Characterization of a single TRAM domain RNA-binding protein from the Antarctic methanogen Methanococcoides burtonii

Methanococcoides burtonii, a methanogen that was isolated from Ace Lake, Antarctica, has proven to be a useful model for studying the molecular mechanisms of cold adaptation in Archaea. In Ace Lake, M. burtonii only experiences temperatures below 4 degrees and nucleic acid binding proteins have been...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Taha, Taha
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: UNSW Sydney 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.26190/unsworks/19064
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/56384
id ftdatacite:10.26190/unsworks/19064
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic RNA-seq
Antarctic microorganism
OB-fold
Ribosomal protein L5
RlmD
RumA
psychrophile
spellingShingle RNA-seq
Antarctic microorganism
OB-fold
Ribosomal protein L5
RlmD
RumA
psychrophile
Taha, Taha
Characterization of a single TRAM domain RNA-binding protein from the Antarctic methanogen Methanococcoides burtonii
topic_facet RNA-seq
Antarctic microorganism
OB-fold
Ribosomal protein L5
RlmD
RumA
psychrophile
description Methanococcoides burtonii, a methanogen that was isolated from Ace Lake, Antarctica, has proven to be a useful model for studying the molecular mechanisms of cold adaptation in Archaea. In Ace Lake, M. burtonii only experiences temperatures below 4 degrees and nucleic acid binding proteins have been inferred to play important roles in cold adaptation. In this thesis, the three M. burtonii ctr (cold-responsive TRAM domain) genes (proteins) Mbur_0304, Mbur_0604 and Mbur_1445 are referred to as ctr1 (Ctr1), ctr2 (Ctr2) and ctr3 (Ctr3), respectively. The thesis reports the first experimental studies to assess evolutionary, biophysical and structural properties and unique characteristics related to nucleic acid binding, including specific interactions describing putative roles of Ctr3 in the cell. During purification, E. coli nucleic acids consistently co-purified with recombinant Ctr3. The liberated nucleic acid from proteins was able to be digested with RNase indicating the bound nucleic acid was RNA. The bound RNA was able to be removed by treating the recombinant proteins with mild urea to partially unfold the protein, eluting the protein across a NaCl gradient, and refolding it by dialysis. Purification of recombinant RNA-free proteins allowed thorough assessment of the structure-function-stability relationship of Ctr3. Ctr3 unfolded reversibly with a two-state mechanism (Tm of ~ 50 degrees). The predicted three-dimensional structure of Ctr3 exhibited substantial structural similarities with the TRAM domain of RumA protein (RlmD) from E. coli. The aromatic residues, particularly the four phenylalanine residues of Ctr3 appeared to be surface exposed and in close proximity to each other on the putative RNA-binding surface, similar to the aromatic residues in RumA-TRAM domain, suggesting similar roles in RNA interaction. An on-column in vitro binding assay was used to capture M. burtonii RNA targets of Ctr3, and analysed relative to a complete reconstruction of the M. burtonii transcriptome obtained from total RNA. Identification of the captured RNA using RNA-seq revealed that Ctr3 bound M. burtonii RNA with a preference for tRNA and 5S rRNA, and a potential binding motif was identified. In tRNA, the motif represented the C loop; a region that is conserved in tRNA from all domains of life and appears to be solvent exposed, potentially providing access for Ctr3 to bind. In 5S rRNA, the motif represented one side of the stem and loop C which also appears to be solvent exposed providing possible access to Ctr3. At low temperatures, nucleic acids are prone to form stable secondary structures which consequently impede transcriptional and translational processes in the cell. In Bacteria, a family of cold shock proteins (Csp) has been postulated to resolve inhibitory structures of nucleic acids; thereby facilitating transcription and translation at low temperatures. However, while being ubiquitous in bacterial genomes, only a few csp homologs have been identified in psychrophilic Archaea; and csp genes are absent from the M. burtonii genome. The first insight into which genes in Archaea may perform an analogous function to csp genes came from proteomic analyses of M. burtonii where the increased abundance of Ctr proteins at low temperature was identified (Williams et al., 2011). The highest levels of these Ctr proteins occurred at 1 and -2 degrees and in particular, Ctr3 exhibited the highest increases (9-fold) at -2 degrees. Ctr3 and Csps both form a beta-barrel shape with anti-parallel beta-sheets that form a nucleic acid binding surface. The broad representation of single TRAM domain proteins within Archaea compared to their apparent absence in Bacteria, and scarcity of Csps in Archaea but prevalence in Bacteria, suggests they represent distinct evolutionary lineages of functionally equivalent RNA-binding proteins. Although, there is little sequence identity among TRAM domain and Csp proteins, based on evolutionary and tertiary structural analyses, both proteins are inferred to play important roles in cold adaptation, including low temperature translation.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Taha, Taha
author_facet Taha, Taha
author_sort Taha, Taha
title Characterization of a single TRAM domain RNA-binding protein from the Antarctic methanogen Methanococcoides burtonii
title_short Characterization of a single TRAM domain RNA-binding protein from the Antarctic methanogen Methanococcoides burtonii
title_full Characterization of a single TRAM domain RNA-binding protein from the Antarctic methanogen Methanococcoides burtonii
