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Mol Cell Biol, April 1998, p. 1855-1865, Vol. 18, No. 4
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Dbp6p Is an Essential Putative ATP-Dependent RNA
Helicase Required for 60S-Ribosomal-Subunit Assembly in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Dieter
Kressler,1,*
Jesús
de la Cruz,1
Manuel
Rojo,2 and
Patrick
Linder1
Département de Biochimie
Médicale, Centre Médical
Universitaire,1 and
Département de Biochimie, Sciences
II,2 Université de Genève, 1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland
Received 31 October 1997/Returned for modification 21 November
1997/Accepted 30 December 1997
 |
ABSTRACT |
A previously uncharacterized Saccharomyces cerevisiae
open reading frame, YNR038W, was analyzed in the context of the
European Functional Analysis Network. YNR038W encodes a putative
ATP-dependent RNA helicase of the DEAD-box protein family and
was therefore named DBP6 (DEAD-box protein 6). Dbp6p is
essential for cell viability. In vivo depletion of Dbp6p results in a
deficit in 60S ribosomal subunits and the appearance of half-mer
polysomes. Pulse-chase labeling of pre-rRNA and steady-state analysis
of pre-rRNA and mature rRNA by Northern hybridization and primer
extension show that Dbp6p depletion leads to decreased production of
the 27S and 7S precursors, resulting in a depletion of the mature 25S and 5.8S rRNAs. Furthermore, hemagglutinin epitope-tagged Dbp6p is
detected exclusively within the nucleolus. We propose that Dbp6p is
required for the proper assembly of preribosomal particles during the
biogenesis of 60S ribosomal subunits, probably by acting as an rRNA
helicase.
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INTRODUCTION |
In eukaryotes, ribosome biogenesis
is a complex process where approximately 80 ribosomal proteins
(r-proteins) and four rRNAs are assembled into mature ribosomal
subunits. The 60S ribosomal subunit consists of three rRNAs (5S, 5.8S,
and 25S or 28S) and approximately 45 r-proteins, whereas the 40S
ribosomal subunit is formed by one 18S rRNA molecule and approximately
35 r-proteins (74). In all eukaryotes, rRNAs are synthesized
as precursors (pre-rRNAs) that require maturation by a large number of
nonribosomal trans-acting factors. Transcription of the rRNA
genes, processing (cleavage and modification) of the pre-rRNAs, and
assembly with r-proteins are concomitant processes that take place
primarily in a specialized subnuclear compartment termed the nucleolus
(35).
Although ribosome biogenesis has been extensively studied for higher
eukaryotes (14), biochemical strategies and genetic approaches with the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae have
provided the best-characterized picture regarding the various
cis elements and trans-acting factors
participating in this process (59, 60, 64, 67). In yeast,
three of the four rRNAs (18S, 5.8S, and 25S) are produced as a single
35S precursor by RNA polymerase I, whereas the fourth rRNA (5S) is
transcribed independently by RNA polymerase III (67, 74). In
the 35S pre-rRNA, the mature rRNA sequences are separated by two
internal transcribed spacers, ITS1 and ITS2, and flanked by two
external transcribed spacers, 5' ETS and 3' ETS (Fig.
1A). During the maturation of the 35S pre-rRNA, these transcribed spacers are removed by a series of ordered
endo- or exonucleolytic steps requiring small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs)
and proteins as trans-acting factors (Fig. 1B) (59,
67). Concomitantly, the pre-rRNAs are also covalently modified,
mostly by 2' O methylation of ribose groups and conversion of uridine
residues to pseudouridine (60). In addition to snoRNAs, enzymes for rRNA modification, and endo- and exonucleases, another class of trans-acting factors predicted to function
enzymatically in ribosome biogenesis is the ATP-dependent RNA
helicases.

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FIG. 1.
Scheme of pre-rRNA processing in S. cerevisiae. (A) Structure and processing sites of the 35S
precursor. This precursor contains the sequences for the mature 18S,
5.8S, and 25S rRNAs, which are separated by two internal transcribed
spacers, ITS1 and ITS2. Two external transcribed spacers, 5' ETS and 3'
ETS, are present at either end. The locations of the various probes
(numbered from 1 to 9) used in this study are also indicated. Thick
lines represent mature rRNA species, and thin lines represent
transcribed spacers. (B) Pre-rRNA processing pathway. The 35S pre-rRNA
is cleaved at site A0 by endonuclease Rnt1p (1),
generating the 33S pre-rRNA. This molecule is subsequently processed at
sites A1 and A2 to give rise to the 20S and
27SA2 precursors, resulting in the separation of the
pre-rRNAs destined for the small and large ribosomal subunits. It is
thought that the early pre-rRNA cleavages from A0 to
A2 are carried out by a large small nucleolar RNP complex
(67), which is likely to be assisted by the putative
ATP-dependent RNA helicases Dbp4p (31), Fal1p
(28), Rok1p (65), and Rrp3p (41). The
final maturation of the 20S precursor takes place in the cytoplasm,
where endonucleolytic cleavage at site D yields the mature 18S rRNA.
The 27SA2 precursor is processed by two alternative
pathways that both lead to the formation of mature 5.8S and 25S rRNAs.
In the major pathway, the 27SA2 precursor is cleaved at
site A3 by RNase MRP (67). The putative
ATP-dependent RNA helicase Dbp3p (72) assists in this
processing step. The resulting 27SA3 precursor is 5'-to-3'
exonucleolytically digested up to site B1S to yield
the 27SBS precursor, a reaction requiring exonucleases
Xrn1p and Rat1p (21). The minor pathway processes the
27SA2 molecule at site B1L, producing
the 27SBL pre-rRNA. While processing at site B1
is completed, the 3' end of mature 25S rRNA is generated by processing
at site B2. The subsequent ITS2 processing of both 27SB
species appears to be identical. Cleavage at sites C1 and
C2 releases the mature 25S rRNA and the 7S pre-rRNA. The
latter undergoes exosome-dependent 3'-to-5' exonuclease digestion
to the 3' end of the mature 5.8S rRNA (36, 37); this
reaction also requires the putative ATP-dependent RNA helicase Dob1p
(12). The data presented in this study suggest that Dbp6p is
required for the assembly of 60S ribosomal subunits, a process that may
also involve three other putative ATP-dependent RNA helicases: Dbp7p
(10), Drs1p (44), and Spb4p (49). See
references 59 and 67 for reviews
on pre-rRNA processing and trans-acting factors.
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RNA helicases originate from many organisms, ranging from
bacteria to humans (51). They are involved in a
variety of RNA metabolic processes, including translation initiation
(42), pre-mRNA splicing (48), ribosome biogenesis
(67), and RNA degradation (25, 34). An
ATP-dependent RNA unwinding activity has been observed for some of
these proteins (e.g., see references 22, 30,
and 46), whereas only an RNA-dependent
ATPase activity could be attributed to others (e.g., see
references 17, 27, and 53).
