scholarly journals Intricate regulation of ribosome biogenesis genes in response to mTORC1 signaling

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanjay Kumar ◽  
Muneera Mashkoor ◽  
Priya Balamurugan ◽  
Anne Grove

SummaryGenes encoding ribosomal proteins are repressed in response to inhibition of mTORC1. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, this involves dissociation of the activator Ifh1p in a process that depends on Utp22p, a protein that also functions in pre-rRNA processing. Ifh1p has a paralog, Crf1p, which can mediate mTORC1 inhibition by acting as a repressor. Ifh1p and Crf1p derive from a common ancestor, which may have acted as both an activator and a repressor. We report here that UTP22 and RRP7, which encodes another pre-rRNA processing factor, are controlled by mTORC1; both gene promoters are bound by Ifh1p, which dissociates on mTORC1 inhibition. Notably, Crf1p acts as an activator as evidenced by reduced expression in a crf1Δ strain. By contrast, Crf1p is required to repress expression of HMO1, which encodes a cofactor involved in communicating mTORC1 activity to target genes. Our data therefore indicate that Crf1p exhibits the dual repressor/activator functions of the Ifh1p-Crf1p ancestor.

Blood ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 130 (Suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 83-83
Author(s):  
Ismael Boussaid ◽  
Salome Le Goff ◽  
Celia Floquet ◽  
Anna Raimbault ◽  
Charlotte Andrieu-Soler ◽  
...  

Abstract Haploinsufficiency in genes encoding ribosomal proteins (RP) or ribosome-associated proteins either by mutation or deletion leads to a predominant erythroid phenotype. In acquired 5q- myelodysplasic syndrome (MDS), the macrocytic anemia has been linked to the monoallelic deletion of RPS14 gene which results in altered ribosome biogenesis. Because of the defective maturation of the small 40S ribosome subunit, the RPL5/RPL11/5SrARN complex, normally involved in the assembly of the large 60S subunit assembly, accumulates and inhibits E3-ligase-HDM2 leading to the stabilization and activation of p53 resultig in cell cycle arrest, increased apoptosis and defective differentiation of maturing erythroblasts. In the present work, we hypothesized that p53 could play a key role in the control of normal erythroid differentiation by ribosome biogenesis and we further investigated the involvement of the decreased pool of ribosome on erythroid defects in the 5q- syndrome. To investigate the first hypothesis, we studied the kinetics of ribosome biogenesis in human primary erythroblasts by mass spectrometry after pulse-SILAC. We noted that ribosome renewal collapses begining at the polychromatophilic erythroblast stage. We subsequently used the pharmacological agent CX-5461 to inhibit RNA polymerase I. When ribosome biogenesis in proerythroblasts is blocked by CX-5461, p53 is activated and proerythroblasts enter the terminal differentiation by expressing GATA1-erythroid target genes without apoptosis. By ChIP-seq in primary erythroblasts, we demonstrated that p53 binds to 1289 genes including 263 genes specifically activated by CX-5461, 6 of them being upregulated during CX-5461-induced erythroid differentiation and 3 of them being known GATA1 targets. We further used an shRNA strategy to demonstrate that one of these genes is required to permit entry into terminal erythroid differentiation when ribosome biogenesis is abrogated. We thus showed that normal erythroid differentiation is controlled by ribosome biogenesis through a p53-dependent checkpoint. In 5q- syndrome, ribosome biogenesis is continuously decreased along all stages of erythropoiesis and in contrast to the normal conditions, erythroid differentiation is defective with an excess of apoptosis affecting mature erythroblasts. We previously reported that GATA1 is targeted by a caspase-dependent cleavage since GATA1 is not protected by its chaperone HSP70 in the nucleus of MDS erythroblasts. We confirmed that GATA1 protein is decreased in 5q- primary erythroblasts and in RPS14 shRNA-expressing normal erythroblasts. To obtain further insights into the defective erythroid maturation of RPS14-deleted erythroblasts, we developed an inducible shRNA to RPS14 in the UT7/Epo cell line. Polysome profiling confirmed the decrease of 40S subunit and absolute quantification of RP by deep proteomics demonstrated a 50% decrease of RPS in conjunction with 50% reduction of ribosome content in these cells. GATA1 expression was decreased and was only partially rescued by treatment with either caspase inhibitor qVD or proteasome inhibitor, bortezomib. We then tested the hypothesis of a decrease in GATA1 translation, as previously shown in a shRNA RPS19 Diamond-Blackfan model, by analyzing and comparing the global transcriptome and the translatome corresponding to transcripts present in high molecular weight polysomes using Affymetrix HTA 2.0 microarrays. We observed a decoupling between transcriptome and translatome suggesting a selectivity of translational defects. Thermodynamic characteristics i.e. the fold energy, energy per base and length of the 3'UTR and the energy per base of the 5'UTR (Vienna RNA Package, UCSC genome browser) were the determinants of transcript selection on the polysome. The shortest transcripts with a highly structured 3'UTR including GATA1 were the transcripts which were less effectively translated. Consistently, the diminution of GATA1 protein was associated with a decrease of its target genes. Our results suggest that GATA1 is a potentially interesting therapeutic target. In summary, our results show that ribosome biogenesis controls erythroid differentiation via a p53-dependent transcriptional regulation and that a reduction of the ribosome pool leads to a selective translation at the expense of erythroid master gene GATA1. Disclosures Fontenay: Celgene: Research Funding.


