Erika L. Matunis
University of Pennsylvania
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Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1991
Christopher G. Burd; Erika L. Matunis; Gideon Dreyfuss
The poly(A)-binding protein (PABP) is the major mRNA-binding protein in eukaryotes, and it is essential for viability of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The amino acid sequence of the protein indicates that it consists of four ribonucleoprotein consensus sequence-containing RNA-binding domains (RBDs I, II, III, and IV) and a proline-rich auxiliary domain at the carboxyl terminus. We produced different parts of the S. cerevisiae PABP and studied their binding to poly(A) and other ribohomopolymers in vitro. We found that none of the individual RBDs of the protein bind poly(A) specifically or efficiently. Contiguous two-domain combinations were required for efficient RNA binding, and each pairwise combination (I/II, II/III, and III/IV) had a distinct RNA-binding activity. Specific poly(A)-binding activity was found only in the two amino-terminal RBDs (I/II) which, interestingly, are dispensable for viability of yeast cells, whereas the activity that is sufficient to rescue lethality of a PABP-deleted strain is in the carboxyl-terminal RBDs (III/IV). We conclude that the PABP is a multifunctional RNA-binding protein that has at least two distinct and separable activities: RBDs I/II, which most likely function in binding the PABP to mRNA through the poly(A) tail, and RBDs III/IV, which may function through binding either to a different part of the same mRNA molecule or to other RNA(s).
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993
Michael J. Matunis; Erika L. Matunis; Gideon Dreyfuss
The expression of RNA polymerase II transcripts can be regulated at the posttranscriptional level by RNA-binding proteins. Although extensively characterized in metazoans, relatively few RNA-binding proteins have been characterized in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Three major proteins are cross-linked by UV light to poly(A)+ RNA in living S. cerevisiae cells. These are the 72-kDa poly(A)-binding protein and proteins of 60 and 50 kDa (S.A. Adam, T.Y. Nakagawa, M.S. Swanson, T. Woodruff, and G. Dreyfuss, Mol. Cell. Biol. 6:2932-2943, 1986). Here, we describe the 60-kDa protein, one of the major poly(A)+ RNA-binding proteins in S. cerevisiae. This protein, PUB1 [for poly(U)-binding protein 1], was purified by affinity chromatography on immobilized poly(rU), and specific monoclonal antibodies to it were produced. UV cross-linking demonstrated that PUB1 is bound to poly(A)+ RNA (mRNA or pre-mRNA) in living cells, and it was detected primarily in the cytoplasm by indirect immunofluorescence. The gene for PUB1 was cloned and sequenced, and the sequence was found to predict a 51-kDa protein with three ribonucleoprotein consensus RNA-binding domains and three glutamine- and asparagine-rich auxiliary domains. This overall structure is remarkably similar to the structures of the Drosophila melanogaster elav gene product, the human neuronal antigen HuD, and the cytolytic lymphocyte protein TIA-1. Each of these proteins has an important role in development and differentiation, potentially by affecting RNA processing. PUB1 was found to be nonessential in S. cerevisiae by gene replacement; however, further genetic analysis should reveal important features of this class of RNA-binding proteins.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993
Sally A. Amero; Michael J. Matunis; Erika L. Matunis; Joel W. Hockensmith; Gopa Raychaudhuri; Ann L. Beyer
The protein on ecdysone puffs (PEP) is associated preferentially with active ecdysone-inducible puffs on Drosophila polytene chromosomes and contains sequence motifs characteristic of transcription factors and RNA-binding proteins (S. A. Amero, S. C. R. Elgin, and A. L. Beyer, Genes Dev. 5:188-200, 1991). PEP is associated with RNA in vivo, as demonstrated here by the sensitivity of PEP-specific chromosomal immunostaining in situ to RNase digestion and by the immunopurification of PEP in Drosophila cell extract with heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) complexes. As revealed by sequential immunostaining, PEP is found on a subset of chromosomal sites bound by the HRB (heterogeneous nuclear RNA-binding) proteins, which are basic Drosophila hnRNPs. These observations lead us to suggest that a unique, PEP-containing hnRNP complex assembles preferentially on the transcripts of ecdysone-regulated genes in Drosophila melanogaster presumably to expedite the transcription and/or processing of these transcripts.
Methods in Cell Biology | 1994
Michael J. Matunis; Erika L. Matunis; Gideon Dreyfuss
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses biochemical approaches that can be used to isolate, purify, and characterize RNA-binding proteins in Drosophila melanogaster . The same procedures are also applicable to the isolation of proteins from other tissues, other organisms, and from cultured cells. The most common affinity chromatography procedure used for the isolation of RNA-binding proteins from D. melanogaster is single stranded (ssDNA)-cellulose chromatography. Overall, purification can be accomplished rapidly and on a large scale. It does not depend on the integrity of RNA and does not require protein denaturing conditions. Individual RNA-binding proteins can be separated from one another on the same column, owing to their different affinities for ssDNA. This procedure is used to isolate and characterize heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) proteins from human HeLa cells. Proteins not related to RNA metabolism may also bind to ssDNA-cellulose and conversely, not all RNAbinding proteins will necessarily bind to ssDNA. Therefore, binding to ssDNA is not by itself an absolute diagnostic criterion for RNA-binding proteins, and the identification of genuine RNA-binding proteins must be supported by complimentary data.
Development | 1997
Pierre Gönczy; Erika L. Matunis; Stephen DiNardo
Development | 1997
Erika L. Matunis; John Tran; Pierre Gönczy; Kim Caldwell; Stephen DiNardo
Journal of Cell Biology | 1993
Erika L. Matunis; Michael J. Matunis; Gideon Dreyfuss
Journal of Cell Biology | 1992
Erika L. Matunis; Michael J. Matunis; Gideon Dreyfuss
Journal of Cell Biology | 1992
Michael J. Matunis; Erika L. Matunis; Gideon Dreyfuss
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1994
Erika L. Matunis; Richard L. Kelley; Gideon Dreyfuss