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. 2005 Nov;11(11):1648-54.
doi: 10.1261/rna.2172105.

The Kluyveromyces lactis gamma-toxin targets tRNA anticodons

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The Kluyveromyces lactis gamma-toxin targets tRNA anticodons

Jian Lu et al. RNA. 2005 Nov.

Abstract

Kluyveromyces lactis killer strains secrete a heterotrimeric toxin (zymocin), which causes an irreversible growth arrest of sensitive yeast cells. Despite many efforts, the target(s) of the cytotoxic gamma-subunit of zymocin has remained elusive. Here we show that three tRNA species tRNA(Glu)(mcm(5)s(2)UUC), tRNA(Lys)(mcm(5)s(2)UUU), and tRNA(Gln)(mcm(5)s(2)UUG) are the targets of gamma-toxin. The toxin inhibits growth by cleaving these tRNAs at the 3' side of the modified wobble nucleoside 5-methoxycarbonylmethyl-2-thiouridine (mcm(5)s(2)U). Transfer RNA lacking a part of or the entire mcm(5) group is inefficiently cleaved by gamma-toxin, explaining the gamma-toxin resistance of the modification-deficient trm9, elp1-elp6, and kti11-kti13 mutants. The K. lactis gamma-toxin is the first eukaryotic toxin shown to target tRNA.

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Figures

FIGURE 1.
FIGURE 1.
Intracellular γ-toxin expression in S. cerevisiae reduces cell viability and the level of tRNAGlumcm5s2UUC. (A) Structure of mcm5s2U. An elp3Δ mutant lacks the entire mcm5 side-chain (box with solid lines) (Huang et al. 2005), whereas a trm9Δ strain lacks the indicated methyl group (box with dotted lines) (Kalhor and Clarke 2003). The formation of the 2-thio group appears not to be affected in the elp3 and trm9 mutants (Huang et al. 2005; data not shown). (B) Wild-type, elp3Δ, and trm9Δ strains with an integrated PGAL1-γ-toxin construct were shifted from raffinose (uninduced) to galactose (induced) containing medium. The ratio of viable to total cells was determined at indicated time points. (C) Northern blot analysis of total RNA isolated from the induced or uninduced cultures in B. The tRNAGlumcm5s2UUC signal was quantified and normalized to the tRNASerCGA signal. Below each lane is the normalized value expressed relative to the corresponding value at time point 0, which is set to 1.
FIGURE 2.
FIGURE 2.
The γ-toxin is an endonuclease that cleaves tRNAGlumcm5s2UUC, tRNALysmcm5s2UUU, and tRNAGlnmcm5s2UUG. (A) SDS-PAGE analysis of γ-toxin-GST fraction (lane 1), further purified 53-kD γ-toxin- GST (lane 2), and GST (lane 3). Proteins were visualized by silver staining. (B,C) Northern blot analysis of wild-type S. cerevisiae tRNA (5 μg) incubated with 1 μg of γ-toxin-GST fraction (lane 1), 53-kDa γ-toxin-GST (lane 2), or GST (lane 3) for 10 min at 30°C. The filter was probed by using an oligonucleotide complementary to the 3′- (B) or the 5′-part (C) of tRNAGlumcm5s2UUC. (D) Reactions containing the indicated concentration of γ-toxin-GST fraction or GST, and 5 μg of wild-type, elp3Δ, or trm9Δ total tRNA was incubated for 10 min at 30°C. Samples were analyzed by Northern blots; the identity of each signal is indicated on the left. (E) A wild-type S. cerevisiae strain CY4029 (W303-1A SSD1-v1) carrying the indicated high copy (h.c.) plasmid was serially diluted, spotted onto a YEPD plate or a YEPD plate supplemented with crude zymocin, and incubated for 3 d at 25°C. The elp3Δ and trm9Δ strains carrying the empty h.c. vector were included on the plates.
FIGURE 3.
FIGURE 3.
K. lactis γ-toxin cleaves tRNAGlumcm5s2UUC, tRNALysmcm5s2UUU, and tRNAGlnmcm5s2UUG between position 34 and 35. (A) γ-toxin-GST– treated (+) or mock-treated (−) wild-type total tRNA was reverse transcribed by using 32P-labeled oligonucleotides complementary to the 3′-end of tRNAGlumcm5s2UUC, tRNALysmcm5s2UUU, or tRNAGlnmcm5s2UUG. The sequence ladder was derived from a gene coding for tRNAGlumcm5s2UUC. Arrowheads indicate reverse transcripts induced by γ-toxin treatment. (B) The purified 5′-half of tRNAGlumcm5s2UUC, tRNALysmcm5s2UUU, or tRNAGlnmcm5s2UUG was treated with the indicated enzyme(s) before ligation and RT-PCR amplification. (C) The sequence shared between tRNAGlumcm5s2UUC, tRNALysmcm5s2UUU, and tRNAGlnmcm5s2UUG in the anticodon region, and the site of γ-toxin cleavage.

References

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