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Vol. 19, Issue 7, 2844-2856, July 2008
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Department of Biological Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213
Submitted December 27, 2007;
Revised March 17, 2008;
Accepted April 17, 2008
Monitoring Editor: Thomas Fox
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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The major challenge now before us is to understand the precise functions of each of these assembly factors. Identification of networks of interactions among the assembly factors, ribosomal proteins, and ribosomal RNAs is an important first step to address this question. To begin to identify this internal structure of preribosomes and to connect this structural information to function of ribosomal molecules, we have used a combined genetic and biochemical approach to identify neighborhoods or subcomplexes of interacting proteins within preribosomes (Harnpicharnchai et al., 2001
; Miles et al., 2005
; Zhang et al., 2007
).
One such neighborhood is the Nop7-subcomplex, which contains assembly factors Nop7, Ytm1, and Erb1 (Harnpicharnchai et al., 2001
; Du and Stillman, 2002
; Krogan et al., 2004
, Miles et al., 2005
). Two-hybrid assays and GST pulldown experiments show that Nop7 and Ytm1 interact directly with Erb1, but not with each other (Miles et al., 2005
). Mammalian counterparts of these three proteins, Pes1, WDR12, and Bop1, also associate with each other to form the PeBoW complex (Hölzel et al., 2005
). Each of these proteins is essential, conserved among eukaryotes, located primarily in the nucleolus, and required for the assembly of 60S ribosomal subunits (Strezoska et al., 2000
; Pestov et al., 2001
; Adams et al., 2002
; Lerch-Gaggl et al., 2002
; Oeffinger et al., 2002
; Miles et al., 2005
; Hölzel et al., 2005
). The Nop7-subcomplex is also a member of a "functional cluster" in yeast; depletion of each of these three proteins causes identical defects in rRNA precursor (pre-rRNA) processing: altered conversion of 27SA3 pre-rRNA to 27SBS pre-rRNA (Adams et al., 2002
; Miles et al., 2005
; Oeffinger et al., 2002
; Pestov et al., 2001
). Knock-down of the mammalian proteins also affects processing of the corresponding pre-rRNAs. Nop7 and Erb1 assemble into 90S preribosomal particles containing 35S pre-rRNA, whereas Ytm1 is recruited later, into 66S A2 preribosomes (Miles et al., 2005
). Thus, Nop7, Ytm1, and Erb1 function several steps after they associate with pre-ribosomes, suggesting that there may be separate means to recruit and to utilize these proteins in subunit assembly.
Nop7, Ytm1, and Erb1 each contain potential protein–protein interaction domains, which may enable them to form a microscaffold within nascent ribosomes, to organize a neighborhood necessary for processing of 27SA3 pre-rRNA. Here, we used several different methods to investigate how these three ribosome assembly factors interact with each other and are recruited into and function in preribosomes: 1) identifying ligands of these interaction domains both in vitro and in vivo, 2) testing whether truncated Ytm1, Erb1, or Nop7 proteins containing or lacking each potential interaction domain can associate with preribosomal particles, and 3) assaying effects of the truncations on cellular localization, ribosome assembly and pre-rRNA processing in both wild-type cells and cells lacking the corresponding full-length proteins. We found that Ytm1 binds to Erb1 via the C-terminal WD40 domain of Ytm1, the N-terminal conserved region of Erb1 interacts with Nop7 and Ytm1, and the central region of Nop7 binds to Erb1. Surprisingly, the conserved C-terminal WD40 domain of Erb1 is not essential for growth or ribosome biogenesis. We also show that recruitment of Nop7, Ytm1, and Erb1 into nascent ribosomes is mutually interdependent. Interactions between these specific domains in the three proteins are important for the assembly of each protein into preribosomes. Moreover, dominant negative effects on growth and ribosome biogenesis caused by overexpressing truncated Ytm1, Erb1, or Nop7 proteins reveal domains potentially important for each protein to function in preribosome maturation. The methods described here can be used as an experimental system to discover interactions among other assembly factors and ultimately contribute to understand the molecular architecture of preribosomes.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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200 pep4::HIS3 prb1-
