Abstract

In the mitochondria of kinetoplastid protozoa, including Trypanosoma brucei, RNA editing inserts and/or deletes uridines from pre-mRNAs to produce mature, translatable mRNAs. RNA editing is carried out by several related multiprotein complexes known as editosomes, which contain all of the enzymatic components required for catalysis of editing. In addition, noneditosome accessory factors necessary for editing of specific RNAs have also been described. Here, we report the in vitro and in vivo characterization of the mitochondrial TbRGG2 protein (originally termed TbRGGm) and demonstrate that it acts as an editing accessory factor. TbRGG2 is an RNA-binding protein with a preference for poly(U). TbRGG2 protein levels are up-regulated 10-fold in procyclic form T. brucei compared with bloodstream forms. Nevertheless, the protein is essential for growth in both life cycle stages. TbRGG2 associates with RNase-sensitive and RNase-insensitive mitochondrial complexes, and a small fraction of the protein co-immunoprecipitates with editosomes. RNA interference-mediated depletion of TbRGG2 in both procyclic and bloodstream form T. brucei leads to a dramatic decrease in pan-edited RNAs and in some cases a corresponding increase in the pre-edited RNA. TbRGG2 down-regulation also results in moderate stabilization of never-edited and minimally edited RNAs. Thus, our data are consistent with a model in which TbRGG2 is multifunctional, strongly facilitating the editing of pan-edited RNAs and modestly destabilizing minimally edited and never-edited RNAs. This is the first example of an RNA editing accessory factor that functions in the mammalian infective T. brucei life cycle stage.

Highlights

  • 23016 JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY midgut stage (procyclic form (PF)3), energy is generated through cytochrome-mediated oxidative phosphorylation, whereas in the mammalian bloodstream form (BF), energy is generated strictly through glycolysis

  • Editing occurs through the association of the guide RNAs (gRNAs) and pre-mRNA with several related multiprotein complexes known as editosomes, which contain the enzymatic components required for catalysis of RNA editing [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]

  • The TbRGG2 open reading frame predicts a protein with a molecular mass of 33.1 kDa that contains two putative RNA binding domains: an N-terminal glycine-rich domain with eight RG repeats, four of which are in an RGG context (Fig. 1B, boldface type) [25, 26], and a C-terminal domain with a canonical RNA recognition motif (RRM) (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

23016 JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY midgut stage (procyclic form (PF)3), energy is generated through cytochrome-mediated oxidative phosphorylation, whereas in the mammalian bloodstream form (BF), energy is generated strictly through glycolysis. Significant amounts of TbRGG2 remained in macromolecular complexes following RNase treatment, including a substantial portion of the protein co-sedimenting with editosome components KREPA2 and KREL1 in the 20 S region of the gradient (Fig. 4, middle).

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