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Featured researches published by Rodger Voelker.


The EMBO Journal | 1995

Two nuclear mutations disrupt distinct pathways for targeting proteins to the chloroplast thylakoid.

Rodger Voelker; Alice Barkan

Results of in vitro experiments have suggested the existence of at least three pathways by which nuclear‐encoded proteins are targeted to the chloroplast thylakoid membrane. However, few components of the targeting machinery have been identified and the relationship between the three pathways is not clear. To investigate mechanisms underlying thylakoid protein targeting, we identified nuclear mutations in maize that cause targeting defects. We found two mutations, tha1 and hcf106, that disrupt the localization of different sets of proteins to the thylakoid lumen. The tha1 mutation interferes with the targeting of one chloroplast‐encoded protein, cytochrome f, and three nuclear‐encoded proteins, plastocyanin, the psaF gene product and the 33 kDa subunit of the oxygen‐evolving complex. The hcf106 mutation interferes with the targeting of the 16 and 23 kDa subunits of the oxygen‐evolving complex. The tha1 and hcf106 phenotypes provide the first in vivo evidence supporting the existence of two distinct thylakoid‐targeting pathways. Their phenotypes also provide evidence that one chloroplast‐encoded protein, cytochrome f, engages the ‘tha1’ pathway, indicating that nuclear‐ and chloroplast‐encoded proteins can be targeted via common machinery.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Protein-mediated protection as the predominant mechanism for defining processed mRNA termini in land plant chloroplasts

Petya Zhelyazkova; Kamel Hammani; Margarita Rojas; Rodger Voelker; Martín Vargas-Suárez; Thomas Börner; Alice Barkan

Most chloroplast mRNAs are processed from larger precursors. Several mechanisms have been proposed to mediate these processing events, including site-specific cleavage and the stalling of exonucleases by RNA structures. A protein barrier mechanism was proposed based on analysis of the pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) protein PPR10: PPR10 binds two intercistronic regions and impedes 5′- and 3′-exonucleases, resulting in processed RNAs with PPR10 bound at the 5′- or 3′-end. In this study, we provide evidence that protein barriers are the predominant means for defining processed mRNA termini in chloroplasts. First, we map additional RNA termini whose arrangement suggests biogenesis via a PPR10-like mechanism. Second, we show that the PPR protein HCF152 binds to the immediate 5′- or 3′-termini of transcripts that require HCF152 for their accumulation, providing evidence that HCF152 defines RNA termini by blocking exonucleases. Finally, we build on the observation that the PPR10 and HCF152 binding sites accumulate as small chloroplast RNAs to infer binding sites of other PPR proteins. We show that most processed mRNA termini are represented by small RNAs whose sequences are highly conserved. We suggest that each such small RNA is the footprint of a PPR-like protein that protects the adjacent RNA from degradation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

MBNL1 binds GC motifs embedded in pyrimidines to regulate alternative splicing

Emily S. Goers; Jamie Purcell; Rodger Voelker; Devika P. Gates; J. Andrew Berglund

Muscleblind-like 1 (MBNL1) regulates alternative splicing and is a key player in the disease mechanism of myotonic dystrophy (DM). In DM, MBNL1 becomes sequestered to expanded CUG/CCUG repeat RNAs resulting in splicing defects, which lead to disease symptoms. In order to understand MBNL1’s role in both the disease mechanism of DM and alternative splicing regulation, we sought to identify its RNA-binding motif. A doped SELEX was performed on a known MBNL1-binding site. After five rounds of SELEX, MBNL1 selected pyrimidine-rich RNAs containing YGCY motifs. Insertion of multiple YGCY motifs into a normally MBNL1-independent splicing reporter was sufficient to promote regulation by MBNL1. MBNL1 was also shown to regulate the splicing of exon 22 in the ATP2A1 pre-mRNA, an exon mis-spliced in DM, via YGCY motifs. A search for YGCY motifs in 24 pre-mRNA transcripts that are mis-spliced in DM1 patients revealed an interesting pattern relative to the regulated exon. The intronic regions upstream of exons that are excluded in normal tissues relative to DM1, are enriched in YGCY motifs. Meanwhile, the intronic regions downstream of exons that are included in normal tissues relative to DM1, are enriched in YGCY motifs.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1995

Nuclear genes required for post-translational steps in the biogenesis of the chloroplast cytochrome b 6 f complex in maize

Rodger Voelker; Alice Barkan

Nuclear genes essential for the biogenesis of the chloroplast cytochrome b6f complex were identified by mutations that cause the specific loss of the complex. We describe four transposon-induced maize mutants that lack cytochrome b6f proteins but contain normal levels of other photosynthetic complexes. The four mutations define two nuclear genes. To identify the step at which each mutation blocks protein accumulation, mRNAs encoding each subunit were examined by Northern hybridization analysis and the rates of subunit synthesis were examined in pulse-labeling experiments. In each mutant the mRNAs encoding the known subunits of the complex were normal in size and abundance and the major subunits were synthesized at normal rates. Thus, these mutations block the biogenesis of the cytochrome b6f complex at a post-translational step. The two nuclear genes identified by these mutations may encode previously unknown subunits, be involved in prosthetic group synthesis or attachment, or facilitate assembly of the complex. These mutations were also used to provide evidence for the authenticity of a proposed fifth subunit of the complex and to demonstrate a role for the cytochrome b6f complex in protecting photosystem 11 from light-induced degradation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

