4.3 Article

Systematic analysis of the contribution of c-myc mRNA constituents upon cap and IRES mediated translation

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 396, Issue 12, Pages 1301-1313

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/hsz-2015-0190

Keywords

cordycepin; c-myc mRNA; CRD-BP/IMP1; glucose starvation; translation

Funding

  1. Greek Ministry of Health
  2. Hellenic Anticancer Institute

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Fine tuning of c-MYC expression is critical for its action and is achieved by several regulatory mechanisms. The contribution of c-myc mRNA regulatory sequences on its translational control has been investigated individually. However, putative interactions have not been addressed so far. The effect of these interactions upon the translatability of monocistronic and bicistronic chimaeric mRNAs, carrying combinations of the c-myc mRNA 5'-untranlated region (UTR), 3'-UTR, and coding region instability element (CRD) was investigated on this study. The presence of the 5'-UTR induced an increase in translatability of 50%. The presence of the CRD element, when in frame, reduced translatability by approximately 50%, regardless of the expression levels of the wild type CRD-binding protein (CRD-BP/IMP1). Conversely, overexpression of a mutated CRD-BP/IMP1 (Y396F) further impeded translation of the chimaeric mRNAs carrying its cognate sequences. The presence of the c-myc 3'-UTR increased translatability by approximately 300% affecting both cap and c-myc internal ribosome entry site (IRES) mediated translation. In addition, 3'-UTR rescued the cap mediated translation in the presence of the polyadenylation inhibitor cordycepin. Furthermore, the 3'-UTR rescued cap mediated translation under metabolic stress conditions and this was enhanced in the absence of a long poly (A) tail.

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