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Published online 14 May 2001. doi:10.1083/jcb.153.4.F13
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© The Rockefeller University Press, 0021-9525/2001/5/F13/ $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 153, Number 4, May 14, 2001 F13-18


Mini-Review

La Protein and the Trafficking of Nascent RNA Polymerase III Transcripts

Richard J. Maraiaa
a Laboratory of Molecular Growth Regulation, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892

Correspondence to: Richard J. Maraia, Laboratory of Molecular Growth Regulation, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, 6 Center Dr., Rm 416, Bethesda, MD 20892-2753. Tel:(301) 402-3567 Fax:(301) 480-6863 E-mail:maraiar{at}mail.nih.gov.

Several small nuclear and cytoplasmic RNAs are synthesized by RNA polymerase (Pol)1 III as nascent transcripts that must then migrate through RNA processing, modification, and transport machinery on their trek to becoming mature, functional molecules. The first factor to interact with newly synthesized Pol III transcripts is the La protein. Evidence that this molecular chaperone accompanies precursor tRNAs through various RNA modification and processing events and facilitates the assembly of other transcripts into specific RNPs is reviewed. Although most La is nucleoplasmic, some is nucleolar, and several Pol III transcripts, including precursors of tRNAs, U6 small nuclear RNA (snRNA), RNase P RNA, and signal recognition particle (SRP) RNA, have recently been shown to move through the nucleolus. Modifications found previously on La-associated U6 snRNA, coupled with recent data, now suggest that these modifications occur in the nucleolus, while U6 RNA is associated with La. Finally, data which indicate that human La exhibits a two-step mode of RNA binding that is sensitive to phosphorylation are reviewed, and the implications of this mode of binding are considered in the context of the dynamics of RNA maturation.

RNA Pol III synthesizes many small RNAs, including 5S ribosomal rRNA and tRNAs, U6 and RNase P snRNAs, MRP small nucleolar RNA (snoRNA), as well as SRP and the family of Y small cytoplasmic RNAs. Similar to transcripts of Pols I and II, newly synthesized Pol III transcripts are subjected to a maturation process that involves removal, modification, and addition of nucleotides. Some Pol III transcripts undergo little, while others undergo extensive, processing. Precursor tRNAs endure an elaborate intranuclear maturation process that involves recognition by many cleavage and modification enzymes before transport to the cytoplasm (Wolin and Matera 1999 Down).


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Newly made Pol III transcripts have been visualized directly in HeLa nucleoplasm and it was calculated that they reside at ~2,000 discernible sites (distinct from Pol II transcription loci), containing ~5 nascent Pol III transcripts per site (Pombo et al. 1999 Down). Transcription termination by Pol III produces a common motif, 3' oligo(U), that is a high affinity binding site for an abundant nuclear phosphoprotein known as La that resides mostly in the nucleoplasm (Deng et al. 1981 Down; Hendrick et al. 1981 Down; Stefano 1984 Down). Accordingly, the first protein that can be detected in association with newly synthesized Pol III transcripts is La. Approximately 1–2 x 105 molecules of pre-5S rRNA (1–2% of mature 5S rRNA), in addition to a comparable number of pre-tRNAs, are associated with La (Rinke and Steitz 1982 Down; Steitz et al. 1988 Down). Since the number of newly made transcripts detected by the direct visualization approach (104) (Pombo et al. 1999 Down) is significantly exceeded by the number of pre-5S and pre-tRNAs, it would seem as if nuclei contain a reservoir of La-associated transcripts, consistent with a chaperone function for La (Pannone et al. 1998 Down).


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The nuclear localization signal (NLS) at the COOH terminus (amino acids 382–408) of human La mediates nuclear import, but is not sufficient for nuclear accumulation, since additional elements are responsible for nuclear retention (Simons et al. 1996a Down). Available data suggest that La can sequester RNAs in the nucleus, provided that they retain their oligo(U) 3' termini (Boelens et al. 1995 Down). Nascent B1-Alu RNA contains a 3' trailer and is associated with La in the nucleus, but exits to the cytoplasm after 3' end processing as a La-free scB1 RNP (Maraia et al. 1988 Down). 5S rRNA is transported to the cytoplasm only after dissociation from La (Guddat et al. 1990 Down; Steitz et al. 1988 Down). Similar results were obtained for human Y1 RNA (Simons et al. 1994 Down, Simons et al. 1996b Down). Euplotes telomerase appears to represent an example of how association with La may provide an RNA and associated proteins with nuclear residence. Although this protein has not yet been shown to associate with a wide range of nascent Pol III transcripts, it does contain a highly conserved La motif positioned at its NH2-terminal end, followed by a region with significant homology to the characterized La proteins of other species (e.g., trypanosome and insect) in the RRM-2 region, making it a very likely genuine La homologue (analyzed by the BLAST 2 Sequences program available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast/bl2seq/bl2.html; data not shown). As a Pol III product that retains its UUU 3' terminus, Euplotes telomerase RNA is an integral component of telomerase reverse transcriptase that remains associated with La as a stable RNP (Aigner et al. 2000 Down). This La homologue might function both in the stabilization and nuclear retention of telomerase in this ancient eukaryote (Aigner et al. 2000 Down).

