• Title/Summary/Keyword: RNA motifs

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Functional analysis of RNA motifs essential for BC200 RNA-mediated translational regulation

  • Jang, Seonghui;Shin, Heegwon;Lee, Younghoon
    • BMB Reports
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    • v.53 no.2
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    • pp.94-99
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    • 2020
  • Brain cytoplasmic 200 RNA (BC200 RNA) is proposed to act as a local translational modulator by inhibiting translation after being targeted to neuronal dendrites. However, the mechanism by which BC200 RNA inhibits translation is not fully understood. Although a detailed functional analysis of RNA motifs is essential for understanding the BC200 RNA-mediated translation-inhibition mechanism, there is little relevant research on the subject. Here, we performed a systematic domain-dissection analysis of BC200 RNA to identify functional RNA motifs responsible for its translational-inhibition activity. Various RNA variants were assayed for their ability to inhibit translation of luciferase mRNA in vitro. We found that the 111-200-nucleotide region consisting of part of the Alu domain as well as the A/C-rich domain (consisting of both the A-rich and C-rich domains) is most effective for translation inhibition. Surprisingly, we also found that individual A-rich, A/C-rich, and Alu domains can enhance translation but at different levels for each domain, and that these enhancing effects manifest as cap-dependent translation.

The 52 kD Protein Gene of Odontoglossum Ringspot Virus Containing RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase Motifs and Comparisons with Other Tobamoviruses

  • Park, Won-Mok
    • Journal of Plant Biology
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    • v.38 no.2
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    • pp.129-136
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    • 1995
  • Complementary DNA of the genomic RNA of odontoglossum ringspot virus Cymbidium strain (ORSV-Cy) was synthesized from polyadenylated viral RNA and cloned. Selected clones containing the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase gene of the virus has been sequenced by automated sequencing system. The complete nucleotide sequence of an open reading frame is 1377 base pairs in length, and encodes a protein of 458 amino acids about 52, 334 D. The 52 kD protein of ORSV shares four sequence motifs characteristic of viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. Comparison of the ORSV 52 kD protein sequence with that of other five viruses in tobamovirus group showed 76.0 to 60.7% homologies at the amino acid level and the conservation of the four motifs betwen the viruses.

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Discovery of Novel RNA Targets Using Chemical Genomics

  • Yu, Jae-Hoon
    • Proceedings of the PSK Conference
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    • 2003.10a
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    • pp.93-93
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    • 2003
  • RNA plays an important role in numerous biological processes but little is known about the interactions between small organic molecules and RNA. Our previous work has shown that the heterodimeric compound designed by conjugation with neomycin and loop-specific chemical bind to the stem-loop structured RNA motifs. In the present study, heterodimer was used, in a reverse way, as a probe to identify structured RNA motifs. (omitted)

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Dependence of RIG-I Nucleic Acid-Binding and ATP Hydrolysis on Activation of Type I Interferon Response

  • Yu Mi Baek;Soojin Yoon;Yeo Eun Hwang;Dong-Eun Kim
    • IMMUNE NETWORK
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    • v.16 no.4
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    • pp.249-255
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    • 2016
  • Exogenous nucleic acids induce an innate immune response in mammalian host cells through activation of the retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I). We evaluated RIG-I protein for RNA binding and ATPase stimulation with RNA ligands to investigate the correlation with the extent of immune response through RIG-I activation in cells. RIG-I protein favored blunt-ended, double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) ligands over sticky-ended dsRNA. Moreover, the presence of the 5'-triphosphate (5'-ppp) moiety in dsRNA further enhanced binding affinity to RIG-I. Two structural motifs in RNA, blunt ends in dsRNA and 5'-ppp, stimulated the ATP hydrolysis activity of RIG-I. These structural motifs also strongly induced IFN expression as an innate immune response in cells. Therefore, we suggest that IFN induction through RIG-I activation is mainly determined by structural motifs in dsRNA that increase its affinity for RIG-I protein and stimulate ATPase activity in RIG-I.

Selection and Analysis of Genomic Sequence-Derived RNA Motifs Binding to C5 Protein

  • Kim, Kwang-sun;Ryoo, Hye-jin;Lee, June-Hyung;Kim, Mee-hyun;Kim, Tae-yeon;Kim, Yool;Han, Kook;Lee, Seol-Hoon;Lee, Young-hoon
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.27 no.5
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    • pp.699-704
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    • 2006
  • Escherichia coli RNase P is a ribonucleoprotein composed of M1 RNA and C5 protein. Previously, analysis of RNA aptamers selected for C5 protein from a synthetic RNA library showed that C5 protein could bind various RNA molecules as an RNA binding protein. In this study, we searched cellular RNA motifs that could be recognized by C5 protein by a genomic SELEX approach. We found various C5 protein-binding RNA motifs derived from E. coli genomic sequences. Our results suggest that C5 protein interacts with various cellular RNA species in addition to M1 RNA.

