4.7 Article

Translational coregulation of 5′TOP mRNAs by TIA-1 and TIAR

Journal

GENES & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 25, Issue 19, Pages 2057-2068

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gad.17355911

Keywords

5 ' TOP; TIA-1; TIAR; translation regulation

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 GM077243]
  2. American Cancer Society [RSG GMC111896]
  3. Alfred Benzon Foundation (Copenhagen, Denmark)
  4. Danish National Research Council (FNU)
  5. The Lundbeck Foundation (Denmark)
  6. Novo Nordisk Foundation (Denmark)

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The response of cells to changes in their environment often requires coregulation of gene networks, but little is known about how this can occur at the post-transcriptional level. An important example of post-transcriptional coregulation is the selective translational regulation in response to growth conditions of mammalian mRNAs that encode protein biosynthesis factors and contain hallmark 5'-terminal oligopyrimidine tracts (5'TOP). However, the responsible trans-factors and the mechanism by which they coregulate 5'TOP mRNAs have remained elusive. Here we identify stress granule-associated TIA-1 and TIAR proteins as key factors in human 5'TOP mRNA regulation, which upon amino acid starvation assemble onto the 5' end of 5'TOP mRNAs and arrest translation at the initiation step, as evidenced by TIA-1/TIAR-dependent 5'TOP mRNA translation repression, polysome release, and accumulation in stress granules. This requires starvation-mediated activation of the GCN2 (general control nonderepressible 2) kinase and inactivation of the mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) signaling pathway. Our findings provide a mechanistic explanation to the long-standing question of how the network of 5'TOP mRNAs are coregulated according to amino acid availability, thereby allowing redirection of limited resources to mount a nutrient deprivation response. This presents a fundamental example of how a group of mRNAs can be translationally coregulated in response to changes in the cellular environment.

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