Jaanus Remme
University of Tartu
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Featured researches published by Jaanus Remme.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Lauri Peil; Agata L. Starosta; Jürgen Lassak; Gemma C. Atkinson; Kai Virumäe; Michaela Spitzer; Tanel Tenson; Kirsten Jung; Jaanus Remme; Daniel N. Wilson
Significance During protein synthesis, ribosomes catalyze peptide-bond formation between amino acids with differing efficiency. We show that two or more consecutive prolines induce ribosome stalling, and that stalling strength is influenced by the amino acid preceding and following the prolines. In bacteria, the elongation factor EF-P efficiently rescues the ribosome stalling irrespective of the XPP or PPX motif. Ribosomes are the protein synthesizing factories of the cell, polymerizing polypeptide chains from their constituent amino acids. However, distinct combinations of amino acids, such as polyproline stretches, cannot be efficiently polymerized by ribosomes, leading to translational stalling. The stalled ribosomes are rescued by the translational elongation factor P (EF-P), which by stimulating peptide-bond formation allows translation to resume. Using metabolic stable isotope labeling and mass spectrometry, we demonstrate in vivo that EF-P is important for expression of not only polyproline-containing proteins, but also for specific subsets of proteins containing diprolyl motifs (XPP/PPX). Together with a systematic in vitro and in vivo analysis, we provide a distinct hierarchy of stalling triplets, ranging from strong stallers, such as PPP, DPP, and PPN to weak stallers, such as CPP, PPR, and PPH, all of which are substrates for EF-P. These findings provide mechanistic insight into how the characteristics of the specific amino acid substrates influence the fundamentals of peptide bond formation.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2012
Lauri Peil; Agata L. Starosta; Kai Virumäe; Gemma C. Atkinson; Tanel Tenson; Jaanus Remme; Daniel N. Wilson
Lys34 of the conserved translation elongation factor P (EF-P) is post-translationally lysinylated by YjeK and YjeA--a modification that is critical for bacterial virulence. Here we show that the currently accepted Escherichia coli EF-P modification pathway is incomplete and lacks a final hydroxylation step mediated by YfcM, an enzyme distinct from deoxyhypusine hydroxylase that catalyzes the final maturation step of eukaryotic initiation factor 5A, the eukaryotic EF-P homolog.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009
Triinu Siibak; Lauri Peil; Liqun Xiong; Alexander S. Mankin; Jaanus Remme; Tanel Tenson
ABSTRACT Several protein synthesis inhibitors are known to inhibit ribosome assembly. This may be a consequence of direct binding of the antibiotic to ribosome precursor particles, or it could result indirectly from loss of coordination in the production of ribosomal components due to the inhibition of protein synthesis. Here we demonstrate that erythromycin and chloramphenicol, inhibitors of the large ribosomal subunit, affect the assembly of both the large and small subunits. Expression of a small erythromycin resistance peptide acting in cis on mature ribosomes relieves the erythromycin-mediated assembly defect for both subunits. Erythromycin treatment of bacteria expressing a mixture of erythromycin-sensitive and -resistant ribosomes produced comparable effects on subunit assembly. These results argue in favor of the view that erythromycin and chloramphenicol affect the assembly of the large ribosomal subunit indirectly.
FEBS Journal | 2008
Lauri Peil; Kai Virumäe; Jaanus Remme
Ribosome subunit assembly in bacteria is a fast and efficient process. Among the nonribosomal proteins involved in ribosome biogenesis are RNA helicases. We describe ribosome biogenesis in Escherichia coli strains lacking RNA helicase DeaD (CsdA) or DbpA. Ribosome large subunit assembly intermediate particles (40S) accumulate at 25 °C and at 37 °C in the absence of DeaD but not without DbpA. 23S rRNA is incompletely processed in the 40S and 50S particles of the DeaD− strain. Pulse labeling showed that the 40S particles are converted nearly completely into functional ribosomes. The rate of large ribosomal subunit assembly was reduced about four times in DeaD‐deficient cells. Functional activity tests of the ribosomal particles demonstrated that the final step of 50S assembly, the activation step, was affected when DeaD was not present. The results are compatible with the model that predicts multiple DeaD‐catalyzed structural transitions of the ribosome large subunit assembly.