However, based on sequence analysis, most are regarded as putative
ATP-dependent RNA helicases. Many putative ATP-dependent RNA helicases
are grouped in the DEAD-box protein family. This family is
characterized by a core region of about 300 to 350 amino acids that
shows strong homology to the translation initiation factor eIF4A, which
is the prototype of the DEAD-box protein family (32). The
core region consists of eight motifs with strong sequence conservation
among all members of the family (51). To date, biochemical
properties have been attributed only to four of the motifs within
the mammalian eIF4A (42). Sequence divergence within the DEAD box gives rise to the DEXH subgroup, whose
members are more heterogeneous with respect to both sequence and
function (16). Moreover, individual members of the family
have distinct amino- and carboxy-terminal regions that vary in length
(51). These regions and differences within the core region
may confer substrate specificity, direct the protein to its subcellular
localization, include RNA binding motifs, or bind to accessory
proteins, which could by themselves carry out the aforementioned
functions.
To date, nine putative RNA helicases have been shown to be implicated
in ribosome biogenesis in yeast. Dbp4p, Fal1p, Rok1p, and Rrp3p are
required for 18S rRNA synthesis (28, 31, 41, 65). Dbp3p,
Dbp7p, Drs1p, and Spb4p are involved in 25S rRNA maturation (10,
44, 49, 72). Dob1p is required for correct 3'-end processing of
the 5.8S rRNA (12). Considering their putative RNA unwinding
activity, RNA helicases could play different roles during ribosomal
biogenesis reactions. They might be required to provide an accessible
sequence in pre-rRNA substrates for proper endonucleolytic processing
to take place, as has been suggested for Dbp3p or Fal1p (28,
72), or they could disrupt secondary structures that might
otherwise stall or block the activity of an exonuclease, as has been
suggested for Dob1p (12). In addition, many snoRNAs,
including U3, U14, and the methylation and pseudouridylation guide
snoRNAs, form extensive base pair interactions with
pre-rRNAs (60). Thus, RNA helicases may play
roles in the association or dissociation reactions of these snoRNAs
with the pre-rRNA, as has been suggested for Dbp4p and Rok1p (31,
65). Finally, extensive structural rearrangements between
pre-rRNAs and r-proteins probably occur during the assembly reactions,
and these may require RNA helicases. It is suggested that Dbp7p, Drs1p,
and Spb4p are involved in such processes (10, 44, 49).
In this report, we describe the functional analysis of the previously
uncharacterized putative ATP-dependent RNA helicase Dbp6p (DEAD-box
protein 6). We show that Dbp6p is essential for cell viability and that
it localizes to the nucleolus. In vivo depletion of Dbp6p results in a
deficit in 60S ribosomal subunits and the appearance of half-mer
polysomes. This deficit is accompanied by decreased production of the
27S and 7S precursors, which leads to a decrease in the levels of the
mature 25S and 5.8S rRNAs. These phenotypes lead us to conclude that
Dbp6p depletion results in improper assembly of preribosomal particles
during the biogenesis of 60S ribosomal subunits.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Strains, media, and genetic methods.
The S. cerevisiae strains used in this study are derivatives of diploid
strain W303 (MATa/MAT
ura3-1/ura3-1
ade2-1/ade2-1 his3-11,15/his3-11,15 leu2-3,112/leu2-3,112
trp1-1/trp1-1) (58). YDK8
(MATa/MAT
DBP6/dbp6::kanMX4)
was obtained by disrupting one DBP6 open reading frame (ORF)
copy with the kanMX4 marker module. YDK8-1A (MAT
dbp6::kanMX4) is a meiotic segregant of YDK8 that
requires a plasmid-borne copy of DBP6 for cell viability. Preparation of standard media and genetic manipulations were done according to established procedures (4, 26). Yeast cells were transformed by the lithium acetate method (18).
One-step gene replacements were done according to Rothstein
(45). For tetrad dissection, a Singer MSM micromanipulator
was used.
DBP6 disruption.
The deletion disruption of
DBP6 was obtained by transformation of a PCR-synthesized
marker cassette with long flanking homology regions into W303
(70, 71). Briefly, the template for LFH1-PCR was genomic DNA
prepared from FY1679 (MATa/MAT
ura3-52/ura3-52 his3
200/HIS3 leu2
1/LEU2
trp1
63/TRP1) (73). Separate PCRs were set up to
obtain the 5' long flanking homology region (including the start codon
and the pFA6a polylinker sequence at its 3' end) and the 3'
long flanking homology region (including the DBP6 ORF sequence, starting at +1741, and the pFA6a polylinker sequence at its 5' end). These LFH1-PCR products were then used as primers to
amplify the kanMX4 heterologous marker module from the
EcoRV-linearized plasmid pFA6a-kanMX4 (71). The
LFH2-PCR product was used to directly transform yeast. Selection for
transformants was done on yeast extract-peptone-dextrose (YPD) plates
containing 200 mg of G418 (Gibco BRL) per liter. Integration at the
correct genomic locus was verified by Southern blotting.
The oligonucleotides used with LFH-PCR were P5' (5'ATT TCA GTC CCA CGA
ACT GA3') (starting 418 bp upstream of the DBP6 start codon), P5' long (5'GGG GAT CCG TCG ACC TGC AGC GCA
TTG TCA CTA CCG GTC ACC AAT3') (the reverse complement of
the DBP6 start codon is in bold type and underlined, and the
DBP6 5' upstream region is in bold type), P3' long (5'AAA
CGA GCT CGA ATT CAT CGA TGA TAT TCG ATG ACT TAA ACA AAG ATC
TA3') (the DBP6 ORF homology region is in bold type and
starts 150 bp upstream of the stop codon), and P3' (5'CAA ACG AGC ATT
CCA ACG T3') (starting 180 bp downstream of the DBP6 stop
codon). For all PCRs, a mixture of Taq DNA polymerase (Gibco
BRL) and Vent polymerase (New England Biolabs) was used.
Cloning of DBP6.
The cognate DBP6 ORF was
subcloned from a cosmid (14.22; obtained from P. Philippsen, University
of Basel) containing genomic DNA from chromosome XIV. To this end, a
2.79-kb SnaBI/SacI fragment was first cloned into
the EcoRV/SacI-restricted vector pUCBM21 (Boehringer Mannheim Biochemicals) to yield pUCBM21-DBP6.
Then, a 0.5-kb HindIII/NheI fragment and
a 2.3-kb NheI/SacI fragment were excised from
pUCBM21-DBP6 and cloned into the
HindIII/SacI-prepared vector pRS416
(55), resulting in the plasmid pRS416-DBP6.