Metazoan La proteins have been expanded in their COOH-terminal domains (CTDs), presumably in association with the acquisition of additional activities, some of which have been described for human, but not yeast, La (Rosenblum et al. 1998 Down; Intine et al. 2000 Down). The nuclear import system used by Saccharomyces cerevisiae La is different from the system used by other species (Rosenblum et al. 1998 Down). An NLS resides within the NH2-terminal domain (NTD) of S. cerevisiae La, suggesting that RNA binding and nuclear import might be exclusive of each other, whereas this would not be expected in the other eukaryotes examined, which have an NLS at the COOH terminus (Rosenblum et al. 1998 Down). A potential for vertebrate La to transport a synthetic RNA from the cytoplasm to the nucleus has been demonstrated (Grimm et al. 1997 Down). It was noted that the S. cerevisiae La protein appeared to be exclusively nuclear, perhaps indicative of trafficking differences in S. cerevisiae and other eukaryotes (Rosenblum et al. 1998 Down). Although the fraction of vertebrate La that resides in the cytoplasm is usually <20%, this is significantly increased under certain conditions (see Maraia and Intine 2001 Down and references therein).


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It has been well documented in yeast that La protects precursors of U6 snRNA, U4 snRNA, and U3 snoRNA from degradation and facilitates their stable transfer to specific RNPs (Pannone et al. 1998 Down; Kufel et al. 2000 Down; Xue et al. 2000 Down). It is also becoming clear that La's function as a chaperone extends beyond RNP assembly since, as reviewed below, some RNAs appear to remain associated with La during transient recognition by other proteins. As reviewed in the next paragraph, three data sets can be reasonably interpreted to suggest, or indicate, that tRNA modifying enzymes act on their pre-tRNA substrates, albeit transiently, while the substrates are associated with La. After this, the data that pre-tRNAs are recognized transiently by RNase P and pre-tRNA 3' endonuclease while associated with La are also reviewed.

La's involvement in pre-tRNA modification can be considered from three perspectives, (a) recent results linking La and pre-tRNAiMet m1A58 methylation (Anderson et al. 1998 Down; Calvo et al. 1999 Down); (b) differences in the modifications found on a human pre-tRNAeMet that is stabilized by La, and its mature counterpart (Harada et al. 1984 Down; Kenan 1995 Down); and (c) data that documented the modifications found on the nascent precursor and various intermediate species of tRNATyr (Nishikura and De Robertis 1981 Down). Methylation of A58 to m1A58 is one of the earliest modifications of pre-tRNA (Nishikura and De Robertis 1981 Down) and it was shown that yeast La cooperates with the m1A58 methylase (Anderson et al. 1998 Down; Calvo et al. 1999 Down).

Human pre-tRNAeMet was initially identified as a tRNA precursor of unusually high stability (Harada et al. 1984 Down). This pre-tRNA has been independently isolated as the most abundant La-associated transcript in HeLa cells (Ali et al. 2000 Down). Pre-tRNAeMet contains six different modified bases (D, {Psi}, m1A, m5C, m22G, and Cm), whereas the mature tRNAeMet species contains these plus three more modifications (Harada et al. 1984 Down). This kinetic pattern is similar to that observed during the expression of tRNATyr (Nishikura and De Robertis 1981 Down). Specifically, the pre-tRNATyr species containing a 5' leader, 3' trailer, and intron bears several of the modifications found on pre-tRNAeMet, whereas others were found on the intron-containing species only after 5' and 3' end processing occurred (Nishikura and De Robertis 1981 Down).

