Nature Communications (Nov 2023)

RNA recognition by Npl3p reveals U2 snRNA-binding compatible with a chaperone role during splicing

  • Ahmed Moursy,
  • Antoine Cléry,
  • Stefan Gerhardy,
  • Katharina M. Betz,
  • Sanjana Rao,
  • Jarosław Mazur,
  • Sébastien Campagne,
  • Irene Beusch,
  • Malgorzata M. Duszczyk,
  • Mark D. Robinson,
  • Vikram Govind Panse,
  • Frédéric H.-T. Allain

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-42962-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract The conserved SR-like protein Npl3 promotes splicing of diverse pre-mRNAs. However, the RNA sequence(s) recognized by the RNA Recognition Motifs (RRM1 & RRM2) of Npl3 during the splicing reaction remain elusive. Here, we developed a split-iCRAC approach in yeast to uncover the consensus sequence bound to each RRM. High-resolution NMR structures show that RRM2 recognizes a 5´-GNGG-3´ motif leading to an unusual mille-feuille topology. These structures also reveal how RRM1 preferentially interacts with a CC-dinucleotide upstream of this motif, and how the inter-RRM linker and the region C-terminal to RRM2 contribute to cooperative RNA-binding. Structure-guided functional studies show that Npl3 genetically interacts with U2 snRNP specific factors and we provide evidence that Npl3 melts U2 snRNA stem-loop I, a prerequisite for U2/U6 duplex formation within the catalytic center of the Bact spliceosomal complex. Thus, our findings suggest an unanticipated RNA chaperoning role for Npl3 during spliceosome active site formation.