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      Impact of pseudouridylation, substrate fold, and degradosome organization on the endonuclease activity of RNase E

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          Abstract

          The conserved endoribonuclease RNase E dominates the dynamic landscape of RNA metabolism and underpins control mediated by small regulatory RNAs in diverse bacterial species. We explored the enzyme's hydrolytic mechanism, allosteric activation, and interplay with partner proteins in the multicomponent RNA degradosome assembly of Escherichia coli. RNase E cleaves single-stranded RNA with preference to attack the phosphate located at the 5′ nucleotide preceding uracil, and we corroborate key interactions that select that base. Unexpectedly, RNase E activity is impeded strongly when the recognized uracil is isomerized to 5-ribosyluracil (pseudouridine), from which we infer the detailed geometry of the hydrolytic attack process. Kinetics analyses support models for recognition of secondary structure in substrates by RNase E and for allosteric autoregulation. The catalytic power of the enzyme is boosted when it is assembled into the multienzyme RNA degradosome, most likely as a consequence of substrate capture and presentation. Our results rationalize the origins of substrate preferences of RNase E and illuminate its catalytic mechanism, supporting the roles of allosteric domain closure and cooperation with other components of the RNA degradosome complex.

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          ViennaRNA Package 2.0

          Background Secondary structure forms an important intermediate level of description of nucleic acids that encapsulates the dominating part of the folding energy, is often well conserved in evolution, and is routinely used as a basis to explain experimental findings. Based on carefully measured thermodynamic parameters, exact dynamic programming algorithms can be used to compute ground states, base pairing probabilities, as well as thermodynamic properties. Results The ViennaRNA Package has been a widely used compilation of RNA secondary structure related computer programs for nearly two decades. Major changes in the structure of the standard energy model, the Turner 2004 parameters, the pervasive use of multi-core CPUs, and an increasing number of algorithmic variants prompted a major technical overhaul of both the underlying RNAlib and the interactive user programs. New features include an expanded repertoire of tools to assess RNA-RNA interactions and restricted ensembles of structures, additional output information such as centroid structures and maximum expected accuracy structures derived from base pairing probabilities, or z-scores for locally stable secondary structures, and support for input in fasta format. Updates were implemented without compromising the computational efficiency of the core algorithms and ensuring compatibility with earlier versions. Conclusions The ViennaRNA Package 2.0, supporting concurrent computations via OpenMP, can be downloaded from http://www.tbi.univie.ac.at/RNA.
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            Protein Phase Separation: A New Phase in Cell Biology

            Cellular compartments and organelles organize biological matter. Most well-known organelles are separated by a membrane boundary from their surrounding milieu. There are also many so-called membraneless organelles and recent studies suggest that these organelles, which are supramolecular assemblies of proteins and RNA molecules, form via protein phase separation. Recent discoveries have shed light on the molecular properties, formation, regulation, and function of membraneless organelles. A combination of techniques from cell biology, biophysics, physical chemistry, structural biology, and bioinformatics are starting to help establish the molecular principles of an emerging field, thus paving the way for exciting discoveries, including novel therapeutic approaches for the treatment of age-related disorders.
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              Phase Transition of a Disordered Nuage Protein Generates Environmentally Responsive Membraneless Organelles

              Summary Cells chemically isolate molecules in compartments to both facilitate and regulate their interactions. In addition to membrane-encapsulated compartments, cells can form proteinaceous and membraneless organelles, including nucleoli, Cajal and PML bodies, and stress granules. The principles that determine when and why these structures form have remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate that the disordered tails of Ddx4, a primary constituent of nuage or germ granules, form phase-separated organelles both in live cells and in vitro. These bodies are stabilized by patterned electrostatic interactions that are highly sensitive to temperature, ionic strength, arginine methylation, and splicing. Sequence determinants are used to identify proteins found in both membraneless organelles and cell adhesion. Moreover, the bodies provide an alternative solvent environment that can concentrate single-stranded DNA but largely exclude double-stranded DNA. We propose that phase separation of disordered proteins containing weakly interacting blocks is a general mechanism for forming regulated, membraneless organelles.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                RNA
                RNA
                RNA
                RNA
                Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
                1355-8382
                1469-9001
                November 2021
                November 2021
                : 27
                : 11
                : 1339-1352
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1GA, United Kingdom
                [2 ]RNA Biology Group, Institute of Molecular Infection Biology, University of Würzburg, D-97080 Würzburg, Germany
                [3 ]The Center for Microbes, Development and Health (CMDH), Institut Pasteur of Shanghai, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xuhui district, Shanghai, 200031, China
                [4 ]Helmholtz Institute for RNA-based Infection Research (HIRI), Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research (HZI), D-97080 Würzburg, Germany
                Author notes
                Corresponding author: bfl20@ 123456cam.ac.uk
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5735-7954
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1144-9877
                Article
                9509184 RA
                10.1261/rna.078840.121
                8522691
                34341070
                2e57eaab-99b4-4106-ae1f-4763ca2fac97
                © 2021 Islam et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the RNA Society

                This article, published in RNA, is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

                History
                : 23 May 2021
                : 26 July 2021
                Page count
                Pages: 14
                Funding
                Funded by: Wellcome Trust , doi 10.13039/100010269;
                Award ID: 200873/Z/16/Z
                Categories
                Article

                modified rna,riboregulation,rna recognition,ribonuclease mechanism,pseudouridine,rna degradosome

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