Ku is a conserved DNA end-binding protein that plays various roles at different kinds of DNA ends. At telomeres, Ku is part of the structure that protects the chromosome end, whereas at broken DNA ends, Ku promotes DNA repair as part of the nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) pathway. Here, we present evidence of a new role for Ku that impacts both telomere-length maintenance and DNA repair in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We show that Ku binds TLC1, the RNA component of telomerase. We also describe a novel separation-of-function allele of Ku that is specifically defective in TLC1 binding. In this mutant, telomeres are short and the kinetics of telomere addition are slow, but other Ku-dependent activities, such as chromosome end protection and NHEJ, are unaffected. At low frequency, yeast will use telomerase to heal DNA damage by capping the broken chromosome with telomeric DNA sequences. We show that when Ku's ability to bind TLC1 is disrupted, DNA repair via telomere healing is reduced 10-to 100-fold, and the spectrum of sequences that can acquire a telomere changes. Thus, the interaction between Ku and TLC1 RNA enables telomerase to act at both broken and normal chromosome ends.
The telomerase enzyme lengthens telomeres, an activity essential for chromosome stability in most eukaryotes. The enzyme is composed of a specialized reverse transcriptase and a template RNA. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, overexpression of TLC1, the telomerase RNA gene, disrupts telomeric structure. The result is both shortened telomere length and loss of a special chromatin structure that normally silences telomere-proximal genes. Because telomerase function is not required for telomeric silencing, we postulated that the dominant-negative effect caused by overexpression of TLC1 RNA originates in a normal interaction between the RNA and an unknown telomeric factor important for silencing; the overexpressed RNA presumably continues to bind the factor and compromises its function. Here we show that a 48-nt stem-loop structure within the 1.3-kb TLC1 RNA is necessary and sufficient for disrupting telomeric silencing and shortening telomeres. Moreover, this short RNA sequence appears to function through an interaction with the conserved DNA end-binding protein Ku. We propose that, in addition to its roles in telomeric silencing, homologous recombination and non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ), S. cerevisiae Ku also helps to recruit or activate telomerase at the telomere through an interaction with this stem-loop of TLC1 RNA.
The bacterial transposon Tn7 exhibits target immunity, a process that prevents Tn7 from transposing into target DNAs that already contain a copy of the transposon. This work investigates the mechanism of target immunity in vitro. We demonstrate that two Tn7-encoded proteins_TnsB, which binds specifically to the ends of Tn7, and TnsC, the ATP-dependent DNA binding protein_act as a molecular switch to impose immunity on target DNAs containing Tn7 (or just Tn7 ends). TnsC binds to target DNA molecules and communicates with the Tn7 transposition machinery; here we show that target DNAs containing Tn7 ends are also bound and subsequently inactivated by TnsB. Protein-protein interactions between TnsB and TnsC appear to be responsible for this inactivation; the target DNA promotes these interactions by tethering TnsB and TnsC in high local concentration. An attractive model that emerges from this work is that TnsB triggers the dissociation of TnsC from the Tn7 end-containing target DNA; that dissociation depends on TnsC's ability to hydrolyze ATP. We propose that these interactions between TnsB and TnsC not only prevent Tn7 from inserting into itself, but also facilitate the selection of preferred target sites that is the hallmark of Tn7 transposition.
Unlike ribonucleoprotein complexes that have a highly ordered overall architecture, such as the ribosome, yeast telomerase appears to be much more loosely constrained. Here, we investigate the importance of positioning of the Ku subunit within the 1157-nt yeast telomerase RNA (TLC1). Deletion of the 48-nt Ku-binding hairpin in TLC1 RNA (tlc1D48) reduces telomere length, survival of cells with gross chromosomal rearrangements, and de novo telomere addition at a broken chromosome end. To test the function of Ku at novel positions in the telomerase RNP, we reintroduced its binding site into tlc1D48 RNA at position 446 or 1029. We found that Ku bound to these repositioned sites in vivo and telomere length increased slightly, but statistically significantly. The ability of telomerase to promote survival of cells with gross chromosomal rearrangements by healing damaged chromosome arms was also partially restored, whereas the kinetics of DNA addition to a specific chromosome break was delayed. Having two Ku sites in TLC1 caused progressive hyperelongation of a variable subset of telomeres, consistent with Ku's role in telomerase recruitment to chromosome ends. The number of Ku-binding sites in TLC1 contributed to telomerase RNA abundance in vivo but was only partially responsible for telomere length phenotypes. Thus, telomerase RNA levels and telomere length regulation can be modulated by the number of Ku sites in telomerase RNA. Furthermore, there is substantial flexibility in the relative positioning of Ku in the telomerase RNP for native telomere length maintenance, although not as much flexibility as for the essential Est1p subunit.
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