The RNA component of telomerase (telomerase RNA; TER) varies substantially both in sequence composition and size (from ;150 nucleotides [nt] to >1500 nt) across species. This dramatic divergence has hampered the identification of TER genes and a large-scale comparative analysis of TER sequences and structures among distantly related species. To identify by phylogenetic analysis conserved sequences and structural features of TER that are of general importance, it is essential to obtain TER sequences from evolutionarily distant groups of species, providing enough conservation within each group and enough variation among the groups. To this end, we identified TER genes in several yeast species with relatively large (>20 base pairs) and nonvariant telomeric repeats, mostly from the genus Candida. Interestingly, several of the TERs reported here are longer than all other yeast TERs known to date. Within these TERs, we predicted a pseudoknot containing U-AÁU base triples (conserved in vertebrates, budding yeasts, and ciliates) and a three-way junction element (conserved in vertebrates and budding yeasts). In addition, we identified a novel conserved sequence (CS2a) predicted to reside within an internal-loop structure, in all the budding yeast TERs examined. CS2a is located near the Est1p-binding bulge-stem previously identified in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mutational analyses in both budding yeasts S. cerevisiae and Kluyveromyces lactis demonstrate that CS2a is essential for in vivo telomerase function. The comparative and mutational analyses of conserved TER elements reported here provide novel insights into the structure and function of the telomerase ribonucleoprotein complex.
Telomerase copies a short template within its integral telomerase RNA onto eukaryotic chromosome ends, compensating for incomplete replication and degradation. Telomerase action extends the proliferative potential of cells, and thus it is implicated in cancer and aging. Nontemplate regions of telomerase RNA are also crucial for telomerase function. However, they are highly divergent in sequence among species, and their roles are largely unclear. Using in silico three-dimensional modeling, constrained by mutational analysis, we propose a three-dimensional model for a pseudoknot in telomerase RNA of the budding yeast Kluyveromyces lactis. Interestingly, this structure includes a U-A ⅐ U major-groove triple helix. We confirmed the triple-helix formation in vitro using oligoribonucleotides and showed that it is essential for telomerase function in vivo. While triplex-disrupting mutations abolished telomerase function, triple compensatory mutations that formed pH-dependent G-C ⅐ C ؉ triples restored the pseudoknot structure in a pH-dependent manner and partly restored telomerase function in vivo. In addition, we identified a novel type of triple helix that is formed by G-C ⅐ U triples, which also partly restored the pseudoknot structure and function. We propose that this unusual structure, so far found only in telomerase RNA, provides an essential and conserved telomerasespecific function.Telomerase, a ribonucleoprotein reverse transcriptase, makes up for losses caused by incomplete DNA replication and degradation, by adding species-specific, 5-to 26-nucleotide (nt) repeats onto the telomere termini (reviewed in reference 2). The telomerase complex contains an RNA subunit (TER) (TLC1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae), a catalytic reverse transcriptase (TERT) (Est2 in S. cerevisiae), and several other protein components. Unlike other reverse transcriptases, telomerase specializes in repeatedly copying a short RNA template within its integral RNA component.TERs are highly divergent, being conserved in sequence only among closely related species. Phylogenetic covariation was used to predict conserved secondary structures for evolutionarily close species of ciliates (14, 24), vertebrates (4), Kluyveromyces budding yeasts of the K. marxianus cluster (31, 32), and Saccharomyces sensu stricto (3,7,13,37). Limited similarity in the general architecture was observed among these models, consisting of three long arms and a catalytic core domain (4, 13). Although nontemplate regions are essential for the assembly, regulation, and function of telomerase, their specific roles are still unclear (reviewed in reference 30). We hypothesized that important functional elements would exhibit better conservation in their tertiary structures, rather than in their secondary structures or sequences. Solving these tertiary structures may provide insights into their conserved functions.Pseudoknot elements were found to be critical for telomerase function in ciliates (28), vertebrates (4), and Kluyveromyces (32). For S. cerevisiae, alternative pseud...
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