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Molecular and Cellular Biology, May 2008, p. 3038-3044, Vol. 28, No. 9
0270-7306/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/MCB.02064-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Institut de Biologie Moléculaire des Plantes, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unité Propre de Recherche 2357, Conventionné avec l'Université Louis Pasteur, 67000 Strasbourg, France
Received 16 November 2007/ Returned for modification 20 December 2007/ Accepted 11 February 2008
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strain and mutation of AtRRP6L2 leads to accumulation of an rRNA maturation by-product. This by-product corresponds to the excised 5' part of the 18S-5.8S-25S rRNA precursor and accumulates as a polyadenylated transcript, suggesting that RRP6L2 is involved in poly(A)-mediated RNA degradation in plant nuclei. Interestingly, the rRNA maturation by-product is a substrate of AtRRP6L2 but not of AtRRP6L1. This result and the distinctive subcellular distribution of AtRRP6L1 to -3 indicate a specialization of RRP6-like proteins in Arabidopsis. |
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Eukaryotic exosomes are composed of a core complex with which cytoplasm- and nucleus-specific subunits associate (reviewed in reference 38). One of these subunits, Rrp6p, a member of the RNase D family, associates with the nuclear exosome in yeast (2). Its human counterpart, PM/Scl-100, is predominantly nuclear but is also detected in the cytoplasm (7). Rrp6p plays a role in nuclear mRNA surveillance and in the degradation of rRNA maturation by-products or intergenic transcripts (30, 33, 47, 51). In addition, Rrp6p is involved in the final steps in processing several noncoding RNAs (1, 6).
In yeast, the TRAMP complex polyadenylates RNA substrates, which triggers their degradation by the nuclear exosome (30, 47, 51). In higher eukaryotes, evidence for polyadenylation of nuclear transcripts destined for degradation is emerging. Short poly(A) tails were detected upon cotranscriptional cleavage of human β-globin and murine serum albumin pre-mRNA (50). Human rRNA can also be polyadenylated at putative sites of endonucleolytic cleavage (44). In plants, polyadenylation of nuclear noncoding RNA also occurs, as polyadenylated transcripts of the low-abundance 5S rRNA spacer were reported in Nicotiana (20). During revision of our manuscript, a genome-wide search for exosome substrates revealed that a wide range of nuclear noncoding transcripts are polyadenylated in Arabidopsis thaliana (10).
We show here that three RRP6-like proteins (RRP6L1 to -3) are encoded by the A. thaliana genome and form two distinct subfamilies, one of which is specific to plants. Furthermore, each AtRRP6L protein has a specific subcellular distribution. RRP6L3 is cytoplasmic, whereas RRP6L1 and RRP6L2 have different intranuclear locations. RRP6L1 and RRP6L2 can be further distinguished based on yeast complementation assays and analysis of mutant plants. This analysis has revealed a specialization of the RRP6L1 and RRP6L2 proteins for two RNA substrates tested. Interestingly, we also observed polyadenylation of the excised 5' external transcribed sequence (ETS), an rRNA maturation by-product that accumulates upon knockdown of RRP6L2, indicating that polyadenylation can mark a transcript destined for degradation by an RRP6-like protein in plant nuclei.
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Sequence analysis. Rice (Oryza sativa) and poplar (Populus trichocarpa) sequences were identified by BlastP and retrieved from the TIGR Rice Genome (http://www.tigr.org/tdb/e2k1/osa1) and the DOE Joint Genome Institute (http://genome.jgi-psf.org/Poptr1_1/Poptr1_1.home.html), respectively. To obtain full-length sequences for poplar proteins, predictions were improved using FGENESH+ software (data available upon request). Arabidopsis sequences initially identified in The Arabidopsis Information Resource (http://www.arabidopsis.org) were determined by translation of cloned cDNA sequences (GenBank accession numbers EU240662 to -4). PFAM (18) was used to determine protein domains. Sequence alignment was done with Muscle v3.52 (16). Phylogenetic analysis was performed using Phyml (23), following removal of poorly aligned and overly divergent positions using the Gblocks program (8). The unrooted tree was drawn with Treedyn (12).
Yeast complementation.
cDNAs for AtRRP6L1, -2, and -3 and yeast RRP6 were cloned into pRS 426-TDH (43) and transformed into wild-type (WT) (BY4742) and rrp6
(Euroscarf Y11777) yeast strains using the lithium acetate method. Following selection at 24°C, the cells were tested for growth at 24°C and 37°C.
