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Coding region polyadenylation generates a truncated tRNA synthetase that counters translation repression

Authors: 
Yao P, Potdar AA, Arif A, Ray PS, Mukhopadhyay R, Willard B, Xu Y, Yan J, Saidel GM, Fox PL
Citation: 
Cell. 2012 Mar 30;149(1):88-100. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2012.02.018. Epub 2012 Mar 1
Abstract: 
Posttranscriptional regulatory mechanisms superimpose \"fine-tuning\" control upon \"on-off\" switches characteristic of gene transcription. We have exploited computational modeling with experimental validation to resolve an anomalous relationship between mRNA expression and protein synthesis. The GAIT (gamma-interferon-activated inhibitor of translation) complex repressed VEGF-A synthesis to a low, constant rate independent of VEGF-A mRNA expression levels. Dynamic model simulations predicted an inhibitory GAIT-element-interacting factor to account for this relationship and led to the identification of a truncated form of glutamyl-prolyl tRNA synthetase (EPRS), a GAIT constituent that mediates binding to target transcripts. The truncated protein, EPRS(N1), shields GAIT-element-bearing transcripts from the inhibitory GAIT complex, thereby dictating a \"translational trickle\" of GAIT target proteins. EPRS(N1) mRNA is generated by polyadenylation-directed conversion of a Tyr codon in the EPRS-coding sequence to a stop codon (PAY(∗)). Genome-wide analysis revealed multiple candidate PAY(∗) targets, including the authenticated target RRM1, suggesting a general mechanism for production of C terminus-truncated regulatory proteins.
Organism or Cell Type: 
cell culture: U937 and human PBM
Delivery Method: 
Electroporation