINGMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Your use of the translations is subject to all use restrictions contained in your Electronic Products License Agreement and by using the translation functionality you agree to forgo any and all claims against ProQuest or its licensors for your use of the translation functionality and any output derived there from. Hide full disclaimer
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Oct 2016
Abstract
Numerous factors direct eukaryotic ribosome biogenesis, and defects in a single ribosome assembly factor may be lethal or produce tissue-specific human ribosomopathies. Pre-ribosomal RNAs (pre-rRNAs) must be processed stepwise and at the correct subcellular locations to produce the mature rRNAs. Nop9 is a conserved small ribosomal subunit biogenesis factor, essential in yeast. Here we report a 2.1-Å crystal structure of Nop9 and a small-angle X-ray-scattering model of a Nop9:RNA complex that reveals a 'C'-shaped fold formed from 11 Pumilio repeats. We show that Nop9 recognizes sequence and structural features of the 20S pre-rRNA near the cleavage site of the nuclease, Nob1. We further demonstrate that Nop9 inhibits Nob1 cleavage, the final processing step to produce mature small ribosomal subunit 18S rRNA. Together, our results suggest that Nop9 is critical for timely cleavage of the 20S pre-rRNA. Moreover, the Nop9 structure exemplifies a new class of Pumilio repeat proteins.
You have requested "on-the-fly" machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer
Neither ProQuest nor its licensors make any representations or warranties with respect to the translations. The translations are automatically generated "AS IS" and "AS AVAILABLE" and are not retained in our systems. PROQUEST AND ITS LICENSORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES FOR AVAILABILITY, ACCURACY, TIMELINESS, COMPLETENESS, NON-INFRINGMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Your use of the translations is subject to all use restrictions contained in your Electronic Products License Agreement and by using the translation functionality you agree to forgo any and all claims against ProQuest or its licensors for your use of the translation functionality and any output derived there from. Hide full disclaimer




