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Dive into the research topics where Pilar Tijerina is active.

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Featured researches published by Pilar Tijerina.


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

DEAD-box proteins can completely separate an RNA duplex using a single ATP

Yingfeng Chen; Jeffrey P. Potratz; Pilar Tijerina; Mark Del Campo; Alan M. Lambowitz; Rick Russell

DEAD-box proteins are ubiquitous in RNA metabolism and use ATP to mediate RNA conformational changes. These proteins have been suggested to use a fundamentally different mechanism from the related DNA and RNA helicases, generating local strand separation while remaining tethered through additional interactions with structured RNAs and RNA-protein (RNP) complexes. Here, we provide a critical test of this model by measuring the number of ATP molecules hydrolyzed by DEAD-box proteins as they separate short RNA helices characteristic of structured RNAs (6–11 bp). We show that the DEAD-box protein CYT-19 can achieve complete strand separation using a single ATP, and that 2 related proteins, Mss116p and Ded1p, display similar behavior. Under some conditions, considerably <1 ATP is hydrolyzed per separation event, even though strand separation is strongly dependent on ATP and is not supported by the nucleotide analog AMP-PNP. Thus, ATP strongly enhances strand separation activity even without being hydrolyzed, most likely by eliciting or stabilizing a protein conformation that promotes strand separation, and AMP-PNP does not mimic ATP in this regard. Together, our results show that DEAD-box proteins can disrupt short duplexes by using a single cycle of ATP-dependent conformational changes, strongly supporting and extending models in which DEAD-box proteins perform local rearrangements while remaining tethered to their target RNAs or RNP complexes. This mechanism may underlie the functions of DEAD-box proteins by allowing them to generate local rearrangements without disrupting the global structures of their targets.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Nonspecific binding to structured RNA and preferential unwinding of an exposed helix by the CYT-19 protein, a DEAD-box RNA chaperone

Pilar Tijerina; Hari Bhaskaran; Rick Russell

We explore the interactions of CYT-19, a DExD/H-box protein that functions in folding of group I RNAs, with a well characterized misfolded species of the Tetrahymena ribozyme. Consistent with its function, CYT-19 accelerates refolding of the misfolded RNA to its native state. Unexpectedly, CYT-19 performs another reaction much more efficiently; it unwinds the 6-bp P1 duplex formed between the ribozyme and its oligonucleotide substrate. Furthermore, CYT-19 performs this reaction 50-fold more efficiently than it unwinds the same duplex free in solution, suggesting that it forms additional interactions with the ribozyme, most likely using a distinct RNA binding site from the one responsible for unwinding. This site can apparently bind double-stranded RNA, as attachment of a simple duplex adjacent to P1 recapitulates much of the activation provided by the ribozyme. Unwinding the native P1 duplex does not accelerate refolding of the misfolded ribozyme, implying that CYT-19 can disrupt multiple contacts on the RNA, consistent with its function in folding of multiple RNAs. Further experiments showed that the P1 duplex unwinding activity is virtually the same whether the ribozyme is misfolded or native but is abrogated by formation of tertiary contacts between the P1 duplex and the body of the ribozyme. Together these results suggest a mechanism for CYT-19 and other general DExD/H-box RNA chaperones in which the proteins bind to structured RNAs and efficiently unwind loosely associated duplexes, which biases the proteins to disrupt nonnative base pairs and gives the liberated strands an opportunity to refold.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Solution structures of DEAD-box RNA chaperones reveal conformational changes and nucleic acid tethering by a basic tail

Anna L. Mallam; Inga Jarmoskaite; Pilar Tijerina; Mark Del Campo; Soenke Seifert; Liang Guo; Rick Russell; Alan M. Lambowitz

The mitochondrial DEAD-box proteins Mss116p of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and CYT-19 of Neurospora crassa are ATP-dependent helicases that function as general RNA chaperones. The helicase core of each protein precedes a C-terminal extension and a basic tail, whose structural role is unclear. Here we used small-angle X-ray scattering to obtain solution structures of the full-length proteins and a series of deletion mutants. We find that the two core domains have a preferred relative orientation in the open state without substrates, and we visualize the transition to a compact closed state upon binding RNA and adenosine nucleotide. An analysis of complexes with large chimeric oligonucleotides shows that the basic tails of both proteins are attached flexibly, enabling them to bind rigid duplex DNA segments extending from the core in different directions. Our results indicate that the basic tails of DEAD-box proteins contribute to RNA-chaperone activity by binding nonspecifically to large RNA substrates and flexibly tethering the core for the unwinding of neighboring duplexes.