As it is generally accepted that the substrate for pre-tRNA 5' processing is complexed with La (Yoo and Wolin 1997 Down; Fan et al. 1998 Down; Wolin and Matera 1999 Down; Intine et al. 2000 Down), the above data indicate that multiple modifying enzymes act on the pre-tRNA-La RNP before recognition by RNase P. Data that indicate that yeast La facilitates endonucleolytic 3' processing, a cleavage event that normally occurs after 5' processing, provide further evidence that La chaperones its pre-tRNA ligands extensively through many parts of their maturation pathways (Yoo and Wolin 1997 Down; Wolin and Matera 1999 Down). It is also conceivable, under the conditions when pre-tRNA introns are removed before end processing, that a pre-tRNA-La RNP might be a substrate for the splicing machinery (Wolin and Matera 1999 Down). The cumulative results indicate that La protects transcripts during the time between their synthesis and incorporation into more stable RNPs, in some cases facilitating RNP assembly and in some cases supporting them during recognition by modification and cleavage enzymes.


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Several Pol III transcripts have also been observed in the nucleolus; these include pre-tRNAs (Bertrand et al. 1998 Down), U6 snRNA (Lange and Gerbi 2000 Down), and the RNA components of RNases P and MRP, as well as SRP RNA and 5S rRNA (Jacobson et al. 1995 Down, Jacobson et al. 1997 Down; Bertrand et al. 1998 Down; Jacobson and Pederson 1998 Down; Jarrous et al. 1999 Down). When examined by time lapse methods, SRP RNA, RNase P RNA, and U6 snRNA were observed to pass transiently through the nucleolus, during what appears to be the early phases of their life cycles (Jacobson et al. 1997 Down; Jacobson and Pederson 1998 Down; Lange and Gerbi 2000 Down). As indicated from kinetic comparisons, vertebrate U6 RNA appears to use a nucleolar localization system that is different from the box C/D and H/ACA snoRNAs (synthesized by Pol II) which remain more stably in the nucleolus (Lange and Gerbi 2000 Down). Thus, by contrast to the box C/D and H/ACA snoRNAs, the nucleolar localization of the majority of Pol III transcripts (with the exception of MRP RNA) is transient and limited to a fraction of molecules that most likely represent immature species. At least for one of these transcripts, U6, it is almost certain that some of its 2'-O-methylation and pseudouridylation modifications occur in the nucleolus (Tycowski et al. 1998 Down; Ganot et al. 1999 Down; Lange and Gerbi 2000 Down; see below).


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As indicated above, La is a general Pol III nascent transcript-binding protein that has been observed in the nucleolus. Because Pol III transcripts pass through the nucleolus during a (early) phase of their life cycle, when they are associated with La but might otherwise be susceptible to exonucleases, it might seem that La would be involved in their nucleolar transit and protection in this subdivision. However, it appears that this need not be so for 5S, MRP, RNase P, and SRP RNAs, since as reviewed below, more specific proteins would appear to be better candidates for their nucleolar localization.

After transient association with La, 5S rRNA is bound by the ribosomal protein L5 (Steitz et al. 1988 Down; Guddat et al. 1990 Down), the latter of which has been shown to contain a signal that would appear to direct 5S rRNA to the nucleolus (Michael and Dreyfuss 1996 Down; Steitz et al. 1988 Down). Mammalian RNase P RNA and MRP RNA are related by sequence homology and each associate with a shared set of specific proteins, including Rpp38, which reacts with To/Th autoimmune sera, that presumably direct them to nucleoli (Jacobson et al. 1995 Down; Jarrous et al. 1999 Down). Consistent with this scenario, previous studies suggested that To/Th antigen binding to MRP (7-2) RNA appears to occur after La dissociates from the RNA (Hashimoto and Steitz 1983 Down). In mammalian cells, the SRP RNA–associated proteins SRP19, SRP68, and SRP72 each have been observed to localize to the nucleolus, as has SRP RNA itself, directed in part by helix 8 and the Alu domain of the RNA (Jacobson and Pederson 1998 Down; Politz et al. 2000 Down). These data indicate that multiple determinants direct the transient nucleolar localization of SRP RNA. Because UUU-OH comprises a predominate binding site for La (for review see Maraia and Intine 2001 Down), the finding that the terminal uridylates of SRP RNA are removed and the 3' terminus is adenylated before nucleolar accumulation argues that La is not associated with the SRP RNA that is localized to the nucleolus (Chen et al. 1998 Down). Thus, for SRP RNA, 5S rRNA, MRP RNA, and RNase P RNA, it would appear that La would not be directly involved in transporting them to the nucleolus. Yet for pre-tRNAs and pre-U6 snRNA there is no protein other than La that is known to associate with them that has also been observed in the nucleolus (Deng et al. 1981 Down; Hendrick et al. 1981 Down). Finally, it is noteworthy here that although it was proposed that yeast La might reside in the nucleolus (Wolin and Matera 1999 Down), it has not yet been identified there (Rosenblum et al. 1998 Down). Therefore, given the differences noted above regarding the species-specific nuclear import of La, it will be important to determine if the difference also extends to nucleolar trafficking.


