Abstract

Nab3 and Nrd1 are yeast heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP)-like proteins that heterodimerize and bind RNA. Genetic and biochemical evidence reveals that they are integral to the termination of transcription of short non-coding RNAs by RNA polymerase II. Here we define a Nab3 mutation (nab3Δ134) that removes an essential part of the protein's C terminus but nevertheless can rescue, in trans, the phenotype resulting from a mutation in the RNA recognition motif of Nab3. This low complexity region of Nab3 appears intrinsically unstructured and can form a hydrogel in vitro. These data support a model in which multiple Nrd1-Nab3 heterodimers polymerize onto substrate RNA to effect termination, allowing complementation of one mutant Nab3 molecule by another lacking a different function. The self-association property of Nab3 adds to the previously documented interactions between these hnRNP-like proteins, RNA polymerase II, and the nascent transcript, leading to a network of nucleoprotein interactions that define a higher order Nrd1-Nab3 complex. This was underscored from the synthetic phenotypes of yeast strains with pairwise combinations of Nrd1 and Nab3 mutations known to affect their distinct biochemical activities. The mutations included a Nab3 self-association defect, a Nab3-Nrd1 heterodimerization defect, a Nrd1-polymerase II binding defect, and an Nab3-RNA recognition motif mutation. Although no single mutation was lethal, cells with any two mutations were not viable for four such pairings, and a fifth displayed a synthetic growth defect. These data strengthen the idea that a multiplicity of interactions is needed to assemble a higher order Nrd1-Nab3 complex that coats specific nascent RNAs in preparation for termination.

Highlights

  • How the yeast proteins Nrd1 and Nab3 provoke transcription termination is poorly understood

  • Our findings emphasize that there are multiple ways in which the Nrd1-Nab3 dimer can be brought to the elongation complex in preparation for termination

  • These include the independent recognition of RNA by each of the proteins, recognition of polymerase by Nrd1, association of the proteins with each other, and self-association of Nab3 through its C-terminal tail (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

How the yeast proteins Nrd and Nab provoke transcription termination is poorly understood. The self-association property of Nab adds to the previously documented interactions between these hnRNP-like proteins, RNA polymerase II, and the nascent transcript, leading to a network of nucleoprotein interactions that define a higher order Nrd1-Nab complex This was underscored from the synthetic phenotypes of yeast strains with pairwise combinations of Nrd and Nab mutations known to affect their distinct biochemical activities. No single mutation was lethal, cells with any two mutations were not viable for four such pairings, and a fifth displayed a synthetic growth defect These data strengthen the idea that a multiplicity of interactions is needed to assemble a higher order Nrd1-Nab complex that coats specific nascent RNAs in preparation for termination

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