PLOS Biology | 2014

DEAD-box helicase proteins disrupt RNA tertiary structure through helix capture.

Cynthia Pan; Jeffrey P. Potratz; Brian Cannon; Zachary Booth Simpson; Jessica L. Ziehr; Pilar Tijerina; Rick Russell

Single-molecule fluorescence experiments reveal how DEAD-box proteins unfold structured RNAs to promote conformational transitions and refolding to the native functional state.


Archive | 2010

Chapter 3: Mechanisms of DEAD-box proteins in ATP-dependent processes

Jeffrey P. Potratz; Pilar Tijerina; Rick Russell

DEAD-box proteins play an enormous variety of roles in cellular processes. Some promote conformational transitions of specific RNA–protein complexes (RNPs) in processes such as pre-mRNA splicing and ribosome assembly, and some disassemble or remodel specific RNPs in processes such as nuclear export ...


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2017

Distinct RNA-unwinding mechanisms of DEAD-box and DEAH-box RNA helicase proteins in remodeling structured RNAs and RNPs

Benjamin Gilman; Pilar Tijerina; Rick Russell

Structured RNAs and RNA-protein complexes (RNPs) fold through complex pathways that are replete with misfolded traps, and many RNAs and RNPs undergo extensive conformational changes during their functional cycles. These folding steps and conformational transitions are frequently promoted by RNA chaperone proteins, notably by superfamily 2 (SF2) RNA helicase proteins. The two largest families of SF2 helicases, DEAD-box and DEAH-box proteins, share evolutionarily conserved helicase cores, but unwind RNA helices through distinct mechanisms. Recent studies have advanced our understanding of how their distinct mechanisms enable DEAD-box proteins to disrupt RNA base pairs on the surfaces of structured RNAs and RNPs, while some DEAH-box proteins are adept at disrupting base pairs in the interior of RNPs. Proteins from these families use these mechanisms to chaperone folding and promote rearrangements of structured RNAs and RNPs, including the spliceosome, and may use related mechanisms to maintain cellular messenger RNAs in unfolded or partially unfolded conformations.


Nature Protocols | 2007

DMS footprinting of structured RNAs and RNA–protein complexes

Pilar Tijerina; Sabine Mohr; Rick Russell


Molecular Cell | 2007

Do DEAD-Box Proteins Promote Group II Intron Splicing without Unwinding RNA?

Mark Del Campo; Pilar Tijerina; Hari Bhaskaran; Sabine Mohr; Quansheng Yang; Eckhard Jankowsky; Rick Russell; Alan M. Lambowitz


Biochemistry | 2007

Probing the mechanisms of DEAD-box proteins as general RNA chaperones: the C-terminal domain of CYT-19 mediates general recognition of RNA.

Jacob K. Grohman; Mark Del Campo; Hari Bhaskaran; Pilar Tijerina; and Alan M. Lambowitz; Rick Russell


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

Structural specificity conferred by a group I RNA peripheral element

Travis H. Johnson; Pilar Tijerina; Amanda B. Chadee; Daniel Herschlag; Rick Russell

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Rick Russell

University of Texas at Austin

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Hari Bhaskaran

University of Texas at Austin

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Mark Del Campo

University of Texas at Austin

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Alan M. Lambowitz

University of Texas at Austin

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Jeffrey P. Potratz

University of Texas at Austin

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Amanda B. Chadee

University of Texas at Austin

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Sabine Mohr

University of Texas at Austin

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Benjamin Gilman

University of Texas at Austin

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Brian Cannon

University of Texas at Austin

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Cynthia Pan

University of Texas at Austin

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