5′-end surveillance by Xrn2 acts as a shared mechanism for mammalian pre-rRNA maturation and decay

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Abstract

Ribosome biogenesis requires multiple nuclease activities to process pre-rRNA transcripts into mature rRNA species and eliminate defective products of transcription and processing. We find that in mammalian cells, the 5′ exonuclease Xrn2 plays a major role in both maturation of rRNA and degradation of a variety of discarded pre-rRNA species. Precursors of 5.8S and 28S rRNAs containing 5′ extensions accumulate in mouse cells after siRNA-mediated knockdown of Xrn2, indicating similarity in the 5′-end maturation mechanisms between mammals and yeast. Strikingly, degradation of many aberrant pre-rRNA species, attributed mainly to 3′ exonucleases in yeast studies, occurs 5′ to 3′ in mammalian cells and is mediated by Xrn2. Furthermore, depletion of Xrn2 reveals pre-rRNAs derived by cleavage events that deviate from the main processing pathway. We propose that probing of pre-rRNA maturation intermediates by exonucleases serves the dual function of generating mature rRNAs and suppressing suboptimal processing paths during ribosome assembly. © 2010 The Author(s).

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Wang, M., & Pestov, D. G. (2011). 5′-end surveillance by Xrn2 acts as a shared mechanism for mammalian pre-rRNA maturation and decay. Nucleic Acids Research, 39(5), 1811–1822. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkq1050

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