An Extended RNA Binding Site for the Yeast Branch Point-binding Protein and the Role of Its Zinc Knuckle Domains in RNA Binding

Stephen M. Garrey; Rodger Voelker; J. Andrew Berglund

The highly conserved branch point sequence (BPS) of UACUAAC in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is initially recognized by the branch point-binding protein (BBP). Using systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment we have determined that yeast BBP binds the branch point sequence UACUAAC with highest affinity and prefers an additional adenosine downstream of the BPS. Furthermore, we also found that a stem-loop upstream of the BPS enhances binding both to an artificially designed RNA (30-fold effect) and to an RNA from a yeast intron (3-fold effect). The zinc knuckles of BBP are partially responsible for the enhanced binding to the stem-loop but do not appear to have a significant role in the binding of BBP to single-strand RNA substrates. C-terminal deletions of BBP reveal that the linker regions between the two zinc knuckles and between the N-terminal RNA binding domains (KH and QUA2 domains) and the first zinc knuckle are important for binding to RNA. The lack of involvement of the second highly conserved zinc knuckle in RNA binding suggests that this zinc knuckle plays a different role in RNA processing than enhancing the binding of BBP to the BPS.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2012

Frequent Gain and Loss of Intronic Splicing Regulatory Elements during the Evolution of Vertebrates

Rodger Voelker; Steffen Erkelenz; Vinicio Reynoso; Heiner Schaal; J. Andrew Berglund

Splicing regulatory elements (SREs) are sequences bound by proteins that influence splicing of nearby splice sites. Constitutively spliced introns have evolved to utilize many different splicing factors. The evolutionary processes that influenced which splicing factors are used for splicing of individual introns are generally unclear. We demonstrate that in the lineage that gave rise to mammals, many introns lost U-rich sequences and gained G-rich sequences, both of which resemble known SREs. The apparent conversion of U-rich to G-rich SREs suggests that the associated splicing factors are functionally equivalent. In support of this we demonstrated that U-rich and G-rich SREs are both capable of promoting splicing of an SRE-dependent splicing reporter. Furthermore, we demonstrate, using the heterologous MS2 tethering system (bacterial MS2 coat fusion-protein and its RNA stem-loop binding site), that both the U-rich SRE-binding protein (TIA1) and the G-rich SRE-binding protein (HNRNPF) can promote splicing of the same intron. We also observed that gain of G-rich SREs is significantly associated with G/C-rich genomic isochores, suggesting that gain or loss of SREs was driven by the same processes that ultimately resulted in the formation of mammalian genomic isochores. We propose the following model for the gain and loss of mammalian SREs. Ancestral U-rich SREs located in genomic regions that were experiencing high rates of A/T to G/C conversion would have suffered frequent deleterious mutations. However, this same process resulted in increased formation of functionally equivalent G-rich SREs, and acquisition of new G-rich SREs decreased purifying selection on the U-rich SREs, which were then free to decay.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010

Two ways to misregulate mRNAs in myotonic dystrophy

Rodger Voelker; J. Andrew Berglund

Myotonic dystrophy is caused by expanded CTG repeats, and the expression of these repeats as RNA leads to the sequestration of the splicing factor muscleblind-like (MBNL1) to the CUG RNA. Two mouse models for myotonic dystrophy—mice expressing expanded CUG repeats and mice lacking functional MBNL1—now reveal ∼100 new mis-splicing events and a new class of aberrantly regulated mRNAs.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014

Computational Approaches to Mine Publicly Available Databases

Rodger Voelker; William A. Cresko; J. Andrew Berglund

Publicly available sequence annotation data is a vital resource for researchers. Many types of information are available, including structural annotations (i.e., the locations and identities of genomic features) and functional annotations (e.g., gene expression and protein interactions). Annotation data is especially useful for interrogating Next-Gen sequencing data (e.g., identifying genomic features that are associated with mapped reads). Additionally, the vast amount of data that is available offers researchers the opportunity to mine existing data sets and make new discoveries. The ability to efficiently obtain, manipulate, and interrogate this data is a valuable and empowering skill. In this chapter, we introduce several primary data repositories and describe the most commonly encountered file formats. In order to highlight some of the key concepts, operations, and utilities that are involved in working with annotation data we provide a fully worked example of using annotations to answer some basic questions about a particular CHIP-seq data set.


Journal of Cell Biology | 1999

The Maize tha4 Gene Functions in Sec-Independent Protein Transport in Chloroplasts and Is Related to hcf106, tatA, and tatB

Macie B. Walker; Laura M. Roy; Eric Coleman; Rodger Voelker; Alice Barkan


Genetics | 1997

Transposon-Disruption of a Maize Nuclear Gene, tha1, Encoding a Chloroplast SecA Homologue: In Vivo Role of cp-SecA in Thylakoid Protein Targeting

Rodger Voelker; Janet Mendel-Hartvig; Alice Barkan

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Vinicio Reynoso

University of Texas at Austin

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Heiner Schaal

University of Düsseldorf

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