2004 ◽  
Vol 24 (24) ◽  
pp. 10766-10776 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng Fang ◽  
Jason Hoskins ◽  
J. Scott Butler

ABSTRACT The antimetabolite 5-fluorouracil (5FU) is a widely used chemotherapeutic for the treatment of solid tumors. Although 5FU slows DNA synthesis by inhibiting the ability of thymidylate synthetase to produce dTMP, the drug also has significant effects on RNA metabolism. Recent genome-wide assays for 5FU-induced haploinsufficiency in Saccharomyces cerevisiae identified genes encoding components of the RNA processing exosome as potential targets of the drug. In this report, we used DNA microarrays to analyze the effect of 5FU on the yeast transcriptome and found that the drug causes the accumulation of polyadenylated fragments of the 27S rRNA precursor and that defects in the nuclear exoribonuclease Rrp6p enhance this effect. The size distribution of these RNAs and their sensitivity to Rrp6p suggest that they are normally degraded by the nuclear exosome and a 5′-3′ exoribonuclease. Consistent with this hypothesis, 5FU inhibits the growth of RRP6 mutants with defects in the degradation function of the enzyme and it interferes with the degradation of an rRNA precursor. The detection of poly(A)+ pre-RNAs in strains defective in various steps in ribosome biogenesis suggests that the production of poly(A)+ pre-rRNAs may be a general result of defects in rRNA processing. These findings suggest that 5FU inhibits an exosome-dependent surveillance pathway that degrades polyadenylated precursor rRNAs.


eLife ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Blake W Tye ◽  
Nicoletta Commins ◽  
Lillia V Ryazanova ◽  
Martin Wühr ◽  
Michael Springer ◽  
...  

To achieve maximal growth, cells must manage a massive economy of ribosomal proteins (r-proteins) and RNAs (rRNAs) to produce thousands of ribosomes every minute. Although ribosomes are essential in all cells, natural disruptions to ribosome biogenesis lead to heterogeneous phenotypes. Here, we model these perturbations in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and show that challenges to ribosome biogenesis result in acute loss of proteostasis. Imbalances in the synthesis of r-proteins and rRNAs lead to the rapid aggregation of newly synthesized orphan r-proteins and compromise essential cellular processes, which cells alleviate by activating proteostasis genes. Exogenously bolstering the proteostasis network increases cellular fitness in the face of challenges to ribosome assembly, demonstrating the direct contribution of orphan r-proteins to cellular phenotypes. We propose that ribosome assembly is a key vulnerability of proteostasis maintenance in proliferating cells that may be compromised by diverse genetic, environmental, and xenobiotic perturbations that generate orphan r-proteins.