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In addition to nascent Pol III transcripts, yeast La has also been found associated with a U3 snoRNA precursor intermediate (Kufel et al. 2000 Down) and it is possible that La hands off this transcript to the next proteins in the U3 RNP assembly pathway in the nucleolus. Reports of association with ribosomal subunits and involvement in translation (for review see Maraia and Intine 2001 Down) suggest the formal possibility that La may associate with translational machinery in the nucleolus (Pederson and Politz 2000 Down). Below, the possibility that La's localization in the nucleolus is related to its action as a chaperone for nascent Pol III transcripts is considered.

Since MRP RNA is involved in the biogenesis (processing) of 5.8S rRNA and 5S rRNA is a ribosome component, these RNAs would naturally be found in the nucleolus (Pederson and Politz 2000 Down). By contrast, the unexpected finding that SRP RNA, RNase P RNA, and U6 snRNA were also found there raised interesting perspectives, including that they are modified, matured, or participate in a quality control step in the nucleolus (Jacobson et al. 1997 Down; Pederson 1998 Down; Pederson and Politz 2000 Down). Although SRP RNA is not known to be modified other than at the 3' end as mentioned above, the possibility that RPR1 RNA, a component of yeast RNase P, or its precursor, may be modified exists, although the enzyme implicated in the presumptive modification was not determined to be nucleolar (Calvo et al. 1999 Down).

The snoRNAs that direct 2'-O-methylation and pseudouridylation of U6 snRNA almost certainly do so in the nucleolus (Tycowski et al. 1998 Down; Ganot et al. 1999 Down). Detailed analyses indicated the presence of several modified residues on the subset of U6 snRNA precursors that are associated with La (Rinke and Steitz 1985 Down). By reviewing the specific nucleotides that were modified in the La-associated U6 RNA in the context of recent data that identify the specific nucleotides modified by snoRNAs (Rinke and Steitz 1985 Down; Tycowski et al. 1998 Down; Ganot et al. 1999 Down), one can arrive at the tentative conclusion that it appears that modification of U6 may occur while associated with La in the nucleolus (data not shown). Specifically, several 2'-O–methylated and –pseudouridylated U6 nucleotides that were shown recently to be directed by specific snoRNAs (Tycowski et al. 1998 Down; Ganot et al. 1999 Down) appear to be present in La-associated pre-U6 RNA, because the corresponding oligonucleotides comigrated with the modified oligonucleotides isolated from mature U6 snRNA, although some of the La-associated oligonucleotides appeared to be undermodified (Rinke and Steitz 1985 Down). As noted earlier, U6 snRNA has been shown recently to transiently pass through the nucleolus (Lange and Gerbi 2000 Down). The cumulative data provide significantly compelling, albeit circumstantial, evidence to suggest that La travels with pre-U6 snRNA to the nucleolus.


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Because components of RNase P, the endonuclease that matures the 5' ends of pre-tRNAs, as well as pre-tRNAs themselves, have been visualized in the nucleolus (Jacobson et al. 1997 Down; Bertrand et al. 1998 Down; Jarrous et al. 1999 Down), it has become a popular notion that 5' pre-tRNA processing activity actually occurs there (Wolin and Matera 1999 Down; Lewis and Tollervey 2000 Down), although it should be noted that this has not been demonstrated. Although most of the RNase P RNA and intron-containing pre-tRNAs detectable in yeast appeared nucleolar (Bertrand et al. 1998 Down), other studies reveal yeast pre-tRNAs in the nucleoplasm, as well as in the nucleolus (Sarkar and Hopper 1998 Down). In mammalian cells, a substantial amount of RNase P RNA is found in the nucleoplasm (Matera et al. 1995 Down; Lee et al. 1996 Down; Jacobson et al. 1997 Down). In archaea, homologues of snoRNAs are associated with Archaeal fibrillarin, and some of these exhibit complementarity to the regions of tRNAs known to be 2'-O–methylated, suggesting the possibility that eukaryotic pre-tRNAs may be similarly modified in the nucleolus (Omer et al. 2000 Down), although this will be better addressed once the complete human genome has been analyzed for snoRNAs. One tRNA modification enzyme has been localized in the nucleolus as well as the nucleoplasm (Tolerico et al. 1999 Down). Since transient nucleolar localization is common to several Pol III transcripts, pre-tRNAs and RNase P components may each be required to pass through this compartment without necessarily interacting there. In summary, while it is possible that RNase P functions in pre-tRNA processing in the nucleolus, the evidence for this remains circumstantial and alternative explanations may account for the localization of pre-tRNAs and RNAs P components there.


