Literature DB >> 11294903

Nonsense-mediated decay of mRNA for the selenoprotein phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase is detectable in cultured cells but masked or inhibited in rat tissues.

X Sun1, X Li, P M Moriarty, T Henics, J P LaDuca, L E Maquat.   

Abstract

Previous studies of mRNA for classical glutathione peroxidase 1 (GPx1) demonstrated that hepatocytes of rats fed a selenium-deficient diet have less cytoplasmic GPx1 mRNA than hepatocytes of rats fed a selenium-adequate diet. This is because GPx1 mRNA is degraded by the surveillance pathway called nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) when the selenocysteine codon is recognized as nonsense. Here, we examine the mechanism by which the abundance of phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPx) mRNA, another selenocysteine-encoding mRNA, fails to decrease in the hepatocytes and testicular cells of rats fed a selenium-deficient diet. We demonstrate with cultured NIH3T3 fibroblasts or H35 hepatocytes transiently transfected with PHGPx gene variants under selenium-supplemented or selenium-deficient conditions that PHGPx mRNA is, in fact, a substrate for NMD when the selenocysteine codon is recognized as nonsense. We also demonstrate that the endogenous PHGPx mRNA of untransfected H35 cells is subject to NMD. The failure of previous reports to detect the NMD of PHGPx mRNA in cultured cells is likely attributable to the expression of PHGPx cDNA rather than the PHGPx gene. We conclude that 1) the sequence of the PHGPx gene is adequate to support the NMD of product mRNA, and 2) there is a mechanism in liver and testis but not cultured fibroblasts and hepatocytes that precludes or masks the NMD of PHGPx mRNA.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11294903      PMCID: PMC32283          DOI: 10.1091/mbc.12.4.1009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Cell        ISSN: 1059-1524            Impact factor:   4.138


  39 in total

1.  Differential regulation of rat liver selenoprotein mRNAs in selenium deficiency.

Authors:  K E Hill; P R Lyons; R F Burk
Journal:  Biochem Biophys Res Commun       Date:  1992-05-29       Impact factor: 3.575

2.  Post-transcriptional regulation of glutathione peroxidase gene expression by selenium in the HL-60 human myeloid cell line.

Authors:  S Chada; C Whitney; P E Newburger
Journal:  Blood       Date:  1989-11-15       Impact factor: 22.113

3.  Human triosephosphate isomerase cDNA and protein structure. Studies of triosephosphate isomerase deficiency in man.

Authors:  L E Maquat; R Chilcote; P M Ryan
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1985-03-25       Impact factor: 5.157

4.  Translational inhibition mediated by a short upstream open reading frame in the human cytomegalovirus gpUL4 (gp48) transcript.

Authors:  C R Degnin; M R Schleiss; J Cao; A P Geballe
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  1993-09       Impact factor: 5.103

5.  Phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase of rat testis. Gonadotropin dependence and immunocytochemical identification.

Authors:  A Roveri; A Casasco; M Maiorino; P Dalan; A Calligaro; F Ursini
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1992-03-25       Impact factor: 5.157

6.  Mammalian heat shock p70 and histone H4 transcripts, which derive from naturally intronless genes, are immune to nonsense-mediated decay.

Authors:  L E Maquat; X Li
Journal:  RNA       Date:  2001-03       Impact factor: 4.942

7.  Phospholipid-hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase. Genomic DNA, cDNA, and deduced amino acid sequence.

Authors:  R Brigelius-Flohé; K D Aumann; H Blöcker; G Gross; M Kiess; K D Klöppel; M Maiorino; A Roveri; R Schuckelt; F Usani
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1994-03-11       Impact factor: 5.157

8.  Identification of a selenocysteyl-tRNA(Ser) in mammalian cells that recognizes the nonsense codon, UGA.

Authors:  B J Lee; P J Worland; J N Davis; T C Stadtman; D L Hatfield
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1989-06-15       Impact factor: 5.157

9.  Glutathione peroxidase and phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase are differentially regulated in rats by dietary selenium.

Authors:  X G Lei; J K Evenson; K M Thompson; R A Sunde
Journal:  J Nutr       Date:  1995-06       Impact factor: 4.798

10.  Tissue-specific regulation of selenoenzyme gene expression during selenium deficiency in rats.

Authors:  G Bermano; F Nicol; J A Dyer; R A Sunde; G J Beckett; J R Arthur; J E Hesketh
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1995-10-15       Impact factor: 3.857

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  25 in total

1.  Structural analysis of the -1 ribosomal frameshift elements in giardiavirus mRNA.

Authors:  L Li; A L Wang; C C Wang
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2001-11       Impact factor: 5.103

Review 2.  How selenium has altered our understanding of the genetic code.

Authors:  Dolph L Hatfield; Vadim N Gladyshev
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 4.272

3.  BRCA2 T2722R is a deleterious allele that causes exon skipping.

Authors:  James D Fackenthal; Luca Cartegni; Adrian R Krainer; Olufunmilayo I Olopade
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2002-07-19       Impact factor: 11.025

4.  Efficiency of mammalian selenocysteine incorporation.

Authors:  Anupama Mehta; Cheryl M Rebsch; Scott A Kinzy; Julia E Fletcher; Paul R Copeland
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2004-06-30       Impact factor: 5.157

5.  Nuclear assembly of UGA decoding complexes on selenoprotein mRNAs: a mechanism for eluding nonsense-mediated decay?

Authors:  Lucia A de Jesus; Peter R Hoffmann; Tanya Michaud; Erin P Forry; Andrea Small-Howard; Robert J Stillwell; Nadya Morozova; John W Harney; Marla J Berry
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2006-03       Impact factor: 4.272

Review 6.  Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay in human cells: mechanistic insights, functions beyond quality control and the double-life of NMD factors.

Authors:  Pamela Nicholson; Hasmik Yepiskoposyan; Stefanie Metze; Rodolfo Zamudio Orozco; Nicole Kleinschmidt; Oliver Mühlemann
Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci       Date:  2009-10-27       Impact factor: 9.261

7.  Selective up-regulation of human selenoproteins in response to oxidative stress.

Authors:  Zahia Touat-Hamici; Yona Legrain; Anne-Laure Bulteau; Laurent Chavatte
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2014-04-04       Impact factor: 5.157

8.  The distal sequence element of the selenocysteine tRNA gene is a tissue-dependent enhancer essential for mouse embryogenesis.

Authors:  Vincent P Kelly; Takafumi Suzuki; Osamu Nakajima; Tsuyoshi Arai; Yoshitaka Tamai; Satoru Takahashi; Susumu Nishimura; Masayuki Yamamoto
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2005-05       Impact factor: 4.272

9.  Selenium status highly regulates selenoprotein mRNA levels for only a subset of the selenoproteins in the selenoproteome.

Authors:  Roger A Sunde; Anna M Raines; Kimberly M Barnes; Jacqueline K Evenson
Journal:  Biosci Rep       Date:  2009-06-25       Impact factor: 3.840

10.  Translational regulation of glutathione peroxidase 4 expression through guanine-rich sequence-binding factor 1 is essential for embryonic brain development.

Authors:  Christoph Ufer; Chi Chiu Wang; Michael Fähling; Heike Schiebel; Bernd J Thiele; E Ellen Billett; Hartmut Kuhn; Astrid Borchert
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2008-07-01       Impact factor: 11.361

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