Human 17S U2 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Current revision (18:22, 30 November 2025) (edit) (undo)
 
(5 intermediate revisions not shown.)
Line 1: Line 1:
==PDB ID - 6Y5Q Course Code: BI3323-Aug2025==
==PDB ID - 6Y5Q Course Code: BI3323-Aug2025==
-
<Structure load='6Y5Q' size='350' frame='true' align='right' caption='Human U2 snRNP' scene='Insert optional scene name here' />
+
<StructureSection load='6Y5Q' size='350' side='right' caption='Human U2 snRNP' (PDB entry [[6Y5Q]])' scene=''>
The 17S U2 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) is a critical precursor complex in pre-mRNA splicing, primarily responsible for recognizing the intron branch-site adenosine (BS-A). Its structure is highly regulated, defining a pre-catalytic state that must undergo significant remodelling for splicing to occur.
The 17S U2 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) is a critical precursor complex in pre-mRNA splicing, primarily responsible for recognizing the intron branch-site adenosine (BS-A). Its structure is highly regulated, defining a pre-catalytic state that must undergo significant remodelling for splicing to occur.
==Architectural Blueprint ==
==Architectural Blueprint ==
The 17S U2 snRNP exhibits a bipartite structure linked by three molecular bridges, composed of a rigid core and flexible components:
The 17S U2 snRNP exhibits a bipartite structure linked by three molecular bridges, composed of a rigid core and flexible components:
-
* '''5′ Domain (The Rigid Core)''' dominated by the SF3b complex (SF3B1, SF3B3, PHF5A, SF3B5). The overall SF3b core structure remains rigid and functional upon 17S U2 assembly. SF3B1, a key protein, adopts an open conformation in this complex, making the binding site accessible to splicing modulators (e.g., pladienolide B).
+
* '''5′ Domain (The Rigid Core)''' dominated by the SF3b complex (SF3B1, SF3B3, PHF5A, SF3B5). The overall SF3b core structure remains rigid and functional upon 17S U2 assembly. <scene name='10/1096875/Sf3b1/1'>SF3B1</scene>, a key protein, adopts an open conformation in this complex, making the binding site accessible to splicing modulators (e.g., pladienolide B).
* '''3′ Domain (The Flexible Part)''' which contains the Sm core and stem–loops III–IV of the U2 snRNA, bound by the proteins U2-A′ and U2-B″ and is connected to the 5’ domain by three molecular bridges.
* '''3′ Domain (The Flexible Part)''' which contains the Sm core and stem–loops III–IV of the U2 snRNA, bound by the proteins U2-A′ and U2-B″ and is connected to the 5’ domain by three molecular bridges.
Line 11: Line 11:
A critical feature of the 17S U2 structure is the sequestration of the U2 snRNA region that interacts with the intron. This ensures recognition only occurs at the correct time. This is comprises of:
A critical feature of the 17S U2 structure is the sequestration of the U2 snRNA region that interacts with the intron. This ensures recognition only occurs at the correct time. This is comprises of:
* '''Formation of the BSL:''' The U2 snRNA forms an 8 bp Branchpoint-interacting Stem-Loop (BSL) adjacent to the C-terminal HEAT repeats of SF3B1
* '''Formation of the BSL:''' The U2 snRNA forms an 8 bp Branchpoint-interacting Stem-Loop (BSL) adjacent to the C-terminal HEAT repeats of SF3B1
-
* ''' Inaccessible Loop:''' The BSL loop is tightly sandwiched between the C-terminal SF3B1 HEAT repeats, PRP5, and TAT-SF1, rendering it physically inaccessible and preventing premature pairing with the intron branch site
+
* ''' Inaccessible Loop:''' The BSL loop is tightly sandwiched between the C-terminal SF3B1 HEAT repeats, PRP5, and <scene name='10/1096875/Tat-sf1/4'>TAT-SF1</scene>, rendering it physically inaccessible and preventing premature pairing with the intron branch site
* '''Stabilizing Components:''' A short separator helix of SF3A3 enforces the BSL's 8 bp length, stabilizing its position with respect to SLIIa.
* '''Stabilizing Components:''' A short separator helix of SF3A3 enforces the BSL's 8 bp length, stabilizing its position with respect to SLIIa.
Line 22: Line 22:
== Spliceosome Activation and Disease Relevance==
== Spliceosome Activation and Disease Relevance==
Productive splicing requires a major restructuring of the U2 snRNP driven by the displacement of BSL-associated proteins and a conformational change in SF3B1.
Productive splicing requires a major restructuring of the U2 snRNP driven by the displacement of BSL-associated proteins and a conformational change in SF3B1.
-
* '''Conformational Switch:''' Release of the BSL allows the U2 5′ region to rotate and form the extended U2–BS helix. This pairing and the subsequent docking of the BS-A trigger the SF3B1 HEAT domain to close around the U2–BS helix, forming a critical pocket that locks the complex into the active state.
+
* '''Conformational Switch:''' Release of the BSL allows the U2 5′ region to rotate and form the extended U2–BS helix. This pairing and the subsequent docking of the BS-A trigger the SF3B1 HEAT domain to close around the U2–BS helix, forming a critical pocket that locks the complex into the active state.
* '''SF3B1 and Cancer:''' SF3B1 is a common mutational target in haematopoietic cancers. Many cancer-associated SF3B1 mutations cluster near HR6, adjacent to PRP5-interacting regions, suggesting these mutations may disrupt the crucial PRP5 binding and RNP remodeling steps, leading to splicing defects implicated in disease.
* '''SF3B1 and Cancer:''' SF3B1 is a common mutational target in haematopoietic cancers. Many cancer-associated SF3B1 mutations cluster near HR6, adjacent to PRP5-interacting regions, suggesting these mutations may disrupt the crucial PRP5 binding and RNP remodeling steps, leading to splicing defects implicated in disease.

Current revision

PDB ID - 6Y5Q Course Code: BI3323-Aug2025

Human U2 snRNP

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Ananya Datta

Personal tools