Rnt1p is an RNase III homolog from budding yeast,
required for processing snRNAs, snoRNAs, and rRNA. Numerous
Rnt1p RNA substrates share potential to form a duplex structure
with a terminal four-base loop with the sequence AGNN.
Using a synthetic RNA modeled after the 25S rRNA 3′
ETS cleavage site we find that the AGNN loop is an important
determinant of substrate selectivity. When this loop sequence
is altered, the rate of Rnt1p cleavage is reduced. The
reduction in cleavage rate can be attributed to reduced
binding of the mutant substrate as measured by a gel-shift
assay. Deletion of the nonconserved N-terminal domain of
Rnt1p does not affect cleavage site choice or the ability
of the enzyme to distinguish substrates that contain the
AGNN loop, indicating that this region is not required
for selective cleavage. Strikingly, a recombinant fragment
of Rnt1p containing little more than the dsRBD is able
to discriminate between wild-type and mutant loop sequences
in a binding assay. We propose that a major determinant
of AGNN loop recognition by Rnt1p is present in its dsRBD.