Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Production of ribosomal protein S14 in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
is coordinated with the rate of ribosome assembly by a feedback mechanism that represses expression of
RPS14B
. Three-hybrid assays in vivo and filter binding assays in vitro demonstrate that rpS14 directly binds to an RNA stem-loop structure in
RPS14B
pre-mRNA that is necessary for
RPS14B
regulation. Moreover, rpS14 binds to a conserved helix in 18S rRNA with approximately five- to sixfold-greater affinity. These results support the model that
RPS14B
regulation is mediated by direct binding of rpS14 either to its pre-mRNA or to rRNA. Investigation of these interactions with the three-hybrid system reveals two regions of rpS14 that are involved in RNA recognition. D52G and E55G mutations in rpS14 alter the specificity of rpS14 for RNA, as indicated by increased affinity for
RPS14B
RNA but reduced affinity for the rRNA target. Deletion of the C terminus of rpS14, where multiple antibiotic resistance mutations map, prevents binding of rpS14 to RNA and production of functional 40S subunits. The emetine-resistant protein, rpS14-Em
RR
, which contains two mutations near the C terminus of rpS14, does not bind either RNA target in the three-hybrid or in vitro assays. This is the first direct demonstration that an antibiotic resistance mutation alters binding of an r protein to rRNA and is consistent with the hypothesis that antibiotic resistance mutations can result from local alterations in rRNA structure.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
106 articles.
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