2004 ◽  
Vol 24 (12) ◽  
pp. 5534-5547 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jörg Grigull ◽  
Sanie Mnaimneh ◽  
Jeffrey Pootoolal ◽  
Mark D. Robinson ◽  
Timothy R. Hughes

ABSTRACT Using DNA microarrays, we compared global transcript stability profiles following chemical inhibition of transcription to rpb1-1 (a temperature-sensitive allele of yeast RNA polymerase II). Among the five inhibitors tested, the effects of thiolutin and 1,10-phenanthroline were most similar to rpb1-1. A comparison to various microarray data already in the literature revealed similarity between mRNA stability profiles and the transcriptional response to stresses such as heat shock, consistent with the fact that the general stress response includes a transient shutoff of general mRNA transcription. Genes encoding factors involved in rRNA synthesis and ribosome assembly, which are often observed to be coordinately down-regulated in yeast microarray data, were among the least stable transcripts. We examined the effects of deletions of genes encoding deadenylase components Ccr4p and Pan2p and putative RNA-binding proteins Pub1p and Puf4p on the genome-wide pattern of mRNA stability after inhibition of transcription by chemicals and/or heat stress. This examination showed that Ccr4p, the major yeast mRNA deadenylase, contributes to the degradation of transcripts encoding both ribosomal proteins and rRNA synthesis and ribosome assembly factors and mediates a large part of the transcriptional response to heat stress. Pan2p and Puf4p also contributed to the degradation rate of these mRNAs following transcriptional shutoff, while Pub1p preferentially stabilized transcripts encoding ribosomal proteins. Our results indicate that the abundance of ribosome biogenesis factors is controlled at the level of mRNA stability.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (22) ◽  
pp. 5815 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kovács ◽  
Sigmond ◽  
Hotzi ◽  
Bohár ◽  
Fazekas ◽  
...  

: HSF1 (heat shock factor 1) is an evolutionarily conserved master transcriptional regulator of the heat shock response (HSR) in eukaryotic cells. In response to high temperatures, HSF1 upregulates genes encoding molecular chaperones, also called heat shock proteins, which assist the refolding or degradation of damaged intracellular proteins. Accumulating evidence reveals however that HSF1 participates in several other physiological and pathological processes such as differentiation, immune response, and multidrug resistance, as well as in ageing, neurodegenerative demise, and cancer. To address how HSF1 controls these processes one should systematically analyze its target genes. Here we present a novel database called HSF1Base (hsf1base.org) that contains a nearly comprehensive list of HSF1 target genes identified so far. The list was obtained by manually curating publications on individual HSF1 targets and analyzing relevant high throughput transcriptomic and chromatin immunoprecipitation data derived from the literature and the Yeastract database. To support the biological relevance of HSF1 targets identified by high throughput methods, we performed an enrichment analysis of (potential) HSF1 targets across different tissues/cell types and organisms. We found that general HSF1 functions (targets are expressed in all tissues/cell types) are mostly related to cellular proteostasis. Furthermore, HSF1 targets that are conserved across various animal taxa operate mostly in cellular stress pathways (e.g., autophagy), chromatin remodeling, ribosome biogenesis, and ageing. Together, these data highlight diverse roles for HSF1, expanding far beyond the HSR.


1997 ◽  
Vol 139 (7) ◽  
pp. 1655-1661 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan S. Rosenblum ◽  
Lucy F. Pemberton ◽  
Günter Blobel

A limited number of transport factors, or karyopherins, ferry particular substrates between the cytoplasm and nucleoplasm. We identified the Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene YDR395w/SXM1 as a potential karyopherin on the basis of limited sequence similarity to known karyopherins. From yeast cytosol, we isolated Sxm1p in complex with several potential import substrates. These substrates included Lhp1p, the yeast homologue of the human autoantigen La that has recently been shown to facilitate maturation of pre-tRNA, and three distinct ribosomal proteins, Rpl16p, Rpl25p, and Rpl34p. Further, we demonstrate that Lhp1p is specifically imported by Sxm1p. In the absence of Sxm1p, Lhp1p was mislocalized to the cytoplasm. Sxm1p and Lhp1p represent the karyopherin and a cognate substrate of a unique nuclear import pathway, one that operates upstream of a major pathway of pre-tRNA maturation, which itself is upstream of tRNA export in wild-type cells. In addition, through its association with ribosomal proteins, Sxm1p may have a role in coordinating ribosome biogenesis with tRNA processing.