BMC Molecular Biology | 2005
Aivar Liiv; Diana Karitkina; Ülo Maiväli; Jaanus Remme
BackgroundThe ribosome is a two-subunit enzyme known to exhibit structural dynamism during protein synthesis. The intersubunit bridges have been proposed to play important roles in decoding, translocation, and the peptidyl transferase reaction; yet the physical nature of their contributions is ill understood. An intriguing intersubunit bridge, B2a, which contains 23S rRNA helix 69 as a major component, has been implicated by proximity in a number of catalytically important regions. In addition to contacting the small ribosomal subunit, helix 69 contacts both the A and P site tRNAs and several translation factors.ResultsWe scanned the loop of helix 69 by mutagenesis and analyzed the mutant ribosomes using a plasmid-borne IPTG-inducible expression system. We assayed the effects of 23S rRNA mutations on cell growth, contribution of mutant ribosomes to cellular polysome pools and the ability of mutant ribosomes to function in cell-free translation. Mutations A1912G, and A1919G have very strong growth phenotypes, are inactive during in vitro protein synthesis, and under-represented in the polysomes. Mutation Ψ1917C has a very strong growth phenotype and leads to a general depletion of the cellular polysome pool. Mutation A1916G, having a modest growth phenotype, is apparently defective in the assembly of the 70S ribosome.ConclusionMutations A1912G, A1919G, and Ψ1917C of 23S rRNA strongly inhibit translation. Mutation A1916G causes a defect in the 50S subunit or 70S formation. Mutations Ψ1911C, A1913G, C1914A, Ψ1915C, and A1918G lack clear phenotypes.
RNA | 2008
Rya Ero; Lauri Peil; Aivar Liiv; Jaanus Remme
In ribosomal RNA, modified nucleosides are found in functionally important regions, but their function is obscure. Stem-loop 69 of Escherichia coli 23S rRNA contains three modified nucleosides: pseudouridines at positions 1911 and 1917, and N3 methyl-pseudouridine (m(3)Psi) at position 1915. The gene for pseudouridine methyltransferase was previously not known. We identified E. coli protein YbeA as the methyltransferase methylating Psi1915 in 23S rRNA. The E. coli ybeA gene deletion strain lacks the N3 methylation at position 1915 of 23S rRNA as revealed by primer extension and nucleoside analysis by HPLC. Methylation at position 1915 is restored in the ybeA deletion strain when recombinant YbeA protein is expressed from a plasmid. In addition, we show that purified YbeA protein is able to methylate pseudouridine in vitro using 70S ribosomes but not 50S subunits from the ybeA deletion strain as substrate. Pseudouridine is the preferred substrate as revealed by the inability of YbeA to methylate uridine at position 1915. This shows that YbeA is acting at the final stage during ribosome assembly, probably during translation initiation. Hereby, we propose to rename the YbeA protein to RlmH according to uniform nomenclature of RNA methyltransferases. RlmH belongs to the SPOUT superfamily of methyltransferases. RlmH was found to be well conserved in bacteria, and the gene is present in plant and in several archaeal genomes. RlmH is the first pseudouridine specific methyltransferase identified so far and is likely to be the only one existing in bacteria, as m(3)Psi1915 is the only methylated pseudouridine in bacteria described to date.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2014
Agata L. Starosta; Jürgen Lassak; Lauri Peil; Gemma C. Atkinson; Kai Virumäe; Tanel Tenson; Jaanus Remme; Kirsten Jung; Daniel N. Wilson
The polymerization of amino acids into proteins occurs on ribosomes, with the rate influenced by the amino acids being polymerized. The imino acid proline is a poor donor and acceptor for peptide-bond formation, such that translational stalling occurs when three or more consecutive prolines (PPP) are encountered by the ribosome. In bacteria, stalling at PPP motifs is rescued by the elongation factor P (EF-P). Using SILAC mass spectrometry of Escherichia coli strains, we identified a subset of PPP-containing proteins for which the expression patterns remained unchanged or even appeared up-regulated in the absence of EF-P. Subsequent analysis using in vitro and in vivo reporter assays revealed that stalling at PPP motifs is influenced by the sequence context upstream of the stall site. Specifically, the presence of amino acids such as Cys and Thr preceding the stall site suppressed stalling at PPP motifs, whereas amino acids like Arg and His promoted stalling. In addition to providing fundamental insight into the mechanism of peptide-bond formation, our findings suggest how the sequence context of polyproline-containing proteins can be modulated to maximize the efficiency and yield of protein production.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2006
