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Identification and comparative analysis of telomerase RNAs from Candida species reveal conservation of functional elements

Authors :
Stanislava Gunišová
Raymund J. Wellinger
Yehuda Tzfati
Yogev Brown
Nancy Laterreur
Valentin Gorkovoy
Elhanan Elboher
Lubomir Tomaska
Jozef Nosek
Jean-François Lucier
Source :
RNA. 15:546-559
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2009.

Abstract

The RNA component of telomerase (telomerase RNA; TER) varies substantially both in sequence composition and size (from ∼150 nucleotides [nt] to >1500 nt) across species. This dramatic divergence has hampered the identification of TER genes and a large-scale comparative analysis of TER sequences and structures among distantly related species. To identify by phylogenetic analysis conserved sequences and structural features of TER that are of general importance, it is essential to obtain TER sequences from evolutionarily distant groups of species, providing enough conservation within each group and enough variation among the groups. To this end, we identified TER genes in several yeast species with relatively large (>20 base pairs) and nonvariant telomeric repeats, mostly from the genus Candida. Interestingly, several of the TERs reported here are longer than all other yeast TERs known to date. Within these TERs, we predicted a pseudoknot containing U-A·U base triples (conserved in vertebrates, budding yeasts, and ciliates) and a three-way junction element (conserved in vertebrates and budding yeasts). In addition, we identified a novel conserved sequence (CS2a) predicted to reside within an internal-loop structure, in all the budding yeast TERs examined. CS2a is located near the Est1p-binding bulge-stem previously identified in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mutational analyses in both budding yeasts S. cerevisiae and Kluyveromyces lactis demonstrate that CS2a is essential for in vivo telomerase function. The comparative and mutational analyses of conserved TER elements reported here provide novel insights into the structure and function of the telomerase ribonucleoprotein complex.

Details

ISSN :
14699001 and 13558382
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
RNA
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....176d95d625a7dd6c89a535cc8bcc7441