Subcloning of a 2.8-kb SalI/SacI fragment into
pRS415 (55), YCplac111 (19), and YEplac181
(19) generated the plasmids pRS415-DBP6,
YCplac111-DBP6, and YEplac181-DBP6, respectively.
The four plasmid constructs complemented the dbp6 null
allele to the wild-type extent.
DBP6 HA epitope tagging and cloning under the control
of a galactose-inducible promoter or a cognate promoter.
DBP6 was PCR amplified (Vent polymerase) with
oligonucleotides introducing the restriction sites SalI
(5'GCA CGC GTC GAC TTT GCA TCG AGA TTT GAC C3')
(the SalI site is underlined, and the DBP6 ORF
homology region, starting with the second codon, is in bold type) and
SphI (5'GCA CAT GCA TGC CGA GCA TTC CAA CGT GTG3') (the SphI site is underlined, and the
DBP6 3' downstream homology region, starting 176 bp after
the stop codon, is in bold type). The
SalI/SphI-restricted PCR product was cloned into
the SalI/SphI-cut YCplac111-based plasmid pAS24
(52). The resulting plasmid, pAS24-DBP6, contains
a GAL1-GAL10 promoter, a start codon followed by a double
hemagglutinin (HA) tag, and the DBP6 ORF and its
3'-contiguous region. This construct was transformed into strain
YDK8-1A(pRS416-DBP6), and segregation of the plasmid
harboring URA3 DBP6 (5-fluoroorotic acid selection)
resulted in strain YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6). We also
refer to this strain as the GAL::DBP6 strain or,
if grown in YPD medium, as the Dbp6p-depleted strain.
In order to express an N-terminally HA-tagged Dbp6p fusion protein from
its cognate promoter at approximately wild-type levels,
a fusion PCR
was performed (
23). Briefly, two fragments with
sequence
overlap were generated in a first PCR series with
SacI-restricted
pRS416-
DBP6 as a template and the
oligonucleotides 5'
AGG GAT AGC CCG CAT AGT CAG
GAA CAT CGT
ATG GGT ATG C
CA TTG TCA CTA CCG GTC AC3' (the
DBP6 ORF homology region and 5' upstream region are in bold
type,
and the overlapping part of the double HA tag is underlined),
5'GTA AAA CGA CGG CCA GT3' (universal primer), 5'
TGA CTA TGC GGG
CTA TCC CTA
TGA CGT CCC GGA CTA TGC A
GG ATC CTT
TGC ATC GAG ATT TGA CC3' (the
DBP6 ORF homology region
is in bold type, the
introduced
BamHI site is in bold type
and underlined, and the
overlapping part of the double HA tag is
underlined), and P5'int
(5'CCT TTC TTG CAA TGA TAC3') (reverse
complement sequence within
the
DBP6 ORF, starting at +318)
as primers. The PCR products,
together with the universal primer and
the P5'int primer, were
used for the fusion PCR. The final product was
cloned as an
XhoI/
NheI
fragment into the
XhoI/
NheI-restricted plasmid
pRS415-
DBP6 to
yield plasmid pRS415-
HA-DBP6. The
HA fusion and
DBP6 ORF sequences
originating from the fusion
PCR were verified by sequencing. This
construct complemented the
dbp6 null allele to the wild-type extent,
and HA-tagged
Dbp6p was detected by Western blotting as a band
that migrated at the
expected molecular mass of approximately
73 kDa.
Polysome analysis and total ribosomal subunit
quantification.
Polyribosome preparation, polysome analysis, and
ribosomal subunit preparation were done according to Foiani et al.
(15) as previously described (28). Gradient
analysis was performed with an ISCO UV-6 gradient collector with
continuous monitoring at A254.
Indirect immunofluorescence.
Strains
YDK8-1A(pRS415-HA-DBP6) and
YDK8-1A(pRS415-DBP6) were grown to an optical
density at 600 nm (OD600) of about 0.5 in YPD medium, and 5 ml of cells was harvested by centrifugation. Preparation of yeast cells
for immunofluorescence was done according to standard procedures
(43). DAPI (4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole dihydrochloride;
Fluka) was used to stain DNA. Primary monoclonal mouse anti-HA antibody
16B12 (BAbCO), at a dilution of 1/1,000, and secondary goat anti-mouse
rhodamine-conjugated antibodies (Pierce), at a dilution of 1/200, were
used to detect HA-Dbp6p. Polyclonal rabbit anti-Nop1p antibodies
(obtained from E. C. Hurt, University of Heidelberg), at a
dilution of 1/500, and secondary goat anti-rabbit
fluorescein-conjugated antibodies (Pierce), at a dilution of 1/200,
were used to detect nucleolar protein Nop1p (61).
Fluorescence-labeled cells were inspected in a Zeiss Axiophot fluorescence microscope with the Plan-NEOFLUAR 100×/1.3 objective. Photographs were taken with Kodak TMAX p3200 and transferred to Kodak
PhotoCD. Figures were arranged with Adobe Photoshop and printed on a
Kodak Digital Science 8650 PS color printer.
Pulse-chase labeling of pre-rRNA.
Cells of strains
YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6) and
YDK8-1A(pRS415-DBP6) were grown in yeast extract
peptone galactose (YPGal) medium, shifted to YPD medium, grown in 40 ml
of synthetic dextrose (SD) medium lacking methionine (SD-Met) to an
OD600 of about 1, and concentrated in 1 ml of SD-Met. Cells
were then pulse-labeled for 1 min with 250 µCi of
[methyl-3H]methionine (Amersham; 70 to 85 Ci/mmol). Chase conditions, RNA extraction, and analysis on 1.2%
agarose-formaldehyde gels were as previously described
(28).
For [5,6-
3H]uracil pulse-chase labeling analysis, cells
of strains YDK8-1A(pAS24-
DBP6)(pRS416) and
YDK8-1A(pRS416-
DBP6) were
grown in synthetic
galactose (SGal)-Ura and then in 40 ml of SD-Ura
to an
OD
600 of about 1. The cells were concentrated in 1 ml of
SD-Ura and pulse-labeled for 2 min with 100 µCi of
[5,6-
3H]uracil (Amersham; 45 to 50 Ci/mmol). The chase
was initiated
by diluting 200-µl aliquots of the pulse-labeled cells
in 4 ml
of SD medium containing 1 mg of cold uracil per ml. Cells were
harvested after 0, 5, 15, 30, and 60 min of chase, washed in ice-cold
water, and frozen in liquid nitrogen. Total RNA was extracted
by the
acid-phenol method (
4). Uracil incorporation was measured
by
scintillation counting, and 30,000 cpm per RNA extract was
loaded and
resolved on 1.2% agarose-formaldehyde and 7% polyacrylamide-8
M
urea gels. RNA was transferred to Hybond-N
+ nylon membranes
(Amersham) as described previously (
28,
66),
and the filters
were baked for 2 h at 80°C, sprayed with En
3Hance
(Du Pont), dried, and exposed to X-ray films for 4 days
at

80°C
with an intensifying screen.
