Abstract

The survival of motor neurons (SMN) complex mediates the assembly of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) involved in splicing and histone RNA processing. A crucial step in this process is the binding of Sm proteins onto the SMN protein. For Sm B/B', D1, and D3, efficient binding to SMN depends on symmetrical dimethyl arginine (sDMA) modifications of their RG-rich tails. This methylation is achieved by another entity, the PRMT5 complex. Its pICln subunit binds Sm proteins whereas the PRMT5 subunit catalyzes the methylation reaction. Here, we provide evidence that Lsm10 and Lsm11, which replace the Sm proteins D1 and D2 in the histone RNA processing U7 snRNPs, associate with pICln in vitro and in vivo without receiving sDMA modifications. This implies that the PRMT5 complex is involved in an early stage of U7 snRNP assembly and hence may have a second snRNP assembly function unrelated to sDMA modification. We also show that the binding of Lsm10 and Lsm11 to SMN is independent of any methylation activity. Furthermore, we present evidence for two separate binding sites in SMN for Sm/Lsm proteins. One recognizes Sm domains and the second one, the sDMA-modified RG-tails, which are present only in a subset of these proteins.

Highlights

  • The survival of motor neurons (SMN) complex mediates the assembly of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins involved in splicing and histone RNA processing

  • We have addressed the question of whether the PRMT5 complex is involved in U7 small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) assembly and how Lsm10/11 are incorporated into the SMN complex prior to U7 snRNP assembly

  • Taken together with the previous results, these findings indicate that pICln does not bind mature assembled snRNPs but only free Sm or Lsm proteins before their assembly into mature snRNPs

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Summary

Introduction

The survival of motor neurons (SMN) complex mediates the assembly of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) involved in splicing and histone RNA processing. Whether proteins are substrates for methylation by coupled transcription/translation in the presence of tritiated S-adenosyl methionine in rabbit reticulocyte lysate which contains the PRMT5 methylation complex

Results
Conclusion

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