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Article

FLASH Is Required for the Endonucleolytic Cleavage of Histone Pre-mRNAs but Is Dispensable for the 5′ Exonucleolytic Degradation of the Downstream Cleavage Product

, , , , , & show all
Pages 1492-1502 | Received 20 Aug 2010, Accepted 10 Jan 2011, Published online: 20 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

3′-end cleavage of histone pre-mRNAs is catalyzed by CPSF-73 and requires the interaction of two U7 snRNP-associated proteins, FLASH and Lsm11. Here, by using scanning mutagenesis we identify critical residues in human FLASH and Lsm11 that are involved in the interaction between these two proteins. We also demonstrate that mutations in the region of FLASH located between amino acids 50 and 99 do not affect binding of Lsm11. Interestingly, these mutations convert FLASH into an inhibitory protein that reduces in vitro processing efficiency of highly active nuclear extracts. Our results suggest that this region in FLASH in conjunction with Lsm11 is involved in recruiting a yet-unknown processing factor(s) to histone pre-mRNA. Following endonucleolytic cleavage of histone pre-mRNA, the downstream cleavage product (DCP) is degraded by the 5′–3′ exonuclease activity of CPSF-73, which also depends on Lsm11. Strikingly, while cleavage of histone pre-mRNA is stimulated by FLASH and inhibited by both dominant negative mutants of FLASH and anti-FLASH antibodies, the 5′–3′ degradation of the DCP is not affected. Thus, the recruitment of FLASH to the processing complex plays a critical role in activating the endonuclease mode of CPSF-73 but is dispensable for its 5′–3′ exonuclease activity. These results suggest that CPSF-73, the catalytic component in both reactions, can be recruited to histone pre-mRNA largely in a manner independent of FLASH, possibly by a separate domain in Lsm11.

Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/MCB.00979-10.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank N. Kolev and J. Steitz (Yale University) for the plasmid expressing human symplekin.

Lalitha Kunduru was a recipient of a grant from Integrated Biomedical Research Training Program funded from NIH to UNC at Chapel Hill. This work was supported by NIH grant GM29832.

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