1.6R can). Yeast cells were grown at 30°C in YEPD medium (2% dextrose, 2% peptone, and 1% yeast extract), or else synthetic medium lacking leucine (C-leu) or uracil (C-ura) and supplemented with 1% raffinose (C-leu or C-ura + 1% raffinose) or with 1% raffinose + 1% galactose (C-leu or C-ura + 1% raffinose and 1% galactose). Cells were harvested at 5–107 cell/ml unless otherwise indicated. Yeast strains expressing C-terminal triple hemagglutinin (3HA)-tagged proteins, C-terminal 13 Myc-tagged proteins, or N-terminal 3HA-tagged proteins were created as described previously (Longtine et al., 1998
Cloning of Full-Length or Truncated YTM1, ERB1, or NOP7 Genes into Yeast Expression Plasmids
Full-length or truncated YTM1, ERB1, or NOP7 genes were PCR-amplified from yeast genomic DNA and cloned into the pGREG535 or pGREG536 CEN plasmids using the SalI restriction site (Jansen et al., 2005
). Both plasmids have a galactose-inducible and glucose-respressible GAL1 promoter. To generate plasmids expressing TAP-tagged truncated proteins, plasmids containing different truncations of the YTM1, ERB1, or NOP7 genes in pGREG535 were linearized by XhoI, and the TAP tag was introduced into the 3' end of each gene by PCR and gap-repair (Rigaut et al., 1999
). Sequences of oligonucleotides used for PCR to clone or tag genes are available upon request.
Assays for Growth Defects
Growth of yeast cells was assayed by plating serial dilutions. Yeast transformed with plasmids containing full-length or truncated YTM1, ERB1, or NOP7 were grown in C-leu + 1% raffinose medium or C-ura + 1% raffinose medium to early log phase. Cells were diluted 10-, 100-, 1000-, and 10,000-fold; 10 µl of cultures was spotted onto C-leu+ glucose or C-leu + galactose medium where specified.
Assaying Ribosome Production
Ribosome assembly subcomplexes, preribosomes, ribosomes, and polyribosomes were resolved on 7–47% sucrose gradients as described previously (Harnpicharnchai et al., 2001
).
Tandem Affinity Purification, One-Step Purification, and Mass Spectrometry of Preribosomes
Tandem affinity purification of preribosomes or ribosome assembly subcomplexes from whole cell extracts was carried out by the methods of Miles et al. (2005)
. Preribosome purification after a high-speed spin was performed as described in Krogan et al. (2004)
. One-step purification of preribosomes from whole cell extracts was performed as described in Oeffinger et al. (2007)
. Proteins copurifying with Ytm1-C-TAP were identified by mass spectrometry as described in Horsey et al. (2004)
.
GST Pulldown and Yeast Two-Hybrid Assays
GST pulldown and yeast two-hybrid assays of protein–protein interactions were performed as described in Miles et al. (2005)
.
Indirect Immunofluorescence Microscopy
Yeast transformed with plasmids containing truncated YTM1, ERB1, or NOP7 were grown at 30°C in synthetic medium containing 1% raffinose to
3·107 cells/ml. Galactose was added to each culture to a final concentration of 1% to induce the expression of truncated proteins. Cells were harvested after 4-h induction and prepared for microscopy (Pringle et al., 1989
). Cells were incubated with monoclonal anti-HA antibodies in phosphate-buffered saline containing 0.5% bovine serum albumin overnight at 4°C. After washing, cells were incubated with anti-mouse fluorescein-conjugated antibodies (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). To detect nuclear DNA, cells were stained with 4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) for 3.5 min. Slides were viewed using a Zeiss Axioskope 2 plus microscope equipped with a 100x objective (Thornwood, NY). Photographs were taken on a Canon Powershot G5 camera. Digital images were processed using Adobe Photoshop (San Jose, CA).
Analysis of RNA
RNA isolated from whole cell extracts was assayed by Northern analysis or primer extension as described in Horsey et al. (2004)
.