Probing the Functional Motifs of Escherichia coli 5S rRNA in Relation to 16S rRNA Using a SELEX Experiment

  • 고재형;조봉래;안정근;이용훈;박인원
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.20 no.11
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    • pp.1335-1339
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    • 1999
  • The function of 5S rRNA, a constituent of a large subunit of ribosome, is not clearly known yet. To identify RNA motifs interacting with 5S rRNA, and thereby to get an insight into the function of 5S rRNA in the ribosome, a SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment) experiment was performed. RNA molecules binding to Escherichia coli 5S rRNA were selected from a 48-mer random sequence library through 12 rounds of selection, cloned, and sequenced. Two groups of the selected RNA molecules had the consensus sequences GCGG and GUGAAA, respectively, which are present in the segment, G688 through A696, of E. coli 16S rRNA. The gel mobility shift assay showed that 5S rRNA interacted with the 16S rRNA fragment containing the GCGG and GUGAAA sequences. The enzymatic protection experiment shows that the A29CCUGA34 and G51AAGUG56 sequences of 5S rRNA and the C680AGG683 and G688CGG691 sequences of the 16S rRNA fragment are involved in the interaction between the two RNA molecules. On the basis of this observation, we suggest that 5S rRNA and 16S rRNA play a role for the association of two ribosomal subunits.

Pressure-Overload Cardiac Hypertrophy Is Associated with Distinct Alternative Splicing Due to Altered Expression of Splicing Factors

  • Kim, Taeyong;Kim, Jin Ock;Oh, Jae Gyun;Hong, Seong-Eui;Kim, Do Han
    • Molecules and Cells
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    • v.37 no.1
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    • pp.81-87
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    • 2014
  • Chronic pressure-overload cardiac hypertrophy is associated with an increased risk of morbidity/mortality, largely due to maladaptive remodeling and dilatation that progresses to dilated cardiomyopathy. Alternative splicing is an important biological mechanism that generates proteomic complexity and diversity. The recent development of next-generation RNA sequencing has improved our understanding of the qualitative signatures associated with alternative splicing in various biological conditions. However, the role of alternative splicing in cardiac hypertrophy is yet unknown. The present study employed RNA-Seq and a bioinformatic approach to detect the RNA splicing regulatory elements involved in alternative splicing during pressure-overload cardiac hypertrophy. We found GC-rich exonic motifs that regulate intron retention in 5' UTRs and AT-rich exonic motifs that are involved in exclusion of the AT-rich elements that cause mRNA instability in 3' UTRs. We also identified motifs in the intronic regions involved in exon exclusion and inclusion, which predicted splicing factors that bind to these motifs. We found, through Western blotting, that the expression levels of three splicing factors, ESRP1, PTB and SF2/ASF, were significantly altered during cardiac hypertrophy. Collectively, the present results suggest that chronic pressure-overload hypertrophy is closely associated with distinct alternative splicing due to altered expression of splicing factors.

HBV Polymerase Residues $Asp^{429}$ and $Asp^{551}$, Invariant at Motifs A and C are Essential to DNA Binding

  • Kim, Youn-Hee;Hong, Young-Bin;Jung, Gu-Hung
    • BMB Reports
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    • v.31 no.5
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    • pp.498-502
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    • 1998
  • HBV polymerase shares several regions of amino acid homology with other DNA-directed and RNA-directed polymerases. The amino acid residues $Asp^{429}$, $Gly^{518}$, $Asp^{551}$, $Lys^{585}$, and $Gly^{641}$ in the conserved motifs A, B', C, D, and E in the polymerase domain of HBV polymerase were mutated to alanine or histidine by in vitro site-directed mutagenesis. Those mutants were overexpressed, purified, and analyzed against DNA-dependent DNA polymerase activity and affinity for DNA binding. All those mutants did not show DNA-dependent DNA polymerase activities indicating that those five amino acid residues are all critical in DNA polymerase activity. South-Western analysis shows that amino acid residues $ASp^{429}$ and $ASp^{551}$ are essential to DNA binding, and $Gly^{318}$ and $Gly^{585}$ also affect DNA binding to a certain extent.

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