4.4 Article

Conservation of an intricate circuit for crucial modifications of the tRNAPhe anticodon loop in eukaryotes

Journal

RNA
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages 61-74

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1261/rna.047639.114

Keywords

FTSJ1; TRM7; TRM732; TRM734; THADA; tRNA(Phe)

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [GM052347]
  2. NIH postdoctoral training grant [NCI T32 CA09363]

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Post-transcriptional tRNA modifications are critical for efficient and accurate translation, and have multiple different roles. Lack of modifications often leads to different biological consequences in different organisms, and in humans is frequently associated with neurological disorders. We investigate here the conservation of a unique circuitry for anticodon loop modification required for healthy growth in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. S. cerevisiae Trm7 interacts separately with Trm732 and Trm734 to 2'-O-methylate three substrate tRNAs at anticodon loop residues C-32 and N-34, and these modifications are required for efficient wybutosine formation at nil G(37) of tRNA(Phe). Moreover, trm7 Delta and trm732 Delta trm734 Delta mutants grow poorly due to lack of functional tRNA(Phe). It is unknown if this circuitry is conserved and important for tRNA(Phe) modification in other eukaryotes, but a likely human TRM7 ortholog is implicated in nonsyndromic X-linked intellectual disability. We find that the distantly related yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe has retained this circuitry for anticodon loop modification, that S. pombe trm7 Delta and trm734 Delta mutants have more severe phenotypes than the S. cerevisiae mutants, and that tRNA(Phe) is the major biological target. Furthermore, we provide evidence that Trm7 and Trm732 function is widely conserved throughout eukaryotes, since human FTSJ1 and THADA, respectively, complement growth defects of S. cerevisiae trm7 Delta and trm732 Delta trm734 Delta mutants by modifying C32 of tRNA(Phe), each working with the corresponding S. cerevisiae partner protein. These results suggest widespread importance of 2'-O-methylation of the tRNA anticodon loop, implicate tRNA(Phe) as the crucial substrate, and suggest that this modification circuitry is important for human neuronal development.

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