Expression of GFP fusion proteins. Full-length cDNAs of AtRRP6L1, -2, and -3 were obtained by reverse transcriptase (RT) PCR and fused to enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) in N- and C-terminal orientations in pBinH, a pBinPLUS derivative (48) containing the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter and terminator sequences and a hygromycin resistance cassette. Biolistic transformation of tobacco BY2 cells and analysis by confocal microscopy were as described previously (49). For stable transformants, Arabidopsis plants were transformed by the floral-dip method (13). Transformed plants were selected on agar plates containing Murashige and Skoog (MS) salts, 0.5% sucrose, and 50 µg/ml hygromycin. Stable transformants expressing GFP fusion proteins were sown on coverslips coated with MS salts, 0.5% sucrose, and 50 µg/ml hygromycin agar, and the root tips were examined 8 days after germination by confocal microscopy.
RNA extraction and analysis. RNA was extracted using the Tri-reagent (Molecular Research Center) according to the manufacturer's manual. Polyadenylation sites were mapped by amplification of 3' ends as described previously (37). The 5' and 3' ends of the ETS were determined by circular RT-PCR (cRT-PCR) as described previously (37). A complete list of primers used in this study is available upon request.
Smart cDNA and virtual Northern blots.
Full-length cDNAs were synthesized using the cDNA Smart synthesis kit (Clontech) following the manufacturer's protocol, except that different sequence tags at both the 3' and 5' ends of polyadenylated RNA were introduced during cDNA synthesis. Total cDNAs were amplified by PCR using the PCR Advantage II kit (Clontech) for 16 cycles (30 s at 94°C, 30 s at 60°C, and 6 min at 68°C). The resulting Smart PCR products (representing total full-length polyadenylated RNA) were separated on a 1.2% agarose gel-0.5x Tris-acetate-EDTA, blotted on a Hybond N+ membrane, and hybridized to [
-32P]dCTP-labeled DNA probes. This procedure is referred to as "virtual Northern" according to Franz et al. (19). Diluted Smart PCR products were used as a template for 3' and 5' rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) PCR.
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FIG. 1. Analysis of RRP6-like proteins. (A) Conservation of functional domains in RRP6 and RRP6-like proteins. Comparison of S. cerevisiae ScRrp6p and Homo sapiens HsPM/Scl-100 and the three A. thaliana RRP6-like proteins (AtRRP6L1, AtRRP6L2, and AtRRP6L3). Percent identity and, in parentheses, similarity with ScRrp6p are given below each domain, drawn as boxes. (B) Phylogenetic analysis of RRP6-like proteins presented as an unrooted maximum-likelihood tree. Bootstrap values above 70 (using 100 replications) are indicated along the branches. The scale bar indicates the evolutionary distance (amino acid substitutions per site). Pt, P. trichocarpa; At, A. thaliana; Os, O. sativa; Sc, S. cerevisiae; Ce, Caenorhabditis elegans; Hs H. sapiens; Dm, Drosophila melanogaster.
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It is interesting to note that both the rice and Arabidopsis genomes encode RRP6-like proteins containing or lacking the N-terminal PMC2NT domain.
In conclusion, three RRP6-like proteins are encoded in the genomes of rice, poplar, and Arabidopsis. Two of these genes, represented by AtRRP6L1 and -2, are the closest homologues to yeast and human RRP6, whereas the AtRRP6L3 type appears to be specific to plants.
Subcellular distribution of RRP6-like proteins in plants. Both AtRRP6L1 and AtRRP6L2 are predicted to be nuclear by the PSORT program (http://psort.ims.u-tokyo.ac.jp), while no specific localization is predicted for AtRRP6L3. To address this issue experimentally, we expressed N- and C-terminal GFP fusion proteins of AtRRP6L1, -2, and -3 in tobacco BY2 cells. The results were identical for the two orientations of the fusion proteins. AtRRP6L3 fusion proteins were excluded from the nucleus and located exclusively in the cytosol (Fig. 2A). In contrast, both AtRRP6L1 and -2 fused to GFP accumulated predominantly in the nucleus, although a faint cytoplasmic signal was observed for AtRRP6L2 (Fig. 2A). These results indicate that, in contrast to AtRRP6L3, both AtRRP6L1 and -2 can be targeted to the nucleus. To further study the distribution of AtRRP6-like proteins, we produced stably transformed Arabidopsis plants. The results obtained confirmed the cytoplasmic localization of AtRRP6L3 and the nuclear localization of both AtRRP6L1 and -2 (Fig. 2B). In root tip cells, where nucleoli are particularly large, the intranuclear distributions of RRP6L1 and RRP6L2 could be distinguished. The AtRRP6L1 fusion protein accumulated in both the nucleoplasm and the nucleolar vacuole (Fig. 2C, top). In contrast, AtRRP6L2 accumulated predominantly in nucleoli, and the signal was weaker in the nucleoplasm (Fig. 2C, bottom).