Western Blotting and Antibodies
Proteins present in whole cell extracts, purified preribosomes, or assembly subcomplexes were assayed by Western blot analysis according to standard protocols (Ausubel et al., 1994
). TAP-tagged proteins were detected using alkaline phosphatase conjugated to IgG (Pierce, Rockford, IL). HA-tagged proteins were identified with mouse mAb 12CA5. Rabbit polyclonal Nop7 antibody, rpL5 antibody, Sec61 antibody, and mouse monoclonal Myc antibody were used against Nop7, rpL5, Sec61, or Myc-tagged proteins, respectively.
| RESULTS |
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Previously we showed that the Ytm1–1 mutant protein contains two mutations, G398D and S442N, in the sixth and seventh WD40 repeats, which disrupt the interaction between Ytm1 and Erb1 and weaken the association of Ytm1 with preribosomes (Miles et al., 2005
). To confirm that binding to Erb1 enables Ytm1-C to assemble into preribosomes, we tested whether these mutations in Ytm1-1-C that decrease binding to Erb1 affect the association of Ytm1-1-C with pre-RNPs. We constructed strains expressing Ytm1–1 or Ytm1-1-C, each of which contains these two mutations (Figure 2A). Although Ytm1-1-C was expressed at levels similar to Ytm1-C (Supplementary Figure S1A) and was primarily localized to the nucleus (Supplementary Figure S2A), it did not copurify with preribosomes (Figure 3A).
Overexpression of Ytm1-C Has Dominant Negative Effects on Growth and Ribosome Biogenesis
The above results indicate that Ytm1-C might compete with wild-type Ytm1 for binding to Erb1 and assembly into preribosomal particles. However, the absence of the N-terminal 98 amino acids may prevent the truncated Ytm1-C protein from carrying out all necessary functions of full-length Ytm1. Thus preribosomes containing Ytm1-C might not undergo proper maturation. Alternatively, the truncated Ytm1-C protein might fold into an aberrant structure ("poison subunit") and interfere with ribosome biogenesis (Herskowitz, 1987
). Consistent with these ideas, overexpression of Ytm1-C had a dominant negative effect on growth, whereas overexpression of either full-length Ytm1 or Ytm1-N did not affect growth rate (Figure 4A). To determine the effect of overexpression of Ytm1-C on ribosome biogenesis, we assayed levels of ribosomal subunits by sucrose gradient sedimentation. Cells overexpressing either full-length Ytm1 or Ytm1-N contained wild-type levels of 60S subunits (Figure 4C). In contrast, yeast overexpressing Ytm1-C contained significantly fewer free 60S subunits (Figure 4C), indicating a defect in 60S ribosomal subunit assembly almost as strong as observed upon depletion or inactivation of Ytm1 (Harnpicharnchai et al., 2001
; Miles et al., 2005
). To further investigate defects in 60S subunit biogenesis in strains overexpressing Ytm1-C, we assayed the relative amounts of pre-rRNA processing intermediates and mature rRNAs. Surprisingly, we observed no significant differences in the relative amounts of pre-rRNA or mature rRNA in these cells compared with wild-type cells (Figure 4E). These results suggest that overexpression of Ytm1-C must cause a defect in production of 60S ribosomal subunits that does not include perturbations of pre-rRNA processing.
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All of these findings are consistent with our previous results that Ytm1 assembles into preribosomal particles later than Erb1 (Miles et al., 2005
) and that Erb1 is required for Ytm1 recruitment (Figure 1). Additionally, our findings help explain why overexpression of WDR12
Nle, a similarly truncated version of WDR12, the mammalian homologue of Ytm1, causes dominant negative effects on cell proliferation and ribosome biogenesis in cultured mammalian cell lines (Hölzel et al., 2005
).
The N-terminal Conserved Region of Erb1 Interacts with Nop7 and Ytm1
Like Ytm1, Erb1 also contains seven WD40 repeats (Supplementary Figure S4; D. Wilson, personal communication). By binding directly to both Nop7 and Ytm1, Erb1 plays a central role in the formation of the Nop7-subcomplex (Miles et al., 2005
). However, which domain of Erb1 (or its mammalian homologue Bop1) is required for these interactions has not been determined. To systematically investigate domains involved in the interaction between Erb1 and other components in the Nop7-subcomplex and domains required for the recruitment of Erb1 into preribosomes, full-length Erb1 and a panel of four different truncated Erb1 constructs (Figure 5A) were expressed from the GAL promoter in cells also expressing endogenous full-length Erb1. Erb1-N contains the N-terminal 419 amino acids of Erb1, which includes a highly conserved region of unknown function (Pestov et al., 2001
). Erb1-C1 contains the C-terminal 388 amino acids of Erb1, which includes the seven WD40 motifs. Erb1-C2 contains amino acids 265–807, including half of the N-terminal conserved region and all of the WD40 repeats. Erb1-M, containing amino acids 383–639 (Figure 5A), was identified as a ligand of Ytm1 in a genome-wide two-hybrid screen (data not shown). Western blotting indicated that all four truncated constructs were stably expressed (Supplementary Figure S1B). Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy showed that all four truncated proteins were present in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus. Among them, Erb1-C2 accumulated most strongly in the nucleolus (Supplementary Figure S2B).