Northern and primer extension analyses.
Steady-state levels
of pre-rRNA and mature rRNA were assessed by Northern and primer
extension analyses. Oligonucleotides (numbered from 1 to 9 according to
the scheme in Fig. 1A) 5'A0, 18S, D/A2,
A2/A3, A3/B1, 5.8S,
E/C2, C1/C2, and 25S
(28) and the oligonucleotide 5S (5'GGT CAC CCA CTA
CAC TAC TCG G3') were end labeled with 30 µCi of
[
-32P]ATP (Amersham; 5,000 Ci/mmol) by use of T4
polynucleotide kinase (Appligene). Total RNA was extracted as described
above, and 5 µg was loaded and resolved on 1.2%
agarose-formaldehyde gels. For analysis of low-molecular-weight rRNA
species, RNA samples (ca. 2.5 µg) corresponding to equal amounts of
OD600 units of cells were separated on 7%
polyacrylamide-8 M urea gels. RNA was transferred to and immobilized
on nylon membranes as described above. Prehybridization and
hybridization were done with Church buffer (9). Washes were
done with 2× SSC (1× SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate),
0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate, and 0.1× SSC-0.5% sodium dodecyl
sulfate, and the membranes were exposed to X-ray films at
80°C with
an intensifying screen.
Primer extension was done with the same RNA samples as those used for
Northern analysis according to Venema and Tollervey
(
68).
Oligonucleotides 6 and 7 were used as primers. To identify
the
positions of the primer extension stops, plasmid-borne rRNA
genes were
sequenced with the oligonucleotides listed above. Avian
myeloblastosis
virus reverse transcriptase and RNAguard were purchased
from Pharmacia.
Miscellaneous.
Total yeast protein extracts were prepared
and analyzed by Western blotting according to standard procedures
(4, 50). Monoclonal antibody 16B12 and goat anti-mouse
alkaline phosphatase-conjugated antibody (Bio-Rad) were used as primary
and secondary antibodies, respectively. DNA manipulations were done
according to Sambrook et al. (50) with Escherichia
coli DH10B for subcloning and amplification of plasmid DNA. For
dideoxy sequencing, a T7 sequencing kit (Pharmacia) was used. Sequence
comparisons were performed at the Saccharomyces Genome
Database (Stanford University) and NCBI facilities.
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RESULTS |
Dbp6p is a putative ATP-dependent RNA helicase that is essential
for cell viability.
DBP6 (YNR038W) is an ORF of 1,887 bp
located on the right arm of S. cerevisiae chromosome XIV.
The DBP6 ORF encodes a protein of 629 amino acids with a
predicted molecular mass of 70.4 kDa. Dbp6p is also predicted to be
acidic (pI, 5.88) and to localize within the cytoplasm
(SwissProt Psort program [3]). Calculation of the
codon adaptation index (54) suggests that Dbp6p, with a
codon adaptation index of 0.19, is of moderate to low intracellular abundance.
Sequence analysis revealed that Dbp6p belongs to the
DEAD-box protein family of putative ATP-dependent RNA helicases
(Fig.
2). Seven of the eight conserved
motifs characteristic of DEAD-box
proteins are present in Dbp6p. Like
all other DEAD-box proteins
from yeast, with the exception of Tif1/2p
(
33) and Fal1p (
28),
Dbp6p also has relatively
large N- and C-terminal extensions to
the helicase core region. The
N-terminal domain contains an 86-amino-acid
region (amino acids 39 to
124) that is highly enriched in aspartic
acid (11.6% versus 5.4% for
the full-length protein), glutamic
acid (23.2% versus 6.5%), and
serine (20.9% versus 10.8%) residues,
but it does not contain many
positively charged amino acids (Fig.
2).

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FIG. 2.
DBP6 encodes a putative ATP-dependent
RNA helicase of the DEAD-box protein family. Seven of the
eight conserved motifs characteristic of DEAD-box proteins are found in
Dbp6p (bold type and underlined). The helicase core region extends from
amino acid 234 (A motif) to amino acid 598 (HRVGR motif). A portion of
the N-terminal domain, starting at amino acid 39 and ending at amino
acid 124, is highly enriched in serine and the negatively charged amino
acids aspartic acid and glutamic acid (underlined).
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As a first approach to the functional analysis of Dbp6p, we constructed
a
dbp6 null allele. We replaced most of one
DBP6
ORF
copy in the diploid strain W303 with the kanMX4 marker module
(see
Materials and Methods). Correct integration at the genomic
locus was
verified by Southern blotting. Subsequent tetrad analysis
showed a 2:2
segregation of viable to nonviable spores, with all
the viable progeny
being
DBP6 and G418 sensitive (data not shown).
The
dbp6 spores germinated, but cell division stopped
after three
to five generations. The cognate
DBP6 ORF
complemented its null
allele after transformation of the
DBP6/dbp6::kanMX4 heterozygote
(YDK8) with
pRS416-
DBP6 and subsequent sporulation and tetrad
analyses
(data not shown). Furthermore, Dbp6p was required for
vegetative
growth, as judged by the lack of growth of
YDK8-1A(pRS416-
DBP6)
on 5-fluoroorotic
acid-containing plates (data not shown). These
results showed that
Dbp6p is essential for cell viability.
Construction of a GAL::DBP6 strain.
To
determine the essential Dbp6p function, a conditional system for
phenotypic analysis was established. The DBP6 ORF and its 3'
downstream sequence were cloned under the control of a galactose-inducible promoter, which allows gene expression in medium
containing galactose (YPGal) and represses gene expression in
glucose-based medium (YPD). The resulting plasmid,
pAS24-DBP6, expressed an N-terminally HA-tagged Dbp6p that
complemented the dbp6 null mutant (YDK8-1A) on YPGal plates
to the wild-type extent and resulted in a strong slow-growth phenotype
on YPD plates at 30°C (data not shown). After
YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6) was shifted from YPGal medium to
YPD medium, the growth rate remained similar to that of the wild-type
control strain YDK8-1A(YCplac111-DBP6) for the first
12 h but then progressively decreased to a doubling time of more
than 8 h after 36 h in YPD medium (Fig.
3A). Concomitant with the decrease in the
growth rate, the cells were depleted of HA-Dbp6p, as detected by
Western blot analysis (Fig. 3B).

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FIG. 3.
Growth of yeast cells is impaired upon Dbp6p depletion.