Madina Iskakova; Witold Szaflarski; Marc Dreyfus; Jaanus Remme; Knud H. Nierhaus
Cell-free coupled transcription–translation systems with bacterial lysates are widely used to synthesize recombinant proteins in amounts of several mg per ml. By using reporter green fluorescence protein (GFP) we demonstrate that proteins are synthesized with an unsatisfyingly low-active fraction of (50 ± 20)%. One reason is probably the T7 polymerase used, being up to eight times faster than the intrinsic transcriptase and thus breaking the coupling between transcription and translation in bacterial systems. The active fraction of the synthesized protein was improved by using either a slower T7 transcriptase mutant or lowering the incubation temperature to 20°C. A drop of protein synthesis observed after 7 h incubation time was not due to a shortage of nucleotide triphosphates, but rather to a shortage of amino acids. Accordingly, a second addition of amino acids after 10 h during an incubation at 20°C led to synthesis of up to 4 mg/ml of GFP with virtually 100% activity.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009
Kalle Kipper; Csaba Hetényi; Sulev Sild; Jaanus Remme; Aivar Liiv
Intersubunit bridges are important for holding together subunits in the 70S ribosome. Moreover, a number of intersubunit bridges have a role in modulating the activity of the ribosome during translation. Ribosomal intersubunit bridge B2a is formed by the interaction between the conserved 23S rRNA helix-loop 69 (H69) and the top of the 16S rRNA helix 44. Within the 70S ribosome, bridge B2a contacts translation factors and the A-site tRNA. In addition to bridging the subunits, bridge B2a has been invoked in a number of other ribosomal functions from initiation to termination. In the present work, single-nucleotide substitutions were inserted at positions 1912 and 1919 of Escherichia coli 23S rRNA (helix 69), which are involved in important intrahelical and intersubunit tertiary interactions in bridge B2a. The resulting ribosomes had a severely reduced activity in a cell-free translation elongation assay, but displayed a nearly wild-type-level peptidyl transferase activity. In vitro reassociation efficiency decreased with all of the H69 variant 50S subunits, but was severest with the A1919C and DeltaH69 variants. The mutations strongly affected initiation-factor-dependent 70S initiation complex formation, but exhibited a minor effect on the nonenzymatic initiation process. The mutations decreased ribosomal processivity in vitro and caused a progressive depletion of 50S subunits in polysomal fractions in vivo. Mutations at position 1919 decreased the stability of a dipeptidyl-tRNA in the A-site, whereas the binding of the dipeptidyl-tRNA was rendered more stable with 1912 and DeltaH69 mutations. Our results suggest that the H69 of 23S rRNA functions as a control element during enzymatic steps of translation.
Molecular Microbiology | 2010
Arto Pulk; Aivar Liiv; Lauri Peil; Ülo Maiväli; Knud H. Nierhaus; Jaanus Remme
Ribosomal functions are vital for all organisms. Bacterial ribosomes are stable 2.4 MDa particles composed of three RNAs and over 50 different proteins. Accumulating damage to ribosomal RNA or proteins can disturb ribosome functioning. Organisms could benefit from degrading or possibly repairing inactive or partially active ribosomes. Reactivation of chemically damaged ribosomes by a process of protein replacement was studied in vitro. Ribosomes were inactivated by chemical modification of Cys residues. Incubation of modified ribosomes with total ribosomal proteins led to reactivation of translational activity. Intriguingly, ribosomal proteins extracted by LiCl are equally active in the restoration of ribosome function. Incubation of 70S ribosomes with isotopically labelled r‐proteins followed by separation of ribosomes was used to identify exchangeable proteins. A similar set of proteins was found to be exchanged in vivo under stress conditions in the stationary phase. We propose that repair of damaged ribosomes might be an important mechanism for maintaining protein synthesis activity following chemical damage.