ABSTRACT
The RNA exosome is a multisubunit protein complex involved in RNA surveillance of all classes of RNA, and is essential for pre-rRNA processing. The exosome is conserved throughout evolution, present in archaea and eukaryotes from yeast to humans, where it localizes to the nucleus and cytoplasm. The catalytically active subunit Rrp44/Dis3 of the exosome in budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) is considered a protein present in these two subcellular compartments, and here we report that it not only localizes mainly to the nucleus, but is concentrated in the nucleolus, where the early pre-rRNA processing reactions take place. Moreover, we show by confocal microscopy analysis that the core exosome subunits Rrp41 and Rrp43 also localize largely to the nucleus and strongly accumulate in the nucleolus. These results shown here shed additional light on the localization of the yeast exosome and have implications regarding the main function of this RNase complex, which seems to be primarily in early pre-rRNA processing and surveillance.
Subject(s)
Cell Nucleolus/metabolism , Exosome Multienzyme Ribonuclease Complex/metabolism , Exosomes/metabolism , RNA Precursors/metabolism , RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional , RNA, Fungal/metabolism , RNA, Transfer/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Exosome Multienzyme Ribonuclease Complex/chemistry , Protein Transport , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/chemistry , Subcellular Fractions/metabolismABSTRACT
In bacteria, the 5'-end-dependent RNA degradation is triggered by the RNA pyrophosphohydrolase RppH converting tri/diphosphate to monophosphate transcripts. This study shows that in the soil bacterium Azotobacter vinelandii, inactivation of rppH gene negatively affected the production of bioplastic poly-ß-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) by reducing the expression at the translational level of PhbR, the specific transcriptional activator of the phbBAC biosynthetic operon. The effect of RppH on the translation of phbR seemed to be exerted through the translational repressor RsmA, as the inactivation of rsmA in the rppH mutant restored the phbR expression. Interestingly, in Escherichia coli inactivation of rppH also affected the expression of CsrA, the RsmA homolog. The level of the csrA transcript was higher and more stable in the E. coli rppH mutant than in the wild type strain. Additionally, and in contrast to the csrA mutants that are known to have a defective swimming phenotype, the E. coli rppH mutant showed a hyper-swimming phenotype that was suppressed by a csrA mutation, and the AvRppH restored to wild type level the swimming phenotype to the E. coli rppH mutant. We propose that in both A. vinelandii and E. coli, RppH activity plays a role in the expression of the translational regulator protein RsmA/CsrA.