(A) Growth curves for YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6)
(GAL::DBP6; open circles) and
YDK8-1A(YCplac111-DBP6) (DBP6; closed circles) at
30°C after logarithmic cultures were shifted from YPGal medium to YPD
medium for up to 36 h. Data are given as doubling times at
different times in YPD medium. (B) Depletion of Dbp6p. Cell extracts of
the GAL::DBP6 strain were prepared from samples
harvested at the indicated times. The cell extract of the
DBP6 strain was prepared from a sample harvested after
36 h in YPD medium. Extracts were assayed by Western blot analysis
with monoclonal mouse anti-HA antibody 16B12. Equal amounts of protein
(ca. 70 µg) were loaded in each lane, as judged by Coomassie blue
staining of gels or red Ponceau staining of blots (data not shown).
Prestained markers (Bio-Rad) were used as standards for molecular mass
determinations. The HA-Dbp6p signal is indicated by an arrow. No signal
was detected for untagged Dbp6p.
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In vivo depletion of Dbp6p leads to a deficiency in 60S ribosomal
subunits.
As some DEAD-box proteins are involved in either
translation initiation (6, 8, 11) or ribosome biogenesis
(28, 44, 72), we first investigated by polysome profile
analysis whether Dbp6p was involved in one of these two processes. For
this purpose, YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6) was grown at
30°C in YPGal medium and shifted to YPD medium, and then polysomes
were extracted at different times. Wild-type polysome profiles were
obtained after 6 h (Fig. 4A).
Concomitant with the decrease in the growth rate and in HA-Dbp6p levels
after 24 h, the Dbp6p-depleted strain showed a deficit of free 60S
versus 40S ribosomal subunits, an overall decrease in 80S ribosomes
(free couples and monosomes) and polysomes, and an accumulation of
half-mer polysomes (Fig. 4B). The 60S-ribosomal-subunit deficit was
confirmed by quantifying total ribosomal subunits in polysome runoff
and low-Mg2+ cell extracts. The 60S-to-40S ratio was
determined from the A254. It was about 1.9 for the wild-type control strain
YDK8-1A(YCplac111-DBP6); this ratio was about 1.5 for YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6) after 24 h of Dbp6p depletion. Thus, polysome analysis indicated that Dbp6p plays a
role in the metabolism of 60S ribosomal subunits.

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FIG. 4.
Depletion of Dbp6p results in a deficiency in 60S
ribosomal subunits. YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6) was grown in
YPGal medium and shifted to YPD medium for up to 24 h. Polysome
analysis was done after 6 h (A) and 24 h (B). Cell extracts
were resolved in 7 to 50% sucrose gradients. The peaks of free 40S and
60S ribosomal subunits, 80S ribosomes (free couples and monosomes), and
polysomes are indicated. Half-mer polysomes are indicated by arrows.
|
|
Dbp6p localizes to the nucleolus.
To distinguish between a
cytoplasmic role and a nucleolar role of Dbp6p, the subcellular
localization of Dbp6p was analyzed by indirect immunofluorescence. For
this purpose, DBP6 was HA tagged at its 5' end by fusion PCR
and cloned into pRS415 to express the N-terminally epitope-tagged Dbp6p
from its cognate promoter at approximately wild-type levels (see
Materials and Methods). The resulting plasmid
(pRS415-HA-DBP6) or a control plasmid harboring the untagged
DBP6 gene (pRS415-DBP6) was transformed into
strain YDK8-1A(pRS416-DBP6). Upon plasmid shuffling
and subsequent restreaking on YPD plates, HA-Dbp6p complemented the
dbp6 null allele to the wild-type extent at all temperatures
tested (16, 30, and 37°C). In addition, Western blot analysis with an
anti-HA antibody detected a single protein with the expected molecular
mass of ca. 73 kDa in a total cell extract from a strain expressing
HA-tagged Dbp6p [YDK8-1A(pRS415-HA-DBP6)] but not
from a strain expressing untagged Dbp6p
[YDK8-1A(pRS415-DBP6)] (data not shown). The two
strains were grown in YPD medium to an OD600 of about 0.5, and cells were processed for immunofluorescence. The HA-tagged Dbp6p
was detected by anti-HA antibodies, followed by decoration with goat
anti-mouse rhodamine-conjugated antibodies (Fig.
5A). For precise localization, the
nucleus was visualized by staining of DNA with DAPI (Fig. 5C) and the
nucleolus was stained with anti-Nop1p antibodies in combination
with goat anti-rabbit fluorescein-conjugated antibodies (Fig. 5B). The
fluorescence photographs demonstrated that HA-Dbp6p is restricted
to the nucleolus (Fig. 5A), where it colocalizes with Nop1p (Fig. 5B).
In most cells, Dbp6p and Nop1p showed the typical crescentic or
cap-like staining pattern of nucleolar proteins. No signal was obtained
with the combination of anti-HA and goat anti-mouse
rhodamine-conjugated antibodies when cells of strain YDK8-1A(pRS415-DBP6) were analyzed by indirect
immunofluorescence (data not shown). The predominant localization of
HA-Dbp6p in the nucleolus, the specialized compartment for ribosome
biosynthesis (35), indicated that Dbp6p is implicated in the
biogenesis of 60S ribosomal subunits.

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FIG. 5.
HA-Dbp6p localizes to the nucleolus. Indirect
immunofluorescence was performed with cells expressing HA-Dbp6p from
the DBP6 promoter
[YDK8-1A(pRS415-HA-DBP6)]. (A) HA-Dbp6p was
detected with monoclonal mouse anti-HA antibody 16B12, followed by
decoration with goat anti-mouse rhodamine-conjugated antibodies. (B)
Nop1p was detected with polyclonal rabbit anti-Nop1p antibodies,
followed by decoration with goat anti-rabbit fluorescein-conjugated
antibodies. (C) Chromatin DNA was stained with DAPI.
|
|
Formation of the mature 25S and 5.8S rRNAs is impaired upon Dbp6p
depletion.
To study the role of Dbp6p in 60S-ribosomal-subunit
biogenesis, we first analyzed the effects of Dbp6p depletion on the
synthesis and processing of pre-rRNA by
[methyl-3H]methionine pulse-chase labeling
experiments. For this purpose, YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6)
and the wild-type control strain
YDK8-1A(pRS415-DBP6) were grown first as logarithmic
cultures in YPGal medium, then for 12 h in YPD medium, and finally
for another 10 h to an OD600 of about 1 in SD-Met. At
this time, the GAL::DBP6 strain was doubling every
5.5 h, compared to 2.5 h for the wild-type strain. The cells were pulse-labeled for 1 min and then chased for 2, 5, and 15 min with
an excess of cold methionine. We observed a net decrease in the ratio
of labeled 25S to 18S mature rRNAs in the Dbp6p-depleted strain
relative to the wild-type strain (Fig.
