Prevalent and distinct spliceosomal 3′-end processing mechanisms for fungal telomerase RNA

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Abstract

Telomerase RNA (TER) is an essential component of the telomerase ribonucleoprotein complex. The mechanism for TER 3′-end processing is highly divergent among different organisms. Here we report a unique spliceosome-mediated TER 3′-end cleavage mechanism in Neurospora crassa that is distinct from that found specifically in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. While the S. pombe TER intron contains the canonical 5′-splice site GUAUGU, the N. crassa TER intron contains a non-canonical 5′-splice site AUAAGU that alone prevents the second step of splicing and promotes spliceosomal cleavage. The unique N. crassa TER 5′-splice site sequence is evolutionarily conserved in TERs from Pezizomycotina and early branching Taphrinomycotina species. This suggests that the widespread and basal N. crassa-type spliceosomal cleavage mechanism is more ancestral than the S. pombe-type. The discovery of a prevalent, yet distinct, spliceosomal cleavage mechanism throughout diverse fungal clades furthers our understanding of TER evolution and non-coding RNA processing.

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Qi, X., Rand, D. P., Podlevsky, J. D., Li, Y., Mosig, A., Stadler, P. F., & Chen, J. J. L. (2015). Prevalent and distinct spliceosomal 3′-end processing mechanisms for fungal telomerase RNA. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms7105

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