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To identify whether Nop7, Ytm1, or any other molecules associate with each domain of Erb1 in vivo, we carried out affinity purification with each TAP-tagged truncated Erb1 protein. Nop7 and Ytm1, as well as small amounts of other preribosomal proteins (Supplementary Figure S3), copurified with Erb1-N-TAP and with Erb1-C2-TAP (Figure 5C). This confirmed our previous findings that both Erb1-N and Erb1-C2 assemble into preribosomes. No Nop7 and very little Ytm1 copurified with Erb1-C1-TAP (Figure 5C). Consistent with the two-hybrid interaction observed between Ytm1 and Erb1-M (data not shown), Ytm1, but not Nop7, copurified with TAP-tagged Erb1-M (Figure 5C). Erb1-M contains only three WD40-repeats (amino acids 420–639), which may not be able to fold into a β-propeller structure and serve as a stable functional interaction domain. Thus we conclude that the N-terminal region of Erb1-M lacking the WD40 domains (amino acids 383–419) most likely interacts with Ytm1. Other protein(s) might contribute to the interaction between each truncated Erb1 and these ligand(s), but this seems unlikely because both Nop7 and Ytm1 bind to Erb1 directly in vitro (Miles et al., 2005
). Additionally, interactions between Erb1-N and Ytm1 or Nop7 were confirmed by yeast two-hybrid assays (data not shown).
Therefore, these results indicate the following: 1) amino acids 265–383, which are present in both Erb1-N and Erb1-C2, but not in Erb1-M, are required for interaction with Nop7, and are important for Erb1 to assemble into preribosomes, 2) the central region of Erb1 containing amino acids 383–419 is involved in interactions between Erb1 and Ytm1 (see Figure 9), and 3) interactions with both Nop7 and Ytm1 enable Erb1-N and Erb1-C2 to stably associate with preribosomal particles. Conversely, the inability to bind to Nop7 most likely prevents Erb1-C1 and Erb1-M from assembling into or remaining associated with pre-rRNPs. These results are consistent with the findings that efficient association of Erb1 with preribosomes is dependent upon both Nop7 and Ytm1 (Figure 1B).
Effects of Overexpression of Erb1 Truncations on Growth and Ribosome Biogenesis
We also investigated effects of overexpression of Erb1 truncations on growth rate and ribosome biogenesis. As predicted, overexpression of Erb1-C1 and Erb1-M, two Erb1 truncations that cannot associate with preribosomes, did not cause any defects in growth (Figure 6A) or ribosome biogenesis (Figure 6B). Similarly, overexpression of full-length Erb1 did not affect cell growth or ribosome assembly (Figure 6, A and B). This result is different from two previous observations, which showed that overexpressing Bop1 in cultured mouse or human cells has mild or strong dominant negative effects on cell proliferation and pre-rRNA processing (Strezoska et al., 2000
; Rohrmoser et al., 2007
). The differences between these results in mouse and human cells and yeast may indicate subtle structural, functional, and regulatory changes during evolution.
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, a mammalian Erb1 deletion construct containing the same domains as Erb1-C2, causes dominant negative effects on cell proliferation and 60S ribosomal subunit assembly (Strezoska et al., 2000Surprisingly, although Erb1-N also binds to Nop7 and Ytm1 and assembles into pre-rRNPs, overexpression of Erb1-N does not cause dominant negative effects on growth, 60S ribosomal subunit assembly, or pre-rRNA processing (Figure 6, A–C).
