Nicholas J. Watkins
Newcastle University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Nicholas J. Watkins.
Nature Genetics | 2008
Sheila Fisher; Mark Tremelling; Carl A. Anderson; Rhian Gwilliam; Suzannah Bumpstead; Natalie J. Prescott; Elaine R. Nimmo; Dunecan Massey; Carlo Berzuini; Christopher M. Johnson; Jeffrey C. Barrett; Fraser Cummings; Hazel E. Drummond; Charlie W. Lees; Clive M. Onnie; Catherine Hanson; Katarzyna Blaszczyk; Michael Inouye; Philip Ewels; Radhi Ravindrarajah; Andrew Keniry; Sarah Hunt; Martyn J. Carter; Nicholas J. Watkins; Willem H. Ouwehand; Cathryn M. Lewis; L R Cardon; Alan J. Lobo; Alastair Forbes; Jeremy Sanderson
We report results of a nonsynonymous SNP scan for ulcerative colitis and identify a previously unknown susceptibility locus at ECM1. We also show that several risk loci are common to ulcerative colitis and Crohns disease (IL23R, IL12B, HLA, NKX2-3 and MST1), whereas autophagy genes ATG16L1 and IRGM, along with NOD2 (also known as CARD15), are specific for Crohns disease. These data provide the first detailed illustration of the genetic relationship between these common inflammatory bowel diseases.
Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews - Rna | 2012
Nicholas J. Watkins; Markus T. Bohnsack
Box C/D and H/ACA RNPs are essential ribonucleoprotein particles that are found throughout both eukaryotes [small nucleolar RNPs (snoRNPs)] and archaea [snoRNP‐like complexes (sRNPs)]. These complexes catalyze the site‐specific pseudouridylation and most of the methylation of ribosomal RNA (rRNA). The numerous modifications, which are clustered in functionally important regions of the rRNA, are important for rRNA folding and ribosome function. The RNA component of the complexes [small nucleolar RNA (snoRNA) or small RNA (sRNA)] functions in substrate binding by base pairing with the target site and as a scaffold coordinating the organization of the complex. In eukaryotes, a subset of snoRNPs do not catalyze modification but, through base pairing to the rRNA or flanking precursor sequences, direct pre‐rRNA folding and are essential for rRNA processing. In the last few years there have been significant advances in our understanding of the structure of archaeal sRNPs. High resolution structures of the archaeal C/D and H/ACA sRNPs have not only provided a detailed understanding of the molecular architecture of these complexes but also produced key insights into substrate binding and product release. In both cases, this is mediated by significant movement in the complexes. Advances have also been made in our knowledge of snoRNP recruitment and release from pre‐ribosome complexes in eukaryotes. New snoRNA–rRNA interactions have been documented, and the roles of RNA helicases in releasing snoRNP complexes from the rRNA have been described. WIREs RNA 2012, 3:397–414. doi: 10.1002/wrna.117
RNA | 1998
Nicholas J. Watkins; Alexander Gottschalk; Gitte Neubauer; Berthold Kastner; Patrizia Fabrizio; Matthias Mann; Reinhard Lührmann
The eukaryotic nucleolus contains a large number of small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) that are involved in preribosomal RNA (pre-rRNA) processing. The H box/ACA-motif (H/ACA) class of snoRNAs has recently been demonstrated to function as guide RNAs targeting specific uridines in the pre-rRNA for pseudouridine (psi) synthesis. To characterize the protein components of this class of snoRNPs, we have purified the snR42 and snR30 snoRNP complexes by anti-m3G-immunoaffinity and Mono-Q chromatography of