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A group of scientists at The Scripps
Research Institute has solved the structure of a protein that regulates
the expression of genes by controlling the stability of mRNA -- an
intermediate form of genetic information between DNA genes and proteins.
"Gene expression can
be controlled at many levels, " says Scripps Research
Professor Peter Wright, Ph.D., who is chairman of the Department of
Molecular Biology and Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Investigator in Medical
Research at Scripps Research. "One of them is at the level of the
message."
The structure of the "tandem zinc finger" domain of the regulatory protein
TIS11d in complex with a strand of mRNA was solved in the laboratory of
Wright and H. Jane Dyson, Ph.D., by Maria A. Martinez-Yamout, Ph.D., of
Scripps Research, and Brian P. Hudson, Ph.D., of Rutgers University. This
is the first such structure to be solved, and it provides insights into
the process of gene regulation at the atomic level.
In next month's issue of Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, Wright and
his colleagues describe the tandem zinc finger -- thus called because it
contains two finger-like domains that must bind to zinc to fold into its
active form. These tandem zinc fingers are a very common motif in
mammalian genes, and hundreds of genes in the human genome contain some
version of them. This diversity is perhaps indicative of the capability of
TZF proteins to specifically recognize a large number of different RNA
sequence motifs.
Insights into the workings of the regulatory protein TIS11d are
particularly valuable because these proteins are involved in a number of
fundamental biological processes, such as inflammation, and are potential
targets for therapeutics in diseases where these processes go awry.
The Regulation of Genes at the mRNA Level
Regulation of gene expression in humans and other organisms is a crucial
part of biology, and biology has a large repertoire of mechanisms for
turning genes on and off. Many of the proteins encoded by genes in human
and other genomes specialize in regulating other genes, often in
complicated feedback mechanisms.
Shutting off the transcription of a gene - the process whereby a
single-stranded
piece of messenger RNA (mRNA) is made from a double-stranded piece of DNA
-
has for decades been recognized by molecular and cell biologists as a
crucial way
the cell
regulates the expression of a gene.
In the last several years, many of these same scientists, including Wright
and his colleagues, have been growing aware of the importance of
post-transcriptional gene regulation, which occurs at the level of mRNA.
In mammals, once DNA genes are transcribed into mRNAs in the nucleus of a
cell, they are usually transported outside the nucleus, where the mRNAs
can be "translated" into proteins. At this point, certain regulatory
proteins stabilize the mRNA, allowing it to be translated by the cell's
machinery into proteins. Other regulatory proteins destabilize the mRNAs,
marking them for degradation by the cell's machinery.
TIS11d belongs to a common family of regulatory proteins of this latter
type. It regulates the levels of many important proteins involved in the
body's inflammatory response, such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and
interferons, by marking the TNF and interferon mRNAs for destruction. With
incredible specificity, this protein uses its tandem zinc finger domain to
recognize particular sequences of TNF and interferon mRNA.
By solving the structure, Wright and his colleagues revealed for the first
time in atomic detail exactly how this recognition occurs.
The TIS11d protein basically mimics the base-pairing that takes place in
DNA by using its tandem zinc finger domains to bind to the mRNA. Following
the same principle that two strands of DNA use to bind to each other, the
TIS11d protein binds to the mRNA by forming hydrogen bonds with the
Watson-Crick edges of the mRNA.
"It was remarkable to see how these tiny structures work," says Wright.
The research article "Recognition of the mRNA AU-rich element by the zinc
finger domain of TIS11d" is authored by Brian P. Hudson, Maria A.Martinez-Yamout, H. Jane Dyson, and Peter E. Wright and appears in the
March 2004 issue of Nature Structural & Molecular Biology.
2/13/2004
Source: Scripps Research Institute
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