Maturation of the large subunit rRNAs includes a series of
cleavages that result in removal of the internal transcribed
spacer (ITS2) that separates mature 5.8S and 25/28S rRNAs. Previous
work demonstrated that formation of higher order secondary
structure within the assembling pre-ribosomal particle is a
prerequisite for accurate and efficient pre-rRNA processing.
To date, it is not clear which specific sequences or secondary
structures are required for processing. Two alternative secondary
structure models exist for Saccharomyces cerevisiae
ITS2. Chemical and enzymatic structure probing and phylogenetic
comparisons resulted in one structure (Yeh & Lee, J
Mol Biol, 1990, 211:699–712) referred to
here as the “hairpin model.” More recently, an
alternate folded structure was proposed (Joseph et al., Nucleic
Acids Res, 1999, 27:4533–4540), called here
the “ring model.” We have used a functional genetic
assay to examine the potential significance of these predicted
structures in processing. Our data indicate that elements of
both structural models are important in efficient processing.
Mutations that prevent formation of ring-specific structures
completely blocked production of mature 25S rRNA, whereas those
that primarily disrupt hairpin elements resulted in reduced
levels of mature product. Based on these results, we propose
a dynamic conformational model for the role of ITS2 in processing:
Initial formation of the ring structure may be required for
essential, early events in processing complex assembly and may
be followed by an induced transition to the hairpin structure
that facilitates subsequent processing events. In this model,
yeast ITS2 elements may provide in cis certain of the
functions proposed for vertebrate U8 snoRNA acting in trans.