Byszewska Magdalena, Śmietański Mirosław, Purta Elżbieta, Bujnicki Janusz M
a International Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology ; Warsaw , Poland.
RNA Biol. 2014;11(12):1597-607. doi: 10.1080/15476286.2015.1004955.
In eukaryotes and viruses that infect them, the 5' end of mRNA molecules, and also many other functionally important RNAs, are modified to form a so-called cap structure that is important for interactions of these RNAs with many nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins. The RNA cap has multiple roles in gene expression, including enhancement of RNA stability, splicing, nucleocytoplasmic transport, and translation initiation. Apart from guanosine addition to the 5' end in the most typical cap structure common to transcripts produced by RNA polymerase II (in particular mRNA), essentially all cap modifications are due to methylation. The complexity of the cap structure and its formation can range from just a single methylation of the unprocessed 5' end of the primary transcript, as in mammalian U6 and 7SK, mouse B2, and plant U3 RNAs, to an elaborate m(7)Gpppm(6,6)AmpAmpCmpm(3)Um structure at the 5' end of processed RNA in trypanosomes, which are formed by as many as 8 methylation reactions. While all enzymes responsible for methylation of the cap structure characterized to date were found to belong to the same evolutionarily related and structurally similar Rossmann Fold Methyltransferase superfamily, that uses the same methyl group donor, S-adenosylmethionine; the enzymes also exhibit interesting differences that are responsible for their distinct functions. This review focuses on the evolutionary classification of enzymes responsible for cap methylation in RNA, with a focus on the sequence relationships and structural similarities and dissimilarities that provide the basis for understanding the mechanism of biosynthesis of different caps in cellular and viral RNAs. Particular attention is paid to the similarities and differences between methyltransferases from human cells and from human pathogens that may be helpful in the development of antiviral and antiparasitic drugs.
在真核生物以及感染它们的病毒中,mRNA分子的5'端以及许多其他功能重要的RNA会被修饰,形成一种所谓的帽结构,这种结构对于这些RNA与许多核蛋白和胞质蛋白的相互作用至关重要。RNA帽在基因表达中具有多种作用,包括增强RNA稳定性、剪接、核质运输和翻译起始。除了在RNA聚合酶II产生的转录本(特别是mRNA)最典型的帽结构中5'端添加鸟苷外,基本上所有的帽修饰都是由于甲基化。帽结构及其形成的复杂性范围很广,从初级转录本未加工的5'端仅进行一次甲基化,如哺乳动物的U6和7SK、小鼠的B2以及植物的U3 RNA,到锥虫中加工后RNA的5'端形成复杂的m(7)Gpppm(6,6)AmpAmpCmpm(3)Um结构,该结构由多达8次甲基化反应形成。虽然迄今为止发现的所有负责帽结构甲基化的酶都属于同一个进化相关且结构相似的Rossmann折叠甲基转移酶超家族,它们使用相同的甲基供体S-腺苷甲硫氨酸;但这些酶也表现出有趣的差异,这些差异决定了它们各自不同的功能。本综述重点关注负责RNA帽甲基化的酶的进化分类,着重于序列关系以及结构上的异同,这些异同是理解细胞和病毒RNA中不同帽生物合成机制的基础。特别关注人类细胞和人类病原体甲基转移酶之间的异同,这可能有助于开发抗病毒和抗寄生虫药物。