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Dive into the research topics where Joseph A. Piccirilli is active.

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Featured researches published by Joseph A. Piccirilli.


Nature | 2013

RNA catalyses nuclear pre-mRNA splicing

Sebastian M. Fica; Nicole Tuttle; Thaddeus Novak; Nan-Sheng Li; Jun Lu; Prakash Koodathingal; Qing Dai; Jonathan P. Staley; Joseph A. Piccirilli

In nuclear pre-messenger RNA splicing, introns are excised by the spliceosome, a dynamic machine composed of both proteins and small nuclear RNAs (snRNAs). Over thirty years ago, after the discovery of self-splicing group II intron RNAs, the snRNAs were proposed to catalyse splicing. However, no definitive evidence for a role of either RNA or protein in catalysis by the spliceosome has been reported so far. By using metal rescue strategies in spliceosomes from budding yeast, here we show that the U6 snRNA catalyses both of the two splicing reactions by positioning divalent metals that stabilize the leaving groups during each reaction. Notably, all of the U6 catalytic metal ligands we identified correspond to the ligands observed to position catalytic, divalent metals in crystal structures of a group II intron RNA. These findings indicate that group II introns and the spliceosome share common catalytic mechanisms and probably common evolutionary origins. Our results demonstrate that RNA mediates catalysis within the spliceosome.


Nature | 1997

Metal ion catalysis during splicing of premessenger RNA

Erik J. Sontheimer; Sengen Sun; Joseph A. Piccirilli

The removal of intervening sequences from premessenger RNA is essential for the expression of most eukaryotic genes. The spliceosome ribonucleoprotein complex catalyses intron removal by two sequential phosphotransesterification reactions, but the catalytic mechanisms are unknown. It has been proposed that two divalent metal ions may mediate catalysis of both reaction steps, activating the 2′- or 3′-hydroxyl groups for nucleophilic attack and stabilizing the 3′-oxyanion leaving groups by direct coordination. Here we show that in splicing reactions with a precursor RNA containing a 3′-sulphur substitution at the 5′ splice site, interaction between metal ion and leaving group is essential for catalysis of the first reaction step. This establishes that the spliceosome is a metalloenzyme and demonstrates a direct parallel with the catalytic strategy used by the self-splicing group I intron from Tetrahymena. In contrast, 3′-sulphur substitution at the 3′ splice site provides no evidence for a metal ion–leaving group interaction in the second reaction step, suggesting that the two steps of splicing proceed by different catalytic mechanisms and therefore in distinct active sites.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2014

A G-quadruplex–containing RNA activates fluorescence in a GFP-like fluorophore

Hao Huang; Nikolai B. Suslov; Nan-Sheng Li; Sandip A. Shelke; Molly E. Evans; Yelena Koldobskaya; Phoebe A. Rice; Joseph A. Piccirilli

Spinach is an in vitro selected RNA aptamer that binds a GFP-like ligand and activates its green fluorescence.Spinach is thus an RNA analog of GFP, and has potentially widespread applications for in vivo labeling and imaging. We used antibody-assisted crystallography to determine the structures of Spinach both with and without bound fluorophore at 2.2 and 2.4 Å resolution, respectively. Spinach RNA has an elongated structure containing two helical domains separated by an internal bulge that folds into a G-quadruplex motif of unusual topology. The G-quadruplex motif and adjacent nucleotides comprise a partially pre-formed binding site for the fluorophore.The fluorophore binds in a planar conformation and makes extensive aromatic stacking and hydrogen bond interactions with the RNA. Our findings provide a foundation for structure-based engineering of new fluorophore-binding RNA aptamers.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2001

Metal ion coordination by the AGC triad in domain 5 contributes to group II intron catalysis

Peter M. Gordon; Joseph A. Piccirilli

Group II introns require numerous divalent metal ions for folding and catalysis. However, because little information about individual metal ions exists, elucidating their ligands, functional roles and relationships to each other remains challenging. Here we provide evidence that an essential motif at the catalytic center of the group II intron, the AGC triad within domain 5 (D5), provides a ligand for a crucial metal ion. Sulfur substitution of the pro-Sp oxygen of the adenosine strongly disrupts D5 binding to a substrate consisting of an exon and domains 1–3 of the intron (exD123). Cd2+ rescues this effect by enabling the sulfur-modified D5 to bind to exD123 with wild type affinity and catalyze 5′-splice site cleavage. This switch in metal specificity implies that a metal ion interacts with D5 to mediate packing interactions with D123. This new D5 metal ion rescues the disruption of D5 binding and catalysis with a thermodynamic signature different from that of the metal ion that stabilizes the leaving group during the first step of splicing, suggesting the existence of two distinct metal ions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Synthetic antibodies for specific recognition and crystallization of structured RNA