6A, lanes 3, 4, 7, and 8). Furthermore,
processing of the 35S precursor was slightly delayed, and practically
no 32S precursor was formed. Interestingly, different bands of high
molecular weight appeared at the 1-min pulse time point. These bands
presumably correspond to 35S pre-rRNA-derived intermediates or
degradation products that became metastable in the absence of Dbp6p.
Moreover, less of the 27S species formed, with the 27SA and 27SB
precursors not persisting until the 2-min chase time point (Fig. 6A,
lanes 5 and 6). The formation of the 18S rRNA was also weakly impaired,
as revealed by the lower levels of its 20S precursor and the mature
species itself and by the accumulation of an aberrant 23S species (Fig.
6A, lanes 5 and 6). However, the kinetics of processing of the 20S
precursor to the mature 18S rRNA seemed not to be affected.

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FIG. 6.
Dbp6p depletion leads to reduced synthesis of the mature
25S and 5.8S rRNAs. (A) Wild-type control strain
YDK8-1A(YCplac111-DBP6) (DBP6) and strain
YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6) (GAL::DBP6)
were grown at 30°C in YPGal medium, shifted for 12 h to YPD
medium, and then grown for 10 h in SD-Met. Cells were
pulse-labeled (p) for 1 min with
[methyl-3H]methionine and then chased (c) for
2, 5, and 15 min with an excess of unlabeled methionine. Total RNA was
extracted, and 20,000 cpm was loaded and separated on a 1.2%
agarose-formaldehyde gel, transferred to a nylon membrane, and
visualized by fluorography. (B) Strains
YDK8-1A(pRS416-DBP6) (DBP6) and
YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6)(pRS416)
(GAL::DBP6) were grown at 30°C in SGal-Ura and
then shifted to SD-Ura for 22 h. Cells were pulse-labeled (p) for
2 min with [5,6-3H]uracil and then chased (c) for 5, 15, 30, and 60 min with an excess of unlabeled uracil. Total RNA was
extracted, and 30,000 cpm was loaded and separated on a 7%
polyacrylamide-8 M urea gel, transferred to a nylon membrane, and
visualized by fluorography. The positions of the different pre-rRNAs,
mature rRNAs, and tRNAs are indicated.
|
|
To exclude a defect in rRNA methylation and to monitor the processing
and formation of low-molecular-weight RNAs, cells were
also
pulse-labeled with [5,6-
3H]uracil. Strains
YDK8-1A(pAS24-
DBP6)(pRS416) and
YDK8-1A(pRS416-
DBP6)
were grown first as
logarithmic cultures in SGal-Ura and then
for 22 h in SD-Ura
to an OD
600 of about 1. At this time, the
GAL::DBP6 strain was doubling every 4.5 h, compared to 2.75 h for the wild-type
strain. The cells were
pulse-labeled for 2 min and then chased
for 5, 15, 30, and 60 min with
an excess of cold uracil. Results
comparable to those shown in Fig.
6A
were obtained after total
RNA samples were analyzed by agarose gel
electrophoresis (data
not shown), thus excluding an rRNA methylation
defect following
Dbp6p depletion. Analysis of low-molecular-weight RNAs
by polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis showed that the synthesis of
mature 5.8S rRNA
was substantially reduced upon Dbp6p depletion. The
synthesis
of 5S rRNA and the labeling of tRNAs, however, were
comparable
in both kinetics and levels in wild-type and Dbp6p-depleted
cells
(Fig.
6B). Altogether, these results indicated that the deficit
in 60S ribosomal subunits following Dbp6p depletion was due to
impaired
precursor formation or stability, which led to reduced
synthesis of
both mature 25S and mature 5.8S rRNAs.
Dbp6p is required for normal pre-rRNA processing.
To
define the pre-rRNA processing steps that are affected upon Dbp6p
depletion, steady-state levels of pre-rRNA and mature rRNA were
determined by Northern blot and primer extension analyses. Different
oligonucleotides hybridizing to defined regions of the 35S pre-rRNA
transcript (Fig. 1A) were used to monitor specific processing
intermediates in a wild-type control strain and during a time course of
Dbp6p depletion. Depletion of Dbp6p resulted in a slight decrease in
18S rRNA and a more drastic decrease in 25S rRNA steady-state levels
(Fig. 7A). Probing with oligonucleotide 1 (Fig. 7B), which hybridizes 5' to site A0, revealed that
the GAL::DBP6 strain accumulated, with ongoing
depletion of Dbp6p, an aberrant processing product that had already
been detected by the pulse-chase labeling experiments. This
aberrant species could also be detected with oligonucleotides 3 (Fig. 7C) and 4 (Fig. 7D) but not with oligonucleotide 5 (Fig. 7E),
indicating that this rRNA molecule might extend from the 5' end of the
5' ETS to the A3 site and thus correspond to the previously
described aberrant 23S processing product (67). Concomitant
with Dbp6p depletion, the amounts of the 32S pre-rRNA (Fig. 7D) and the
20S pre-rRNA (Fig. 7C) diminished slightly. More importantly, the 27SA2 and 27SB pre-rRNAs were strongly depleted (Fig. 7D to
F; data not shown for oligonucleotide 8).

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FIG. 7.
Dbp6p depletion leads to lower steady-state levels of
the 27S precursors and the mature 25S rRNA. Strains
YDK8-1A(pRS416-DBP6) (DBP6) and
YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6) (GAL::DBP6)
were grown in YPGal medium and shifted to YPD medium for up to 36 h. The cells were harvested at the indicated times. Total RNA was
extracted, separated on a 1.2% agarose-formaldehyde gel, transferred
to a nylon membrane, and subjected to Northern analysis. The same
filter was consecutively hybridized with the probes indicated in Fig.
1A. (A) Oligonucleotides 2 and 9, base pairing to sequences within the
mature 18S and 25S rRNAs, respectively. (B) Oligonucleotide 1 in 5'
ETS. (C) Oligonucleotide 3 in ITS1 between sites D and A2.
(D) Oligonucleotide 4 in ITS1 between sites A2 and
A3. (E) Oligonucleotide 5 in ITS1 downstream of site
A3. (F) Oligonucleotide 7 in ITS2 between sites E and
C2. The positions of the different pre-rRNAs and mature
rRNAs are indicated.
|
|
To assess the steady-state levels of low-molecular-weight rRNAs,
samples were separated on polyacrylamide gels and subjected
to Northern
blot analysis with 7S-, 5.8S-, and 5S-specific oligonucleotides.
Hybridizations indicated that the 7S pre-rRNA was strongly depleted
(Fig.
8, top panel) and that the levels
of the mature 5.8S rRNA
were also decreased (Fig.
