4.7 Article

Ribosomal RACK1 Regulates the Dendritic Arborization by Repressing FMRP Activity

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms231911857

Keywords

neuron differentiation; RACK1; FMRP; translation; ribosomes; neurons; neuroblastoma

Funding

  1. National Health Institute [R15NS098389]
  2. FRAXA Foundation
  3. PRIN2020 [2020JF3R9K]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study reveals a mechanism by which FMRP regulates the localization of translational machinery and its translation activity of specific mRNAs by interacting with RACK1. These findings provide new insights into the altered development in Fragile X syndrome.
FMRP is an RNA-binding protein that represses the translation of specific mRNAs. In neurons, its depletion determines the exaggerated translation of mRNAs leading to dendritic and axonal aberrant development, two peculiar features of Fragile X syndrome patients. However, how FMRP binds to translational machinery to regulate the translation of its mRNA targets is not yet fully understood. Here, we show that FMRP localizes on translational machinery by interacting with the ribosomal binding protein, Receptor for Activated C Kinase 1 (RACK1). The binding of FMRP to RACK1 removes the translational repressive activity of FMRP and promotes the translation of PSD-95 mRNA, one specific target of FMRP. This binding also results in a reduction in the level of FMRP phosphorylation. We also find that the morphological abnormalities induced by Fmr1 siRNA in cortical neurons are rescued by the overexpression of a mutant form of RACK1 that cannot bind ribosomes. Thus, these results provide a new mechanism underlying FMRP activity that contributes to altered development in FXS. Moreover, these data confirm the role of ribosomal RACK1 as a ribosomal scaffold for RNA binding proteins.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available