Jing-Dong Ye; Valentina Tereshko; John K. Frederiksen; Akiko Koide; Frederic A. Fellouse; Sachdev S. Sidhu; Shohei Koide; Anthony A. Kossiakoff; Joseph A. Piccirilli

Antibodies that bind protein antigens are indispensable in biochemical research and modern medicine. However, knowledge of RNA-binding antibodies and their application in the ever-growing RNA field is lacking. Here we have developed a robust approach using a synthetic phage-display library to select specific antigen-binding fragments (Fabs) targeting a large functional RNA. We have solved the crystal structure of the first Fab–RNA complex at 1.95 Å. Capability in phasing and crystal contact formation suggests that the Fab provides a potentially valuable crystal chaperone for RNA. The crystal structure reveals that the Fab achieves specific RNA binding on a shallow surface with complementarity-determining region (CDR) sequence diversity, length variability, and main-chain conformational plasticity. The Fab–RNA interface also differs significantly from Fab–protein interfaces in amino acid composition and light-chain participation. These findings yield valuable insights for engineering of Fabs as RNA-binding modules and facilitate further development of Fabs as possible therapeutic drugs and biochemical tools to explore RNA biology.


Molecular Cell | 2011

Nascent Peptide in the Ribosome Exit Tunnel Affects Functional Properties of the A-Site of the Peptidyl Transferase Center

Haripriya Ramu; Nora Vázquez-Laslop; Dorota Klepacki; Qing Dai; Joseph A. Piccirilli; Ronald Micura; Alexander S. Mankin

The ability to monitor the nascent peptide structure and to respond functionally to specific nascent peptide sequences is a fundamental property of the ribosome. An extreme manifestation of such response is nascent peptide-dependent ribosome stalling, involved in the regulation of gene expression. The molecular mechanisms of programmed translation arrest are unclear. By analyzing ribosome stalling at the regulatory cistron of the antibiotic resistance gene ermA, we uncovered a carefully orchestrated cooperation between the ribosomal exit tunnel and the A-site of the peptidyl transferase center (PTC) in halting translation. The presence of an inducing antibiotic and a specific nascent peptide in the exit tunnel abrogate the ability of the PTC to catalyze peptide bond formation with a particular subset of amino acids. The extent of the conferred A-site selectivity is modulated by the C-terminal segment of the nascent peptide, where the third-from-last residue plays a critical role.


Science | 2009

Crystal structure of the catalytic core of an RNA-polymerase ribozyme.

David M. Shechner; Robert A. Grant; Sarah C. Bagby; Yelena Koldobskaya; Joseph A. Piccirilli; David P. Bartel

Revealing the RNA World? The RNA World hypothesis posits that at an early step in the appearance of life, RNA acted both as an information storage molecule and as an enzyme—or ribozyme. Such dual functionality would allow for an RNA species that could replicate itself and thus seed the beginning of molecular evolution. The involvement of RNA in a number of fundamental cell biological processes, together with its ability, either naturally or through in vitro evolution, to catalyze a range of chemical reactions, provides some indirect support for this view. Shechner et al. (p. 1271) have now determined the structure of an in vitro–evolved RNA ligase ribozyme that catalyses a chemical reaction essentially identical to that of proteins that replicate RNA. The active site of the RNA ligase could be superimposed upon that of the protein enzyme to reveal analogous residues important for the catalytic joining of RNA moieties. These findings will help in the engineering of more effective ribozyme polymerases. The structure of a ligase ribozyme suggests how RNA might be able to replicate itself. Primordial organisms of the putative RNA world would have required polymerase ribozymes able to replicate RNA. Known ribozymes with polymerase activity best approximating that needed for RNA replication contain at their catalytic core the class I RNA ligase, an artificial ribozyme with a catalytic rate among the fastest of known ribozymes. Here we present the 3.0 angstrom crystal structure of this ligase. The architecture resembles a tripod, its three legs converging near the ligation junction. Interacting with this tripod scaffold through a series of 10 minor-groove interactions (including two A-minor triads) is the unpaired segment that contributes to and organizes the active site. A cytosine nucleobase and two backbone phosphates abut the ligation junction; their location suggests a model for catalysis resembling that of proteinaceous polymerases.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Structural inference of native and partially folded RNA by high-throughput contact mapping

