Abstract

SummaryBackgroundThe nucleolus is a subnuclear organelle in which rRNAs are transcribed, processed, and assembled with ribosomal proteins into ribosome subunits. Mass spectrometry combined with pulsed incorporation of stable isotopes of arginine and lysine was used to perform a quantitative and unbiased global analysis of the rates at which newly synthesized, endogenous proteins appear within mammalian nucleoli.ResultsNewly synthesized ribosomal proteins accumulated in nucleoli more quickly than other nucleolar components. Studies involving time-lapse fluorescence microscopy of stable HeLa cell lines expressing fluorescent-protein-tagged nucleolar factors also showed that ribosomal proteins accumulate more quickly than other components. Photobleaching and mass-spectrometry experiments suggest that only a subset of newly synthesized ribosomal proteins are assembled into ribosomes and exported to the cytoplasm. Inhibition of the proteasome caused an accumulation of ribosomal proteins in the nucleus but not in the cytoplasm. Inhibition of rRNA transcription prior to proteasomal inhibition further increased the accumulation of ribosomal proteins in the nucleoplasm.ConclusionsRibosomal proteins are expressed at high levels beyond that required for the typical rate of ribosome-subunit production and accumulate in the nucleolus more quickly than all other nucleolar components. This is balanced by continual degradation of unassembled ribosomal proteins in the nucleoplasm, thereby providing a mechanism for mammalian cells to ensure that ribosomal protein levels are never rate limiting for the efficient assembly of ribosome subunits. The dual time-lapse strategy used in this study, combining proteomics and imaging, provides a powerful approach for the quantitative analysis of the flux of newly synthesized proteins through a cell organelle.

Highlights

  • Ribosomes play a key role in gene expression, and their production is tightly linked with mechanisms for cellulargrowth control

  • That ribosomal protein levels are never rate limiting for the efficient assembly of ribosome subunits

  • The HeLaRPL27-GFP Stable Cell Line Provides a Tool for Studying Ribosomal Biogenesis To study the flux of mammalian rproteins, we established a HeLa cell line stably expressing ribosomal large-subunit protein L27 fused with green fluorescent protein (GFP) at its carboxy terminus (RPL27-GFP)

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Summary

Introduction

Ribosomes play a key role in gene expression, and their production is tightly linked with mechanisms for cellulargrowth control (reviewed by [1]). RRNA genes are transcribed by RNA polymerase I, and the pre-rRNA transcripts are cleaved, modified, and assembled with rproteins to form the respective 40S and 60S ribosomal subunits. In budding yeast, both genetic and biochemical analyses have identified many of the ribosome cleavage and maturation factors (reviewed by [4]). Both genetic and biochemical analyses have identified many of the ribosome cleavage and maturation factors (reviewed by [4]) This showed that assembly and export of the respective small (40S) and large (60S) subunits occurs predominantly via independent nucleolar maturation pathways

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