8, middle panel).
However, the steady-state
levels of the 5S rRNA were only very slightly
affected by Dbp6p
depletion (Fig.
8, bottom panel).

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FIG. 8.
Dbp6p depletion leads to lower steady-state levels of
the 7S precursor and the mature 5.8S rRNAs. Strains
YDK8-1A(pRS416-DBP6) (DBP6) and
YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6) (GAL::DBP6)
were grown in YPGal medium and shifted to YPD medium for up to 36 h. The cells were harvested at the indicated times. Total RNA was
extracted, separated on a 7% polyacrylamide-8 M urea gel, transferred
to a nylon membrane, and subjected to Northern analysis. The same
filter was consecutively hybridized with three different probes:
oligonucleotide 7 in ITS2 between sites E and C2 (top
panel); oligonucleotide 6, base pairing to sequences within the mature
5.8S rRNAs (middle panel); and oligonucleotide 5S, base pairing to
sequences within the mature 5S rRNA (bottom panel). The positions of
the 7S pre-rRNA and the mature 5.8S and 5S rRNAs are indicated.
|
|
Because Northern hybridization poorly detects mature 5.8S
L
rRNA and because it does not distinguish between the 27SA
3
and
27SA
2 precursors and between the 27SB
L and
27SB
S precursors, we
assessed the levels of these species
by primer extension. This
analysis confirmed that Dbp6p depletion led
to a net decrease
in all the 27S precursors, with the 27SB species
being most drastically
affected (Fig.
9A), and to diminished levels of both
mature 5.8S
L and mature 5.8S
S rRNAs (Fig.
9B).
Furthermore, primer extension
showed that processing at all sites
tested was correct at the
nucleotide level during the time course of
Dbp6p depletion.

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FIG. 9.
Primer extension analysis of the 27S precursors and the
mature 5.8S rRNAs. Strains
YDK8-1A(pRS416-DBP6) (DBP6) and
YDK8-1A(pAS24-DBP6)
(GAL::DBP6) were grown in YPGal medium and
shifted to YPD medium for up to 36 h. The cells were harvested at
the indicated times, and total RNA was extracted. (A) Primer extension
with oligonucleotide 7 in ITS2 reveals processing sites
B1S, B1L, A3, and A2.
The bottom panel is a longer exposure of the same gel, and it shows the
A3 site. (B) Primer extension with oligonucleotide 6, priming within the mature 5.8S rRNAs. The positions of the primer
extension stops corresponding to the different pre-rRNA species and the
mature 5.8S rRNAs are indicated.
|
|
Altogether, our results demonstrate that Dbp6p depletion leads to
decreased formation and decreased steady-state levels of
the 27S and 7S
precursors and, as a consequence, of the mature
25S and 5.8S rRNAs.
These phenotypes may be due to or may cause
an improper assembly of
preribosomal particles during the biogenesis
of 60S ribosomal subunits.
The nucleolar localization of HA-Dbp6p
and the 60S-ribosomal-subunit
deficiency upon Dbp6p depletion
are in agreement with a proposed role
of Dbp6p in 60S-ribosomal-subunit
biogenesis.
 |
DISCUSSION |
In this paper, we describe the functional analysis of Dbp6p, a
putative ATP-dependent RNA helicase of the DEAD-box protein family.
Disruption analysis showed that Dbp6p is essential for cell viability.
In vivo depletion of Dbp6p resulted in a deficit in 60S ribosomal
subunits, which led to the appearance of half-mer polysomes. Similar
polysome profiles have been described for mutants defective in
r-proteins of the 60S ribosomal subunit (13, 39, 69) and for
mutants defective in components involved in pre-rRNA processing and
60S-ribosomal-subunit assembly (24, 44, 56, 72, 75). Since
we detected N-terminally HA-tagged Dbp6p only in the nucleolus, we
concluded that Dbp6p is not a structural component of 60S ribosomal
subunits but rather plays a role in their biogenesis. Interestingly,
Dbp6p is predicted to be cytoplasmic and lacks a consensus nuclear
localization signal. This finding may indicate that Dbp6p carries an
as-yet-unknown signal sequence for nuclear targeting or that it is
imported into the nucleus by binding to a nucleus-targeted protein in
the cytoplasm.
To define the role of Dbp6p in the biogenesis of 60S ribosomal
subunits, we investigated the formation and steady-state levels of
pre-rRNA and mature rRNA by pulse-chase labeling, Northern blotting,
and primer extension analyses. Pulse-chase labeling of pre-rRNA showed
that the synthesis of the mature 25S and 5.8S rRNAs was quantitatively
diminished and kinetically delayed compared to the formation of the
mature 18S and 5S rRNAs. Processing of the 35S precursor was slightly
delayed, and practically no 32S precursor was detected. Most notably,
different high-molecular-weight species, most likely corresponding to
35S pre-rRNA-derived degradation products, could be detected during the
pulse. We propose that the processed 35S pre-rRNA might not have been
stable in the absence of Dbp6p and, as a consequence, that less of the
27S species was formed. Furthermore, the stability of the 27S
precursors was probably also affected because they did not persist
until the first chase time point. Moreover, the formation of the 18S
rRNA was also weakly impaired, as revealed by the appearance of the
aberrant 23S processing product and by the lower levels of the 20S
precursor and of the mature 18S rRNA species.
The results of the pulse-chase labeling experiments were confirmed by
Northern blotting and primer extension analyses, which showed that the
steady-state levels of the 27SA and, more drastically, of the 27SB
precursors were decreased. As a consequence, the 7S pre-rRNA was
strongly depleted, and reduced steady-state levels of the mature 25S
and 5.8S rRNAs were detected. In agreement with the finding that newly
synthesized 5S rRNA is more stable than 5.8S rRNA upon depletion of the
60S-subunit protein L16 (38), the steady-state levels of the
5S rRNA were only very slightly affected by Dbp6p depletion. We
conclude that Dbp6p is required for the normal formation of 25S and
5.8S rRNAs. The amounts of both the 32S and the 20S pre-rRNAs also were
diminished slightly, and the aberrant 23S species, which is the product
of direct cleavage of the 35S pre-rRNA at site A3 when
processing at sites A0, A1, and A2
is delayed or inhibited, accumulated. These findings could implicate
Dbp6p in 18S rRNA synthesis; however, this role would only be a minor
one, since the steady-state levels of both the 40S ribosomal subunit
and the 18S rRNA were less affected than the steady-state levels of the
60S ribosomal subunit and the mature 25S or 5.8S rRNA. In agreement
with these findings, reduced processing of the 35S precursor,
accumulation of the aberrant 23S species, and some depletion of the 20S
pre-rRNA and the 18S rRNA have been reported for different mutants
affecting 60S-ribosomal-subunit biogenesis (5, 12, 24, 72,
75). Thus, delayed processing at sites A0,
A1, and A2 may be a general feature of
mutations that interfere with the synthesis of mature 25S and 5.8S
rRNAs. The mechanism is unclear; however, it is likely that all of the processing machinery interacts to some extent or that there is some
form of feedback inhibition due to defective 25S and 5.8S rRNA
synthesis. Indeed, the biogenesis of mature 40S ribosomal units and the
biogenesis of mature 60S ribosomal subunits are not independent events.