Rhiju Das; Madhuri Kudaravalli; Magdalena Jonikas; Alain Laederach; Robert Fong; Jason P. Schwans; David Baker; Joseph A. Piccirilli; Russ B. Altman; Daniel Herschlag

The biological behaviors of ribozymes, riboswitches, and numerous other functional RNA molecules are critically dependent on their tertiary folding and their ability to sample multiple functional states. The conformational heterogeneity and partially folded nature of most of these states has rendered their characterization by high-resolution structural approaches difficult or even intractable. Here we introduce a method to rapidly infer the tertiary helical arrangements of large RNA molecules in their native and non-native solution states. Multiplexed hydroxyl radical (·OH) cleavage analysis (MOHCA) enables the high-throughput detection of numerous pairs of contacting residues via random incorporation of radical cleavage agents followed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. We validated this technology by recapitulating the unfolded and native states of a well studied model RNA, the P4–P6 domain of the Tetrahymena ribozyme, at subhelical resolution. We then applied MOHCA to a recently discovered third state of the P4–P6 RNA that is stabilized by high concentrations of monovalent salt and whose partial order precludes conventional techniques for structure determination. The three-dimensional portrait of a compact, non-native RNA state reveals a well ordered subset of native tertiary contacts, in contrast to the dynamic but otherwise similar molten globule states of proteins. With its applicability to nearly any solution state, we expect MOHCA to be a powerful tool for illuminating the many functional structures of large RNA molecules and RNA/protein complexes.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

Identification of recognition residues for ligation-based detection and quantitation of pseudouridine and N6 -methyladenosine

Qing Dai; Robert Fong; Mridusmita Saikia; David Stephenson; Yi-Tao Yu; Tao Pan; Joseph A. Piccirilli

Over 100 chemical types of RNA modifications have been identified in thousands of sites in all three domains of life. Recent data suggest that modifications function synergistically to mediate biological function, and that cells may coordinately modulate modification levels for regulatory purposes. However, this area of RNA biology remains largely unexplored due to the lack of robust, high-throughput methods to quantify the extent of modification at specific sites. Recently, we developed a facile enzymatic ligation-based method for detection and quantitation of methylated 2′-hydroxyl groups within RNA. Here we exploit the principles of molecular recognition and nucleic acid chemistry to establish the experimental parameters for ligation-based detection and quantitation of pseudouridine (Ψ) and N6-methyladenosine (m6A), two abundant modifications in eukaryotic rRNA/tRNA and mRNA, respectively. Detection of pseudouridylation at several sites in the large subunit rRNA derived from yeast demonstrates the feasibility of the approach for analysis of pseudouridylation in biological RNA samples.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2014

Evidence for a group II intron–like catalytic triplex in the spliceosome

Sebastian M. Fica; Melissa Mefford; Joseph A. Piccirilli; Jonathan P. Staley

To catalyze pre-mRNA splicing, U6 small nuclear RNA positions two metals that interact directly with the scissile phosphates. U6 metal ligands correspond stereospecifically to metal ligands within the catalytic domain V of a group II self-splicing intron. Domain V ligands are organized by base-triple interactions, which also juxtapose the 3′ splice site with the catalytic metals. However, in the spliceosome, the mechanism for organizing catalytic metals and recruiting the substrate has remained unclear. Here we show by genetics, cross-linking and biochemistry in yeast that analogous triples form in U6 and promote catalytic-metal binding and both chemical steps of splicing. Because the triples include an element that defines the 5′ splice site, they also provide a mechanism for juxtaposing the pre-mRNA substrate with the catalytic metals. Our data indicate that U6 adopts a group II intron–like tertiary conformation to catalyze splicing.

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Qing Dai

University of Chicago

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Michael E. Harris

Case Western Reserve University

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Jun Lu

University of Chicago

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