Saccharomyces cerevisiae extracts. Sequence analysis of the individual polypeptides demonstrated that the three proteins Gar1p, Nhp2p, and Cbf5p are common to both the snR30 and snR42 complexes. Nhp2p is a highly basic protein that belongs to a family of putative RNA-binding proteins. Cbf5p has recently been demonstrated to be involved in ribosome biogenesis and also shows striking homology with known prokaryotic psi synthases. The presence of Cbf5p, a putative psi synthase in each H/ACA snoRNP suggests that this class of RNPs functions as individual modification enzymes. Immunoprecipitation studies using either anti-Cbf5p antibodies or a hemagglutinin-tagged Nhp2p demonstrated that both proteins are associated with all H/ACA-motif snoRNPs. In vivo depletion of Nhp2p results in a reduction in the steady-state levels of all H/ACA snoRNAs. Electron microscopy of purified snR42 and snR30 particles revealed that these two snoRNPs possess a similar bipartite structure that we propose to be a major structural determining principle for all H/ACA snoRNPs.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002
Nicholas J. Watkins; Achim Dickmanns; Reinhard Lührmann
ABSTRACT The 5′ stem-loop of the U4 snRNA and the box C/D motif of the box C/D snoRNAs can both be folded into a similar stem-internal loop-stem structure that binds the 15.5K protein. The homologous proteins NOP56 and NOP58 and 61K (hPrp31) associate with the box C/D snoRNPs and the U4/U6 snRNP, respectively. This raises the intriguing question of how the two homologous RNP complexes specifically assemble onto similar RNAs. Here we investigate the requirements for the specific binding of the individual snoRNP proteins to the U14 box C/D snoRNPs in vitro. This revealed that the binding of 15.5K to the box C/D motif is essential for the association of the remaining snoRNP-associated proteins, namely, NOP56, NOP58, fibrillarin, and the nucleoplasmic proteins TIP48 and TIP49. Stem II of the box C/D motif, in contrast to the U4 5′ stem-loop, is highly conserved, and we show that this sequence is responsible for the binding of NOP56, NOP58, fibrillarin, TIP48, and TIP49, but not of 15.5K, to the snoRNA. Indeed, the sequence of stem II was essential for nucleolar localization of U14 snoRNA microinjected into HeLa cells. Thus, the conserved sequence of stem II determines the specific assembly of the box C/D snoRNP.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2012
Simon Lebaron; Claudia Schneider; Rob W. van Nues; Agata Swiatkowska; Dietrich Walsh; Bettina Böttcher; Sander Granneman; Nicholas J. Watkins; David Tollervey
In the final steps of yeast ribosome synthesis, immature translation-incompetent pre-40S particles that contain 20S pre-rRNA are converted to the mature translation-competent subunits containing the 18S rRNA. An assay for 20S pre-rRNA cleavage in purified pre-40S particles showed that cleavage by the PIN domain endonuclease Nob1 was strongly stimulated by the GTPase activity of Fun12, the yeast homolog of cytoplasmic translation initiation factor eIF5b. Cleavage of the 20S pre-rRNA was also inhibited in vivo and in vitro by blocking binding of Fun12 to the 25S rRNA through specific methylation of its binding site. Cleavage competent pre-40S particles stably associated with Fun12 and formed 80S complexes with 60S ribosomal subunits. We propose that recruitment of 60S subunits promotes GTP hydrolysis by Fun12, leading to structural rearrangements within the pre-40S particle that bring Nob1 and the pre-rRNA cleavage site together.
