Telomerase RNA is an essential component of the ribonucleoprotein
enzyme involved in telomere length maintenance, a process
implicated in cellular senescence and cancer. Vertebrate telomerase
RNAs contain a box H/ACA snoRNA motif that is not required for
telomerase activity in vitro but is essential in vivo. Using
the Xenopus oocyte system, we have found that the box
H/ACA motif functions in the subcellular localization of telomerase
RNA. We have characterized the transport and biogenesis of
telomerase RNA by injecting labeled wild-type and variant RNAs
into Xenopus oocytes and assaying nucleocytoplasmic
distribution, intranuclear localization, modification, and protein
binding. Although yeast telomerase RNA shares characteristics
of spliceosomal snRNAs, we show that human telomerase RNA is
not associated with Sm proteins or efficiently imported into
the nucleus. In contrast, the transport properties of vertebrate
telomerase RNA resemble those of snoRNAs; telomerase RNA is
retained in the nucleus and targeted to nucleoli. Furthermore,
both nuclear retention and nucleolar localization depend on
the box H/ACA motif. Our findings suggest that the H/ACA motif
confers functional localization of vertebrate telomerase RNAs
to the nucleus, the compartment where telomeres are synthesized.
We have also found that telomerase RNA localizes to Cajal bodies,
intranuclear structures where it is thought that assembly of
various cellular RNPs takes place. Our results identify the
Cajal body as a potential site of telomerase RNP biogenesis.