1999 ◽  
Vol 19 (8) ◽  
pp. 5441-5452 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah J. Lee ◽  
Susan J. Baserga

ABSTRACT The function of the U3 small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein (snoRNP) is central to the events surrounding pre-rRNA processing, as evidenced by the severe defects in cleavage of pre-18S rRNA precursors observed upon depletion of the U3 RNA and its unique protein components. Although the precise function of each component remains unclear, since U3 snoRNA levels remain unchanged upon genetic depletion of these proteins, it is likely that the proteins themselves have significant roles in the cleavage reactions. Here we report the identification of two previously undescribed protein components of the U3 snoRNP, representing the first snoRNP components identified by using the two-hybrid methodology. By screening for proteins that physically associate with the U3 snoRNP-specific protein, Mpp10p, we have identified Imp3p (22 kDa) and Imp4p (34 kDa) (named for interacting with Mpp10p). The genes encoding both proteins are essential in yeast. Genetic depletion reveals that both proteins are critical for U3 snoRNP function in pre-18S rRNA processing at the A0, A1, and A2 sites in the pre-rRNA. Both Imp proteins associate with Mpp10p in vivo, and both are complexed only with the U3 snoRNA. Conservation of RNA binding domains between Imp3p and the S4 family of ribosomal proteins suggests that it might associate with RNA directly. However, as with other U3 snoRNP-specific proteins, neither Imp3p nor Imp4p is required for maintenance of U3 snoRNA integrity. Imp3p and Imp4p are therefore novel protein components specific to the U3 snoRNP with critical roles in pre-rRNA cleavage events.


2008 ◽  
Vol 28 (11) ◽  
pp. 3686-3699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Qiu ◽  
Julia Eifert ◽  
Ludivine Wacheul ◽  
Marc Thiry ◽  
Adam C. Berger ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) orchestrate the modification and cleavage of pre-rRNA and are essential for ribosome biogenesis. Recent data suggest that after nucleoplasmic synthesis, snoRNAs transiently localize to the Cajal body (in plant and animal cells) or the homologous nucleolar body (in budding yeast) for maturation and assembly into snoRNPs prior to accumulation in their primary functional site, the nucleolus. However, little is known about the trans-acting factors important for the intranuclear trafficking and nucleolar localization of snoRNAs. Here, we describe a large-scale genetic screen to identify proteins important for snoRNA transport in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We performed fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis to visualize U3 snoRNA localization in a collection of temperature-sensitive yeast mutants. We have identified Nop4, Prp21, Tao3, Sec14, and Htl1 as proteins important for the proper localization of U3 snoRNA. Mutations in genes encoding these proteins lead to specific defects in the targeting or retention of the snoRNA to either the nucleolar body or the nucleolus. Additional characterization of the mutants revealed impairment in specific steps of U3 snoRNA processing, demonstrating that snoRNA maturation and trafficking are linked processes.


2007 ◽  
Vol 177 (4) ◽  
pp. 573-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tim Krüger ◽  
Hanswalter Zentgraf ◽  
Ulrich Scheer

Considerable efforts are being undertaken to elucidate the processes of ribosome biogenesis. Although various preribosomal RNP complexes have been isolated and molecularly characterized, the order of ribosomal protein (r-protein) addition to the emerging ribosome subunits is largely unknown. Furthermore, the correlation between the ribosome assembly pathway and the structural organization of the dedicated ribosome factory, the nucleolus, is not well established. We have analyzed the nucleolar localization of several early binding r-proteins in human cells, applying various methods, including live-cell imaging and electron microscopy. We have located all examined r-proteins (S4, S6, S7, S9, S14, and L4) in the granular component (GC), which is the nucleolar region where later pre-ribosomal RNA (rRNA) processing steps take place. These results imply that early binding r-proteins do not assemble with nascent pre-rRNA transcripts in the dense fibrillar component (DFC), as is generally believed, and provide a link between r-protein assembly and the emergence of distinct granules at the DFC–GC interface.


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