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The RNA1 gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is defined by the temperature-sensitive rna1-1 mutation that interferes with the maturation and/or nucleocytoplasmic transport of RNA. We describe the purification of a 44-kDa protein from the evolutionary distant fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe and the cloning and sequence analysis of the corresponding gene. Although this protein shares only 42% sequence identity with the RNA1 gene product, it represents a functional homologue because the expression of the S. pombe gene in S. cerevisiae complements the rna1-1 defect. Disruption in S. pombe of the gene encoding the 44-kDa protein, for which we propose the name S. pombe rna1p, reveals that it is essential for growth. Our analysis of purified S. pombe rna1p represents the first biochemical characterization of an RNA1 gene product and reveals that it is a monomeric protein of globular shape. Cell fractionation and immunofluorescence microscopy indicate that rna1p is a cytoplasmic protein possibly enriched in the nuclear periphery. We identify a sequence motif of 29 residues, which is rich in leucine and repeated eight times both in S. pombe and in S. cerevisiae rna1p. Similar leucine-rich repeats present in a series of other proteins, e.g., the mammalian ribonuclease/angiogenin inhibitor, adenylyl cyclase from S. cerevisiae, the toll protein from Drosophila melanogaster, and the sds22 protein phosphatase regulatory subunit from S. pombe, are thought to be involved in protein-protein interactions. Thus rna1p may act as a scaffold protein possibly interacting in the nuclear periphery with a protein ligand that could be associated with exported RNA.
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