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    Date Issued2012 (1)2011 (1)Author
    Quaresma, Alexandre J.C. (2)
    Benedetti, Celso Eduardo (1)Coltri, Patricia P. (1)de Lira, Nayara Patricia Vieira (1)de Souza, Tiago Anthony (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (1)Department of Cell and Developmental Biology (1)Department of Cell Biology (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordCell Biology (2)Bacterial Proteins (1)Cell and Developmental Biology (1)Nuclear Proteins (1)Poly U (1)View MoreJournalPLoS ONE (1)PloS one (1)

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    The TAL effector PthA4 interacts with nuclear factors involved in RNA-dependent processes including a HMG protein that selectively binds poly(U) RNA

    de Souza, Tiago Anthony; Soprano, Adriana Santos; de Lira, Nayara Patricia Vieira; Quaresma, Alexandre J.C.; Paes Leme, Adriana Franco; Benedetti, Celso Eduardo (Public Library of Science, 2012-02-22)
    Plant pathogenic bacteria utilize an array of effector proteins to cause disease. Among them, transcriptional activator-like (TAL) effectors are unusual in the sense that they modulate transcription in the host. Although target genes and DNA specificity of TAL effectors have been elucidated, how TAL proteins control host transcription is poorly understood. Previously, we showed that the Xanthomonas citri TAL effectors, PthAs 2 and 3, preferentially targeted a citrus protein complex associated with transcription control and DNA repair. To extend our knowledge on the mode of action of PthAs, we have identified new protein targets of the PthA4 variant, required to elicit canker on citrus. Here we show that all the PthA4-interacting proteins are DNA and/or RNA-binding factors implicated in chromatin remodeling and repair, gene regulation and mRNA stabilization/modification. The majority of these proteins, including a structural maintenance of chromosomes protein (CsSMC), a translin-associated factor X (CsTRAX), a VirE2-interacting protein (CsVIP2), a high mobility group (CsHMG) and two poly(A)-binding proteins (CsPABP1 and 2), interacted with each other, suggesting that they assemble into a multiprotein complex. CsHMG was shown to bind DNA and to interact with the invariable leucine-rich repeat region of PthAs. Surprisingly, both CsHMG and PthA4 interacted with PABP1 and 2 and showed selective binding to poly(U) RNA, a property that is novel among HMGs and TAL effectors. Given that homologs of CsHMG, CsPABP1, CsPABP2, CsSMC and CsTRAX in other organisms assemble into protein complexes to regulate mRNA stability and translation, we suggest a novel role of TAL effectors in mRNA processing and translational control.
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    The human nucleolar protein FTSJ3 associates with NIP7 and functions in pre-rRNA processing

    Morello, Luis G.; Coltri, Patricia P.; Quaresma, Alexandre J.C.; Simabuco, Fernando M.; Sila, Tereza C.L.; Singh, Guramrit; Nickerson, Jeffrey A.; Oliveira, Carla C.; Moore, Melissa J.; Zanchin, Nilson I. T. (2011-12-01)
    NIP7 is one of the many trans-acting factors required for eukaryotic ribosome biogenesis, which interacts with nascent pre-ribosomal particles and dissociates as they complete maturation and are exported to the cytoplasm. By using conditional knockdown, we have shown previously that yeast Nip7p is required primarily for 60S subunit synthesis while human NIP7 is involved in the biogenesis of 40S subunit. This raised the possibility that human NIP7 interacts with a different set of proteins as compared to the yeast protein. By using the yeast two-hybrid system we identified FTSJ3, a putative ortholog of yeast Spb1p, as a human NIP7-interacting protein. A functional association between NIP7 and FTSJ3 is further supported by colocalization and coimmunoprecipitation analyses. Conditional knockdown revealed that depletion of FTSJ3 affects cell proliferation and causes pre-rRNA processing defects. The major pre-rRNA processing defect involves accumulation of the 34S pre-rRNA encompassing from site A' to site 2b. Accumulation of this pre-rRNA indicates that processing of sites A0, 1 and 2 are slower in cells depleted of FTSJ3 and implicates FTSJ3 in the pathway leading to 18S rRNA maturation as observed previously for NIP7. The results presented in this work indicate a close functional interaction between NIP7 and FTSJ3 during pre-rRNA processing and show that FTSJ3 participates in ribosome synthesis in human cells.
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