title_fullStr Characterization of a single TRAM domain RNA-binding protein from the Antarctic methanogen Methanococcoides burtonii
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of a single TRAM domain RNA-binding protein from the Antarctic methanogen Methanococcoides burtonii
title_sort characterization of a single tram domain rna-binding protein from the antarctic methanogen methanococcoides burtonii
publisher UNSW Sydney
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.26190/unsworks/19064
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/56384
long_lat ENVELOPE(78.188,78.188,-68.472,-68.472)
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
Ace Lake
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
Ace Lake
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/au/
cc by-nc-nd 3.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26190/unsworks/19064
_version_ 1766101956002054144
spelling ftdatacite:10.26190/unsworks/19064 2023-05-15T13:38:09+02:00 Characterization of a single TRAM domain RNA-binding protein from the Antarctic methanogen Methanococcoides burtonii Taha, Taha 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.26190/unsworks/19064 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/56384 unknown UNSW Sydney https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/au/ cc by-nc-nd 3.0 CC-BY-NC-ND RNA-seq Antarctic microorganism OB-fold Ribosomal protein L5 RlmD RumA psychrophile Dissertation thesis Thesis doctoral thesis 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.26190/unsworks/19064 2022-04-01T18:57:04Z Methanococcoides burtonii, a methanogen that was isolated from Ace Lake, Antarctica, has proven to be a useful model for studying the molecular mechanisms of cold adaptation in Archaea. In Ace Lake, M. burtonii only experiences temperatures below 4 degrees and nucleic acid binding proteins have been inferred to play important roles in cold adaptation. In this thesis, the three M. burtonii ctr (cold-responsive TRAM domain) genes (proteins) Mbur_0304, Mbur_0604 and Mbur_1445 are referred to as ctr1 (Ctr1), ctr2 (Ctr2) and ctr3 (Ctr3), respectively. The thesis reports the first experimental studies to assess evolutionary, biophysical and structural properties and unique characteristics related to nucleic acid binding, including specific interactions describing putative roles of Ctr3 in the cell. During purification, E. coli nucleic acids consistently co-purified with recombinant Ctr3. The liberated nucleic acid from proteins was able to be digested with RNase indicating the bound nucleic acid was RNA. The bound RNA was able to be removed by treating the recombinant proteins with mild urea to partially unfold the protein, eluting the protein across a NaCl gradient, and refolding it by dialysis. Purification of recombinant RNA-free proteins allowed thorough assessment of the structure-function-stability relationship of Ctr3. Ctr3 unfolded reversibly with a two-state mechanism (Tm of ~ 50 degrees). The predicted three-dimensional structure of Ctr3 exhibited substantial structural similarities with the TRAM domain of RumA protein (RlmD) from E. coli. The aromatic residues, particularly the four phenylalanine residues of Ctr3 appeared to be surface exposed and in close proximity to each other on the putative RNA-binding surface, similar to the aromatic residues in RumA-TRAM domain, suggesting similar roles in RNA interaction. An on-column in vitro binding assay was used to capture M. burtonii RNA targets of Ctr3, and analysed relative to a complete reconstruction of the M. burtonii transcriptome obtained from total RNA. Identification of the captured RNA using RNA-seq revealed that Ctr3 bound M. burtonii RNA with a preference for tRNA and 5S rRNA, and a potential binding motif was identified. In tRNA, the motif represented the C loop; a region that is conserved in tRNA from all domains of life and appears to be solvent exposed, potentially providing access for Ctr3 to bind. In 5S rRNA, the motif represented one side of the stem and loop C which also appears to be solvent exposed providing possible access to Ctr3. At low temperatures, nucleic acids are prone to form stable secondary structures which consequently impede transcriptional and translational processes in the cell. In Bacteria, a family of cold shock proteins (Csp) has been postulated to resolve inhibitory structures of nucleic acids; thereby facilitating transcription and translation at low temperatures. However, while being ubiquitous in bacterial genomes, only a few csp homologs have been identified in psychrophilic Archaea; and csp genes are absent from the M. burtonii genome. The first insight into which genes in Archaea may perform an analogous function to csp genes came from proteomic analyses of M. burtonii where the increased abundance of Ctr proteins at low temperature was identified (Williams et al., 2011). The highest levels of these Ctr proteins occurred at 1 and -2 degrees and in particular, Ctr3 exhibited the highest increases (9-fold) at -2 degrees. Ctr3 and Csps both form a beta-barrel shape with anti-parallel beta-sheets that form a nucleic acid binding surface. The broad representation of single TRAM domain proteins within Archaea compared to their apparent absence in Bacteria, and scarcity of Csps in Archaea but prevalence in Bacteria, suggests they represent distinct evolutionary lineages of functionally equivalent RNA-binding proteins. Although, there is little sequence identity among TRAM domain and Csp proteins, based on evolutionary and tertiary structural analyses, both proteins are inferred to play important roles in cold adaptation, including low temperature translation. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic The Antarctic Ace Lake ENVELOPE(78.188,78.188,-68.472,-68.472)