4.8 Article

Nuclear and cytoplasmic poly(A) binding proteins (PABPs) favor distinct transcripts and isoforms

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 50, Issue 8, Pages 4685-4702

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkac263

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R35 GM127012, R01 HG011864]
  2. UCSD Cellular and Molecular Genetics Training Program through National Institute of General Medicine [T32 GM007240]
  3. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-2038238, DGE-1650112]
  4. National Institutes of Health SIG grant [S10 OD026929]

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This study analyzed the RNAs bound by endogenous PABPN or PABPC in human cells, revealing the different preferences of various transcripts for these proteins and shedding light on their roles in poly(A)-tail synthesis, maintenance, and function.
The poly(A)-tail appended to the 3 '-end of most eukaryotic transcripts plays a key role in their stability, nuclear transport, and translation. These roles are largely mediated by Poly(A) Binding Proteins (PABPs) that coat poly(A)-tails and interact with various proteins involved in the biogenesis and function of RNA. While it is well-established that the nuclear PABP (PABPN) binds newly synthesized poly(A)-tails and is replaced by the cytoplasmic PABP (PABPC) on transcripts exported to the cytoplasm, the distribution of transcripts for different genes or isoforms of the same gene on these PABPs has not been investigated on a genome-wide scale. Here, we analyzed the identity, splicing status, poly(A)-tail size, and translation status of RNAs co-immunoprecipitated with endogenous PABPN or PABPC in human cells. At steady state, many protein-coding and non-coding RNAs exhibit strong bias for association with PABPN or PABPC. While PABPN-enriched transcripts more often were incompletely spliced and harbored longer poly(A)-tails and PABPC-enriched RNAs had longer half-lives and higher translation efficiency, there are curious outliers. Overall, our study reveals the landscape of RNAs bound by PABPN and PABPC, providing new details that support and advance the current understanding of the roles these proteins play in poly(A)-tail synthesis, maintenance, and function.

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