The WD40 Motifs of Erb1 Are Not Essential
The absence of effects on ribosome biogenesis caused by overexpression of Erb1-N, despite the significant association of this truncated protein with preribosomes, suggests that Erb1-N is sufficient to perform all essential functions of Erb1. To test this hypothesis, Erb1-N was expressed from its own promoter in a strain that also contains a GAL-ERB1gene. Thus, when cells grown in galactose are shifted to glucose, Erb1-N but not full-length Erb1 will be expressed. Consistent with our hypothesis, expression of ERB1-N rescued the lethal phenotype of shutting off GAL-ERB1 (Figure 7A). In contrast, neither Erb1-C1 nor Erb1-C2 could complement the lethality caused by depletion of wild-type Erb1 (Figure 7A), consistent with our observations that Erb1-C1 cannot assemble into preribosomes and that Erb1-C2 can assemble into preribosomal particles, but causes dominant negative effects. Compared with wild-type cells expressing full-length Erb1, cells expressing only the truncated Erb1-N protein showed no obvious defects in 60S ribosomal subunit assembly and polysome formation (Figure 7B). Consistent with this lack of noticeable effects on ribosome production or function, the relative levels of 27SA3 or 27SB pre-rRNAs in cells expressing Erb1-N were only slightly different from those in wild-type cells (Figure 7C). Mild defects in ribosome assembly in vivo are sometimes exacerbated by growing cells under less than ideal conditions, such as high or low temperatures. However, cells expressing only Erb1-N exhibited no growth defects at 37 or 13°C, compared with 30°C (data not shown). Nevertheless, the reproducible mild defects in pre-rRNA processing in cells expressing Erb1-N leave open the possibility that the conserved C-terminal WD40 domain of Erb1 may be involved in some function of Erb1 in ribosome biogenesis.
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| DISCUSSION |
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At least fourteen different subcomplexes have been identified from preribosomal particles in yeast, revealing the modular nature of ribosome assembly (Harnpicharnchai et al., 2001
; Du and Stillman, 2002
; Granneman et al., 2003
; Dosil and Bustelo, 2004
; Galani et al., 2004
; Krogan et al., 2004
; Miles et al., 2005
; Karbstein and Doudna, 2006
; Rashid et al., 2006
; Schäfer et al., 2006
; Rosado et al., 2007
; Rudra et al., 2007
; Zhang et al., 2007
). Interactions among components of a subcomplex, such as the Nop7- or PeBoW-subcomplex (Lapik et al., 2004
; Miles et al., 2005
), the Rpf2-subcomplex (Morita et al., 2002
; Miyoshi et al., 2004
; Nariai et al., 2005
; Zhang et al., 2007
), or the Arx1-subcomplex (Lebreton et al., 2006
), have been inferred from indirect yeast two-hybrid experiments in vivo, GST pulldown assays in vitro, or by assays for genetic interactions.
Interaction Domains Are Necessary for the Recruitment of Ytm1, Erb1, and Nop7
In this study, we have shown that assembly of Nop7, Erb1, and Ytm1 into preribosomes is interdependent. By purifying TAP-tagged truncated Ytm1, Erb1, and Nop7, and associated molecules and by purifying preribosomes in cells expressing truncated versions of these proteins, we have identified domains in each protein responsible for interactions among these three proteins in vivo and sufficient for their assembly into preribosomes. Examination of dominant and recessive phenotypes upon expression of each truncated protein revealed not only interaction domains, but also which sequences are important or not for other functions of these proteins.
Our results indicate that amino acids 265–419 within the N-terminal conserved region of Erb1 bind to the central region of Nop7 containing most of the N-terminal pescadillo-like protein domain, a coiled-coil domain, and the BRCT domain (Figure 9). This interaction is important for association of both proteins with preribosomal particles. However, it is not clear whether Erb1 and Nop7 form a heterodimeric complex before entering into pre-RNPs. Once in preribosomes, Erb1 recruits Ytm1 by the interaction between amino acids 383 and 419 within the amino-terminal conserved region of Erb1 and the carboxyl-terminal seven WD40 domains of Ytm1 (Figure 9). Assembly of Ytm1 into pre-rRNPs stabilizes association of previously incorporated Nop7 and Erb1. These associations might otherwise be weakened as a result of the structural rearrangements that occur during maturation of preribosomes.
