Reference - PMID:21208191 - The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe has two distinct tRNase Z(L)s encoded by two different genes and differentially targeted to the nucleus and mitochondria.
Reference summary
- PubMed ID
- PMID:21208191
- Title
- The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe has two distinct tRNase Z(L)s encoded by two different genes and differentially targeted to the nucleus and mitochondria.
- Authors
- Gan X, Yang J, Li J, Yu H, Dai H, Liu J, Huang Y
- Citation
- Biochem J 2011 Apr 01;435(1):103-11
- Publication year
- 2011
- Abstract
- tRNase Z is the endonuclease that is involved in tRNA 3'-end maturation by removal of the 3'-trailer sequences from tRNA precursors. Most eukaryotes examined to date, including the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and humans, have a single long form of tRNase Z (tRNase ZL). In contrast, the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe contains two candidate tRNase ZLs encoded by the essential genes sptrz1+ and sptrz2+. In the present study, we have expressed recombinant SpTrz1p and SpTrz2p in S. pombe. Both recombinant proteins possess precursor tRNA 3'-endonucleolytic activity in vitro. SpTrz1p localizes to the nucleus and has a simian virus 40 NLS (nuclear localization signal)-like NLS at its N-terminus, which contains four consecutive arginine and lysine residues between residues 208 and 211 that are critical for the NLS function. In contrast, SpTrz2p is a mitochondrial protein with an N-terminal MTS (mitochondrial-targeting signal). High-level overexpression of sptrz1+ has no detectable phenotypes. In contrast, strong overexpression of sptrz2+ is lethal in wild-type cells and results in morphological abnormalities, including swollen and round cells, demonstrating that the correct expression level of sptrz2+ is critical. The present study provides evidence for partitioning of tRNase Z function between two different proteins in S. pombe, although we cannot rule out specialized functions for each protein.