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FIG. 2. Subcellular distribution of RRP6-like proteins. (A) GFP fluorescence (left) and Nomarski (right) images of tobacco BY2 cells transiently expressing EGFP and EGFP fusion proteins. β-Glucuronidase-GFP (GUS-GFP) is a large protein that cannot enter the nuclear compartment by passive diffusion. (B) Root tips of stably transformed Arabidopsis plants expressing RRP6L-EGFP fusion proteins. (C) Enlarged view of root tips of transformed Arabidopsis plants showing the intranuclear distribution of fusion proteins. Comparison of fluorescence and Nomarski panels shows that RRP6L1-EGFP (top) is mainly in the nucleoplasm and in the nucleolar vacuole. RRP6L2-EGFP is detected mainly inside the nucleolus (bottom). Cy, cytoplasm; Np, nucleoplasm; Nu, nucleolus. Size bar = 10 µm.
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AtRRP6L1 complements the growth defect of a yeast rrp6
strain.
To determine whether Arabidopsis RRP6-like proteins can functionally replace S. cerevisiae Rrp6p, we expressed AtRRP6L1, -2, and -3 in the temperature-sensitive rrp6
yeast strain (2). Expression of transgenes was confirmed by RT-PCR (not shown). AtRRP6L3, cytoplasmic in plants, did not support the growth of the rrp6
strain at the nonpermissive temperature (Fig. 3). In contrast, AtRRP6L1 was able to complement the thermosensitive growth phenotype of rrp6
yeast (Fig. 3). This demonstrates that AtRRP6L1 is a functional protein that can perform at least one of the biological roles of Rrp6p in yeast. AtRRP6L1 lacks the N-terminal PMC2NT domain. In yeast Rrp6p, this domain is not required to complement the growth phenotype of the rrp6
strain (45). Surprisingly, RRP6L2, which is the closest homologue of yeast Rrp6p, did not restore the growth phenotype of the rrp6
strain, although the expression and stability of the protein were sufficient, as determined by Western analysis (not shown). Even though RRP6L2 does not complement the growth phenotype of the rrp6
strain, we show below that RRPL2 and yeast Rrp6p perform similar functions in rRNA metabolism.
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FIG. 3. AtRRP6L1 complements yeast rrp6 . Growth at the nonpermissive temperature (37°C) of WT and rrp6 yeast strains harboring empty vector (vec.) or vectors encoding either S. cerevisiae Rrp6p (ScRRP6) or the indicated Arabidopsis RRP6-like proteins.
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FIG. 4. Characterization of rrpl1 and -2 TDNA insertion mutants. (A) Diagram of the intron-exon structure of RRP6L1. Exons are in black, introns in white. The 5' and 3' untranslated regions are drawn as gray blocks. T-DNA insertion sites for rrp6l1-1 and -2 are shown. In rrp6l1-1, the T-DNA insertion removed 29 nt from the genomic sequence. (B) Detection of RRP6L1 mRNA in WT and mutant plants by virtual Northern analysis, as described in Materials and Methods. A probe for RBP1A mRNA was used as a loading control. (C) Organi-zation and T-DNA insertion sites in RRP6L2. (D) Virtual Northern blot analysis of RRP6L2 mRNA in WT and mutant plants showed a size difference between transcripts in WT and rrp6b-2 mutants. (E) Western blots of proteins extracted from WT, rrp6l21-1, or rrp6l2-2 seedlings were probed with antibodies against AtRRP6L2 (left). The truncated protein encoded by the mutant rrp6b-2 allele is indicated by an arrow. As a loading control, the membrane was stained with Coomassie blue (right).
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All four single mutants were indistinguishable from WT plants in terms of growth and development under standard growth conditions. Similarly, both homozygous double mutants, rrp6l1-2 rrp6l2-1 and rrp6l1-2 rrp6l2-2, did not show any obvious growth or developmental phenotype.
