Login / Signup

A Kinase and a Glycosylase Catabolize Pseudouridine in the Peroxisome to Prevent Toxic Pseudouridine Monophosphate Accumulation.

Mingjia ChenClaus-Peter Witte
Published in: The Plant cell (2020)
Pseudouridine (Ψ) is a frequent nucleoside modification that occurs in both noncoding RNAs and mRNAs. In pseudouridine, C5 of uracil is attached to the Rib via an unusual C-glycosidic bond. This RNA modification is introduced on the RNA by site-specific transglycosylation of uridine (U), a process mediated by pseudouridine synthases. RNA is subject to constant turnover, releasing free pseudouridine, but the metabolic fate of pseudouridine in eukaryotes is unclear. Here, we show that in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), pseudouridine is catabolized in the peroxisome by (1) a pseudouridine kinase (PUKI) from the PfkB family that generates 5'-pseudouridine monophosphate (5'-ΨMP) and (2) a ΨMP glycosylase (PUMY) that hydrolyzes ΨMP to uracil and ribose-5-phosphate. Compromising pseudouridine catabolism leads to strong pseudouridine accumulation and increased ΨMP content. ΨMP is toxic, causing delayed germination and growth inhibition, but compromising pseudouridine catabolism does not affect the Ψ/U ratios in RNA. The bipartite peroxisomal PUKI and PUMY are conserved in plants and algae, whereas some fungi and most animals (except mammals) possess a PUMY-PUKI fusion protein, likely in mitochondria. We propose that vacuolar turnover of ribosomal RNA produces most of the pseudouridine pool via 3'-ΨMP, which is imported through the cytosol into the peroxisomes for degradation by PUKI and PUMY, a process involving a toxic 5'-ΨMP intermediate.
Keyphrases
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • oxidative stress