Evolution of the ubiquitin fold of the intron-specific splicing factor Sde2
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IISER Mohali
Abstract
Sde2 is an intron-specific pre-mRNA splicing regulator that is synthesized as precursor
with a N-terminal ubiquitin fold (Sde2-UBL). Despite having a poor similarity (less than
20%) to ubiquitin, this UBL gets processed by the deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) Ubp5
and Ubp15 in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Post-processing, an activated C-terminal
domain of Sde2 (Sde2-C) is formed which has been shown to enter the spliceosome and is
involved in the pre-mRNA splicing of a specific set of introns in a subset of genes. Unlike
ubiquitin, which is a highly conserved protein, Sde2-UBL is poorly conserved across
eukaryotic kingdom. Even amongst the species of the same genera like
Schizosaccharomyces, the conservation is very poor. The Sde2-UBL is also less conserved
than Sde2-C. This study suggest that Sde2-UBL evolved rapidly from ubiquitin, possibly
because the ubiquitin–Sde2-C precursor was inhibitory to cell growth. This rapidly
evolving molecule nevertheless remained under selection pressure of retaining the
ubiquitin fold, for allowing DUB-specific cleavage activating the spliceosomal Sde2-C.
We have also shown that the UBL region of Sde2 seems to have evolved faster than the C terminal. We also analyzed the evolutionary phylogeny of Sde2 across different organisms.