An rRNA maturation by-product accumulates in rrp6l2, but not in rrp6l1, mutants. We tested these insertion mutants for the accumulation of an rRNA maturation by-product, which is a typical molecular phenotype of yeast rrp6 mutant strains (2). One of the earliest processing events of rRNA maturation is an endonucleolytic cleavage in the 5' ETS. In S. cerevisiae, this cleavage takes place at site A0, located about 90 nt upstream of the 18S rRNA. The excised ETS accumulates in the absence of functional Rrp6p. In Arabidopsis, the complete 5' ETS is relatively large (about 1.8 kb). The primary processing site (P site) is located 1,275 nt downstream of the transcription initiation site and about 560 nt upstream of the 5' extremity of the 18S rRNA (40). To our knowledge, a second processing site, equivalent to the A0 site in yeast, has not been characterized in Arabidopsis. Cleavage at such a site will release a plant rRNA maturation by-product akin to the yeast 5' ETS. We will refer to this product as the 5' pETS (5'-proximal ETS) to distinguish it from the distal 5' ETS corresponding to the sequence between the transcription initiation site and the P site (Fig. 5A).
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FIG. 5. A polyadenylated rRNA maturation by-product accumulates in rrp6l2 mutants. (A) Diagram showing the 5' region of the polycistronic rRNA transcript of A. thaliana. Distal (5' dETS) and proximal (5' pETS) RNA segments and processing sites P and P', respectively, are indicated. The promoter is shown by a bent arrow. (B) Mapping of 5' and 3' ends of the 5' pETS by cRT-PCR. Total RNA from rrp6l2-1 plants was self-ligated by T4 RNA ligase, and cDNA was synthesized using a gene-specific reverse primer. The same primer was combined with a gene-specific forward primer to amplify joined 5' and 3' ends by PCR. Primers are indicated on the diagram. 5' ends are shown above the diagram, 3' ends are shown below, and nonencoded nucleotides at the 3' ends of 5' pETS transcripts are indicated. (C) Characterization of the 5' pETS by 3' RACE. Oligo(dT)12-primed cDNA was synthesized from total RNA from WT or mutant plants. 3' ends were then amplified by PCR using a gene-specific forward primer (arrow above the diagram) and a reverse primer specific for the oligo(dT) primer adapter sequence. The PCR products were analyzed by electrophoresis (top). The PCR products obtained from rrp6l2 samples were cloned and sequenced to map polyadenylation sites (bottom). The locations and frequencies of polyadenylation sites are indicated on the sequence, and the sizes and nucleotide compositions of poly(A) tails are given below. Clones obtained in an A-rich region may correspond to artifacts and are indicated by a question mark. (D) Accumulation of the 5' pETS in WT and rrp6l2 (left) or WT and rrp6l1 (right) plants as determined by virtual Northern blotting. Full-length oligo(dT)-primed cDNA was amplified by 16 PCR cycles, separated on an agarose gel, blotted, and hybridized to a DNA probe corresponding to the 5' pETS.
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We further analyzed the polyadenylation status of the 5' pETS by 3' RACE. Oligo(dT)-primed cDNA was produced from WT and rrp6l RNA, followed by 3' RACE with a sense primer located 210 nt upstream of the 18S rRNA. We clearly detected polyadenylated 5' pETS in rrp6l2-1 and to a lesser extent in rrp6l2-2, while only a faint smear was observed for WT and rrp6l1 samples (Fig. 5C). Sequence analysis of the cloned PCR products from the WT sample revealed that most were PCR artifacts; only 1 in 50 clones actually corresponded to the polyadenylated 5' pETS. This suggests that the 5' pETS can be polyadenylated in WT plants, but the level is extremely low. In contrast, all sequences from rrp6l2 mutants corresponded to polyadenylated 5' pETS. The positions and frequencies of polyadenylation sites are presented for rrp6l2-1 (Fig. 5C). Some clones mapped to regions devoid of A's and had poly(A) tails longer than the oligo(dT)12 used for cDNA synthesis. These clones represent unambiguous polyadenylation sites. For six clones (Fig. 5C), we cannot exclude artificial priming by a stretch of four A's. However, nine clones mapped precisely to the 3' site previously determined by cRT-PCR, immediately downstream of this A-rich region (AAAAG). The fact that all of these clones contained the G nucleotide indicates that cDNA synthesis was not primed by the genomically encoded A stretch. Remarkably, the poly(A) tails were slightly heteropolymeric, i.e., they contained several non-A nucleotides. These data confirm that the 5' pETS is polyadenylated in rrp6l2 mutants.
