Analysis of orthologous groups reveals archease and DDX1 as tRNA splicing factors.

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Citation

Popow J, Jurkin J, Schleiffer A, Martinez J

Analysis of orthologous groups reveals archease and DDX1 as tRNA splicing factors.

Nature. 2014 Jul 3;511(7507):104-7. doi: 10.1038/nature13284. Epub 2014 May 25.

PubMed ID
24870230 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

RNA ligases have essential roles in many cellular processes in eukaryotes, archaea and bacteria, including in RNA repair and stress-induced splicing of messenger RNA. In archaea and eukaryotes, RNA ligases also have a role in transfer RNA splicing to generate functional tRNAs required for protein synthesis. We recently identified the human tRNA splicing ligase, a multimeric protein complex with RTCB (also known as HSPC117, C22orf28, FAAP and D10Wsu52e) as the essential subunit. The functions of the additional complex components ASW (also known as C2orf49), CGI-99 (also known as C14orf166), FAM98B and the DEAD-box helicase DDX1 in the context of RNA ligation have remained unclear. Taking advantage of clusters of eukaryotic orthologous groups, here we find that archease (ARCH; also known as ZBTB8OS), a protein of unknown function, is required for full activity of the human tRNA ligase complex and, in cooperation with DDX1, facilitates the formation of an RTCB-guanylate intermediate central to mammalian RNA ligation. Our findings define a role for DDX1 in the context of the human tRNA ligase complex and suggest that the widespread co-occurrence of archease and RtcB proteins implies evolutionary conservation of their functional interplay.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
tRNA-splicing ligase RtcB homologQ9Y3I0Details