In yeast, the 5′ end of the mature 18S rRNA
is generated by endonucleolytic cleavage at site A1,
the position of which is specified by two distinct signals.
An evolutionarily conserved sequence immediately upstream
of the cleavage site has previously been shown to constitute
one of these signals. We report here that a conserved stem-loop
structure within the 5′ region of the 18S rRNA is
recognized as a second positioning signal. Mutations predicted
to either extend or destabilize the stem inhibited the
normal positioning of site A1 from within the
18S rRNA sequence, as did substitution of the loop nucleotides.
In addition, these mutations destabilized the mature 18S
rRNA, indicating that recognition of the stem-loop structure
is also required for 18S rRNA stability. Several mutations
tested reduced the efficiency of pre-rRNA cleavage at site
A1. There was, however, a poor correlation between
the effects of the different mutations on the efficiency
of cleavage and on the choice of cleavage site, indicating
that these involve recognition of the stem-loop region
by distinct factors. In contrast, the cleavages at sites
A1 and A2 are coupled and the positioning
signals appear to be similar, suggesting that both cleavages
may be carried out by the same endonuclease.