Instead, processing of the 35S pre-rRNA requires the assembly of this
primary transcript into a ribonucleoprotein particle, 90S RNP, which
contains many r-proteins of the mature 40S and 60S ribosomal subunits
as well as nonribosomal proteins that are most likely
trans-acting factors involved in pre-rRNA processing or
ribosome assembly reactions (63). Furthermore, functional
interactions between the processing machinery responsible for cleavages
at sites A0, A1, and A2 (small
nucleolar RNP complex) and that responsible for cleavage at site
A3 (RNase MRP complex) have been reported, and they
probably occur via the bridging factor Rrp5p (2, 68).
In addition to Dbp6p, other proteins have been shown to be required for
60S-ribosomal-subunit biogenesis. All of these proteins can be
arbitrarily grouped into two classes. The first class consists of
trans-acting factors that are directly involved in pre-rRNA processing reactions and includes the endonucleolytic RNase MRP complex, the exonucleases Xrn1p and Rat1p, the exosome, and the putative ATP-dependent RNA helicases Dbp3p and Dob1p (see Fig. 1B and
its legend for further information and references). In contrast, the
precise functional roles of proteins belonging to the second class are
not clear. This class includes nucleolar and r-proteins that are
required for proper ribosome assembly. Mutations in or in vivo
depletion of Nip7p, Nop2p, Nop3p, and the r-proteins L1 and L32 lead to
an accumulation of one of the 27S precursors (13, 24, 47, 69,
75), while in vivo depletion of Nop4p/Nop77p results in some
depletion of 27SA and, more drastically, of 27SB pre-rRNAs (5,
56). The phenotype observed after the depletion of Dbp6p most
closely resembles that described for Nop4/Nop77p-depleted strains
(5, 56). In both cases, early cleavage at sites
A0 to A2 is kinetically delayed, but the most
striking effect is the large decrease in 27SB pre-rRNA levels. In
contrast, the depletion of Nop4p/Nop77p but not of Dbp6p impairs rRNA
methylation. We conclude that Dbp6p, like Nop4p/Nop77p, plays a primary
role in the early ribosome assembly steps leading to the formation of mature 60S ribosomal subunits. Considering its presumed RNA helicase activity, Dbp6p could function in the unwinding of the pre-rRNA to
promote specific intramolecular rRNA or rRNA-protein interactions. An
abortive assembly of the pre-RNP in the absence of Dbp6p would then
either be the cause or the consequence of the instability and rapid
turnover of the 27S pre-rRNAs. The increased stability of these 27S
precursors observed during the depletion of Nip7p, Nop2p, and Nop3p
strongly suggests that these trans-acting factors are
involved in ribosome assembly steps downstream of the ones assisted by
Nop4p/Nop77p and Dbp6p. This involvement may occur at a point where the
assembly of 60S ribosomal subunits is close to completion and assembly
would more likely be arrested rather than aborted (24).
In agreement with a 60S-ribosomal-subunit assembly function for Dbp6p,
we obtained predominantly cold-sensitive dbp6 mutants (at
18°C) by random PCR mutagenesis. When examined by polysome profile
analysis, all of these mutants displayed a 60S-ribosomal-subunit deficiency phenotype similar to that observed upon Dbp6p depletion (29). It has been argued on the basis of thermodynamic
grounds that mutations affecting assembly reactions may be intensified at low temperatures (7). Indeed, many cold-sensitive alleles blocking ribosome assembly have been found in bacteria (20, 57). Furthermore, cold-sensitive DEAD-box protein mutations that
affect bacterial and yeast ribosome assembly have been identified (40, 44, 49, 62, 72).
The functional analysis of Dbp6p reported here is, to our knowledge,
the first report that clearly implicates a putative ATP-dependent RNA
helicase in the assembly of 60S ribosomal subunits in S. cerevisiae. However, earlier publications suggested, based on
polysome profile analyses and pulse-chase labeling experiments, that
mutations in two other putative ATP-dependent RNA helicases, Drs1p and
Spb4p, also affect 60S-ribosomal-subunit assembly (44, 49).
Unfortunately, the destiny of the 27S pre-rRNAs in drs1 and
spb4 mutants has not been assessed so far. As Dbp6p, Drs1p,
and Spb4p are all essential for cell viability, it is unlikely
that they carry out redundant functions. More recently, it was also
shown that Dbp7p, a nonessential putative ATP-dependent RNA helicase,
may also assist in early 60S-ribosomal-subunit assembly reactions
(10). However, experimental evidence indicates that
Dbp6p and Dbp7p are not genetically redundant (10,
29). We conclude that there are at least four putative ATP-dependent RNA helicases that play nonredundant roles in
the assembly of 60S ribosomal subunits. It will be interesting to determine what their precise functions are and why so many putative RNA
helicases are needed in this process. Thus, it will be crucial to
determine whether these proteins exhibit RNA unwinding or RNA-dependent ATPase activities and what their specific RNA substrates are.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank M. Rekik for technical assistance, E. C. Hurt for
the kind gift of the anti-Nop1p antibodies, and M.-C. Daugeron for
communicating results prior to publication. We are grateful to D. Tollervey, J. Venema, and members of our laboratory for fruitful discussions, and we are grateful to M.-C. Daugeron,
I. Iost, and K. Tanner for critical reading of the manuscript. We are
indebted to M. Collart and U. Oberholzer for providing us with plasmid
pRS416-DBP6. Special thanks are due to B. Emery for his
contribution and enthusiasm during a 2-month practical stay in our
laboratory.
We are grateful to C. Georgopoulos for supporting our work. J.C.
acknowledges a fellowship from the Spanish government (Ministerio de
Educación y Ciencia) and support from Sandoz-Stiftung and Ciba-Geigy Jubiläums-Stiftung. The initial parts of this study also were supported by the Swiss Federal Office for Education and
Science. This work was supported by grant 31-43321.95 from the Swiss
National Science Foundation to P.L.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address:
Département de Biochimie Médicale, Centre Médical
Universitaire, Université de Genève, 1 rue Michel-Servet,
CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland. Phone: 41 22 702 55 08. Fax: 41 22 702 55 02. E-mail: dieter.kressler{at}medecine.unige.ch.
 |
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