Cell Reports | 2013
Katherine E. Sloan; Markus T. Bohnsack; Nicholas J. Watkins
Summary Several proto-oncogenes and tumor suppressors regulate the production of ribosomes. Ribosome biogenesis is a major consumer of cellular energy, and defects result in p53 activation via repression of mouse double minute 2 (MDM2) homolog by the ribosomal proteins RPL5 and RPL11. Here, we report that RPL5 and RPL11 regulate p53 from the context of a ribosomal subcomplex, the 5S ribonucleoprotein particle (RNP). We provide evidence that the third component of this complex, the 5S rRNA, is critical for p53 regulation. In addition, we show that the 5S RNP is essential for the activation of p53 by p14ARF, a protein that is activated by oncogene overexpression. Our data show that the abundance of the 5S RNP, and therefore p53 levels, is determined by factors regulating 5S complex formation and ribosome integration, including the tumor suppressor PICT1. The 5S RNP therefore emerges as the critical coordinator of signaling pathways that couple cell proliferation with ribosome production.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2013
Katherine E. Sloan; Sandy Mattijssen; Simon Lebaron; David Tollervey; Ger J. M. Pruijn; Nicholas J. Watkins
Human ribosomal RNA processing is initiated by endonuclease cleavage and followed by 3′ to 5′ exonucleolytic processing by RRP6 and the exosome.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007
Kenneth Scott McKeegan; Charles Maurice Debieux; Séverine Boulon; Edouard Bertrand; Nicholas J. Watkins
ABSTRACT The box C/D small nucleolar RNPs (snoRNPs) are essential for the processing and modification of rRNA. The core box C/D proteins are restructured during human U3 box C/D snoRNP biogenesis; however, the molecular basis of this is unclear. Here we show that the U8 snoRNP is also restructured, suggesting that this may occur with all box C/D snoRNPs. We have characterized four novel human biogenesis factors (BCD1, NOP17, NUFIP, and TAF9) which, along with the ATPases TIP48 and TIP49, are likely to be involved in the formation of the pre-snoRNP. We have analyzed the in vitro protein-protein interactions between the assembly factors and core box C/D proteins. Surprisingly, this revealed few interactions between the individual core box C/D proteins. However, the novel biogenesis factors and TIP48 and TIP49 interacted with one or more of the core box C/D proteins, implying that they mediate the assembly of the pre-snoRNP. Consistent with this, we show that NUFIP bridges interactions between the core box C/D proteins in a partially reconstituted pre-snoRNP. Restructuring of the core complex probably reflects the conversion of the pre-snoRNP, where core protein-protein interactions are maintained by the bridging biogenesis factors, to the mature snoRNP.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2009
Amy Jane Turner; Andrew Alexander Knox; José-Luis Prieto; Brian McStay; Nicholas J. Watkins
ABSTRACT Eukaryotic 18S rRNA processing is mediated by the small subunit (SSU) processome, a machine comprised of the U3 small nucleolar RNP (U3 snoRNP), tUTP, bUTP, MPP10, and BMS1/RCL1 subcomplexes. We report that the human SSU processome is a dynamic structure with the recruitment and release of subcomplexes occurring during the early stages of ribosome biogenesis. A novel 50S U3 snoRNP accumulated when either pre-rRNA transcription was blocked or the tUTP proteins were depleted. This complex did not contain the tUTP, bUTP, MPP10, and BMS1/RCL1 subcomplexes but was associated with the RNA-binding proteins nucleolin and RRP5 and the RNA helicase DBP4. Our data suggest that the 50S U3 snoRNP is an SSU assembly intermediate that is likely recruited to the pre-rRNA through the RNA-binding proteins nucleolin and RRP5. We predict that nucleolin is only transiently associated with the SSU processome and likely leaves the complex not long after 50S U3 snoRNP recruitment. The nucleolin-binding site potentially overlaps that of several other key factors, and we propose that this protein must leave the SSU processome for pre-rRNA processing to occur.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2009
Kenneth Scott McKeegan; Charles Maurice Debieux; Nicholas J. Watkins
ABSTRACT The box C/D small nucleolar RNPs (snoRNPs) are essential for the processing and modification of rRNA. TIP48 and TIP49 are two related AAA+ proteins that are essential for the formation of box C/D snoRNPs. These proteins are key components of the pre-snoRNP complexes, but their exact role in box C/D snoRNP biogenesis is largely uncharacterized. Here we report that TIP48 and TIP49 interact with one another in vitro, and only the TIP48/TIP49 complex, but not the individual proteins, possesses significant ATPase activity. Loss of TIP48 and TIP49 results in a change in pre-snoRNA levels and a loss of U3 snoRNA signal in the Cajal body. We show that TIP48 and TIP49 make multiple interactions with core snoRNP proteins and biogenesis factors and that these interactions are often regulated by the presence of ATP. Furthermore, we demonstrate that TIP48 and TIP49 efficiently bridge interactions between the core box C/D proteins NOP56 or NOP58 and 15.5K. Our data imply that the snoRNP assembly factor NUFIP can regulate the interactions between TIP48 and TIP49 and the core box C/D proteins. We suggest that snoRNP assembly involves an intricate series of interactions that are mediated/regulated by bridging factors and chaperones.