The 5' pETS was detected as a weak signal in rrp6l2 mutants, but not in WT or rrp6l1 plants, by using Northern hybridization of total RNA. To enhance the sensitivity and confirm the polyadenylation of the 5' pETS, we performed virtual Northern blotting, a PCR-based method designed for quantitative comparison of polyadenylated RNA samples. Briefly, full-length oligo(dT)-primed cDNAs were amplified by a limited number of PCR cycles, separated on agarose gels, blotted, and hybridized to radiolabeled probes (19). Several RNA species were detected using a 5' pETS DNA probe (Fig. 5D). The larger transcripts were rRNA precursor transcripts that were present in all samples. The smaller RNA, which was the size of the 5' pETS (450 nt), accumulated in both rrp6l2 mutants (Fig. 5D), indicating that AtRRP6L2 is involved in the degradation of the 5' pETS. Accumulation of this RNA was not observed in either of the rrp6l1 mutants or in the WT. Similarly, a 5.8S rRNA precursor transcript accumulated only upon downregulation of RRP6L2, and not RRP6L1, as determined by Northern blot analysis (data not shown). No increase in accumulation of the 5' pETS and the 5.8S rRNA precursor was observed in rrp6l1-2 rrp6l2-1 and rrp6l1-2 rrp6l2-2 double mutants (data not shown). These results strongly suggest that both the 5' pETS and the 5.8S rRNA precursor are substrates for AtRRP6L2, but not for AtRRP6L1.
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Phylogenetic analysis clearly distinguished AtRRP6L1 and -2, which group with human and yeast proteins, from AtRRP6L3, which seems to be a plant-specific gene. Interestingly, AtRRP6L3-GFP fusion proteins were found exclusively in the cytoplasm in both tobacco BY2 cells and A. thaliana. While yeast Rrp6p is restricted to the nucleus (2), the protein was found in both the cytoplasm and nucleus of trypanosomes (24). Interestingly, in human and Drosophila, a small fraction of PM/Scl-100 and dRRP6, respectively, was also detected in the cytoplasm (7, 22). Taken together, these results suggest that RRP6-related proteins could have a function in the cytoplasm in higher eukaryotes, including plants. It remains to be determined whether the biological role of RRP6L3 is similar to that of cytoplasmic RRP6 proteins in animals and humans or whether it has a plant-specific function that could also be independent of the exosome.
Only plant mutants downregulated for AtRRP6L2 accumulated the 5' pETS, a maturation by-product of rRNA synthesis and a classical substrate for yeast Rrp6p. A role of AtRRP6L2 in the degradation of plant ETS is supported by its domain architecture and its subcellular distribution. AtRRP6L2 is the only RRP6-like protein in Arabidopsis, which contains the N-terminal PMC2NT domain. This domain mediates the interaction of yeast Rrp6p with the RNA binding protein Rrp47 (45). The absence of Rrp47p impairs both 3' processing of stable RNA and degradation of the 5' ETS (34). Thus, the N-terminal region of RRP6L2 could be necessary for degradation of the ETS in plants by interaction with a cofactor analogous to Rrp47. In fact, a protein with significant homology to Rrp47p is encoded by At5g25080. In addition, the intranuclear distribution of the AtRRP6L2 fusion proteins coincides with the localization of the 5' ETS in nucleoli (42).
The ancient role of polyadenylation in marking transcripts destined for degradation is conserved from bacteria to higher eukaryotes, including humans, Drosophila, and plants, as well as in some organelles (5, 10, 14, 21, 28, 30, 36, 44, 47, 50, 51). Our results suggest that RRP6L2 participates in this process in Arabidopsis nuclei. The fact that the 5' pETS that accumulates upon knockdown of AtRRP6L2 is polyadenylated is consistent with recent results in yeast, which show that several nuclear transcripts can be polyadenylated by the TRAMP complex and are subsequently degraded by Rrp6p (30, 47, 51). The fact that only RRP6L2 is able to degrade the 5' pETS, combined with the distinct subcellular distribution of RRP6L proteins, suggests that RRP6-like proteins are specialized, or at least not fully redundant, in plants. These results reveal an intriguing complexity compared to other organisms studied to date.
We thank Uli Mühlenhoff (Marburg) and Jean-Luc Evrard (Strasbourg) for kindly providing the yeast and GFP cloning vectors, respectively.
Published ahead of print on 19 February 2008. ![]()
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