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The unexpected ability of human La to protect pre-tRNAs from 5' processing led to a model that suggested that the evolutionarily conserved NTD of La recognizes 3' oligo(U) and adjacent determinants, whereas the CTD recognizes the 5' end region of the nascent RNA (Fan et al. 1998 Down; Intine et al. 2000 Down; Maraia and Intine 2001 Down). Evidence obtained from in vitro and in vivo studies suggest that 5' end binding is significant only for RNAs that carry 3' oligo(U), probably because the latter comprises a principal binding site for La (Fan et al. 1998 Down; Intine et al. 2000 Down; for review see Maraia and Intine 2001 Down). Unphosphorylated La binds both the 3' and 5' regions of a pre-tRNA, protecting the latter from processing at either end (Fan et al. 1998 Down). Phosphorylated La attaches only to the 3' end, allowing access to the 5' end of a pre-tRNA by RNase P (Fan et al. 1998 Down; Intine et al. 2000 Down). A two-step binding and/or dissociation mechanism might provide La with versatility that would be useful as a chaperone for a wide variety of RNAs. A regulatable mode of binding might afford La the ability to retain a nascent transcript of its 5' end region in a stable form until it receives a signal, i.e., in the form of S366 phosphorylation, to release it (Fan et al. 1998 Down). This mode of binding activity and its modulation by phosphorylation is consistent with a role for La as a quality control factor (Fan et al. 1998 Down; Intine et al. 2000 Down). This feature could potentially be used to control the handing off of an RNA from La to another protein during RNP assembly, modification, cleavage, or transport. A challenge is to explain how the two-step RNA recognition mechanism, intracellular trafficking, and signal transduction functions of La are integrated with the maturation pathways of the various RNAs with which it associates.


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La is an abundant, ubiquitous nuclear phosphoprotein that associates with and serves as a chaperone for a large variety of newly synthesized RNA Pol III transcripts. Accumulating evidence suggests that La maintains close contact with its ligands during maturation events that involve transient interactions between La RNPs and a variety of pre-tRNA and U6 snRNA modification enzymes. It is also becoming clear that while La may serve as a nuclear retention factor for associated RNAs and appears mostly nucleoplasmic, a fraction of La also resides in the nucleolus. Some precursor RNAs (e.g., pre-U6 snRNA), with which La is found physically associated, contain ribose and base modifications that recent evidence strongly suggest are added in the nucleolus, suggesting that La chaperones some transcripts during modification in the nucleolar compartment, although this remains to be investigated using more directed approaches. Although the NTD of human La binds the UUU-OH 3' terminal motifs of nascent Pol III transcripts, recognition of the 5' phosphoprotein end regions of these RNAs is mediated by the distinct CTD, a specific activity that can be modulated by phosphorylation of human La on serine 366. A challenge for the future is to decipher how this bipartite mode of nascent RNA binding, intracellular trafficking, and the signal transduction activities of La are integrated with the expression pathways for the variety of snRNA and snoRNA precursors with which it associates. An equally important goal is to understand how signal transduction through La may be integrated with other aspects of intermediary metabolism and cellular proliferation.


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1 Abbreviations used in this paper: CTD, COOH-terminal domain; NTD, NH2-terminal domain; NLS, nuclear localization signal; Pol, polymerase; snoRNA, small nucleolar RNA; snRNA, small nuclear RNA; SRP, signal recognition particle. Back


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I am especially grateful to R. Intine, A. Sakulich-Woitach, M. Dundr, and T. Misteli for the experimental data that led me to the considerations in this review and to B. Peculis and A. Hinnebusch for discussion and/or comments on the manuscript, and I apologize to those whose work I was unable to cite due to space limitation.

This work was supported by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health.

Submitted: 13 February 2001
Revised: 26 March 2001
Accepted: 27 March 2001


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