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Functions of WD40 Motifs in Ytm1 and Erb1
One interesting feature about the Nop7-subcomplex is that it contains two proteins with WD40 motifs. There are 111 WD40 repeat-containing proteins in yeast; 22 are ribosome assembly factors (Saveanu et al., 2007
). However, the roles of WD40 domains in ribosome biogenesis have only been explored in a few cases (Miles et al., 2005
). Here, our data provide in vivo and in vitro evidence that the carboxyl-terminal WD40-repeats of Ytm1 interact with Erb1 and are essential for Ytm1 to associate with pre-rRNPs. In contrast, the seven conserved WD40 motifs of Erb1 are not necessary for interaction of Erb1 with Nop7 or Ytm1, nor for the assembly of Erb1 into preribosomes, and surprisingly, are not required for ribosome biogenesis or any other essential functions of Erb1. Results with mammalian Bop1, the mammalian homologue of Erb1, are consistent with these findings. Overexpression of the Bop1 N4 truncation, which is homologous to Erb1-N, but extends 80 additional amino acids C-terminal into Bop1, causes no defects in cell cycle or pre-rRNA processing. However, overexpression of Bop1 N2, which is
40 amino acids shorter than Erb1-N, does cause defects in cell proliferation and ribosome biogenesis. Together, these results with Erb1 and Bop1 truncations suggest that the amino-terminal conserved region of Erb1 (419aa) or Bop1 (391aa), lacking the WD40 motifs, are largely sufficient for their function. Conserved amino acids 346–419 in Erb1-N or 324–391 in Bop1 N4, which are missing from Bop1 N2, likely are important for ribosome biogenesis but not necessary for assembly of Erb1 or Bop1 into preribosomes. The WD40 motifs of Erb1 may bridge interactions in preribosomal particles that are not essential for 60S subunit assembly or might participate in a different nonessential function of Erb1. Genome-wide two-hybrid assays using Erb1-C1 identified several ER binding proteins as potential ligands of the WD40 domain of Erb1, suggesting a potential "moonlighting" function of the WD40 repeats of Erb1 (data not shown).
Roles for Domains Other Than Interactions within the Nop7-Subcomplex
The dominant negative phenotype caused by Ytm1-C demonstrates the functional importance of the amino-terminal 98 amino acids of Ytm1, containing the Notchless-like element. This sequence was originally identified in the N-terminal part of Notchless, a protein implicated in the modulation of Notch signaling in Drosophila (Royet et al., 1998
). Previously, Nal et al. (2002)
found a direct interaction between GST-WDR12 and the intracytoplasmic domain of the Notch1 protein in vitro, presumably via the Nle of WDR12. Because there are no known Notch homologues in yeast, the function of the Nle in Ytm1 remains unclear. The Nle of Ytm1 might interact with other preribosomal molecules to recruit them into assembling ribosomes, or to initiate conformational changes in preribosomes essential for their further maturation.
To assemble into and function in preribosomal particles, assembly factors are likely to interact with multiple protein or RNA ligands. Domains not required for interactions among Nop7, Erb1, and Ytm1, such as the WD40 domain of Erb1, or the Nle element of Ytm1, may bind to other assembly factors. Genetic assays could provide valuable information about potential candidates that interact with the Nop7-subcomplex proteins. For example, the nop7-1 mutation is synthetically lethal with specific mutant alleles of DRS1, a putative DEAD box helicase necessary for 60S subunit assembly (Adams et al., 2002
), and overexpression of DRS1 suppresses certain nop7 mutants (L. Tang, unpublished data). Overexpression of NOP7 suppresses the thermosensitive growth defects of certain mutations in ribosome assembly factor Nog1 (Honma et al., 2006
). More experiments need to be done to discover proteins that physically associate with the Nop7-subcomplex within nascent ribosomes. Moreover, identification of these molecules will enable us to walk out of the Nop7-neighborhood and expand our knowledge of the architecture of preribosomes.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| Footnotes |
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* Present address: Department of Genetics, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520. ![]()
Address correspondence to: John L. Woolford, Jr. (jw17{at}andrew.cmu.edu)
Abbreviations used: rRNA, ribosomal RNA; pre-rRNA, rRNA precursor; RNP, ribonucleoprotein; pre-rRNP, preribosomes.
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