Literature DB >> 17924945

Auto-regulation of the circadian slave oscillator component AtGRP7 and regulation of its targets is impaired by a single RNA recognition motif point mutation.

Jan C Schöning1, Corinna Streitner, Damian R Page, Sven Hennig, Kenko Uchida, Eva Wolf, Masaki Furuya, Dorothee Staiger.   

Abstract

The clock-regulated RNA-binding protein AtGRP7 (Arabidopsis thaliana glycine-rich RNA-binding protein) influences circadian oscillations of its transcript by negative feedback at the post-transcriptional level. Here we show that site-specific mutation of one conserved arginine to glutamine within the RNA recognition motif impairs binding of recombinant AtGRP7 to its pre-mRNA in vitro. This correlates with the loss of the negative auto-regulation in vivo: in transgenic plants constitutively overexpressing AtGRP7 (AtGRP7-ox), a shift occurs to an alternatively spliced AtGRP7 transcript that decays rapidly, and thus does not accumulate to high levels. In contrast, constitutive ectopic overexpression of the AtGRP7-RQ mutant does not lead to alternative splicing of the endogenous AtGRP7 transcript and concomitant damping of the oscillations. This highlights the importance of AtGRP7 binding to its own transcript for the negative auto-regulatory circuit. Moreover, regulation of AtGRP7 downstream targets also depends on its RNA-binding activity, as AtGRP8 and other targets identified by transcript profiling of wild-type and AtGRP7-ox plants using fluorescent differential display are negatively affected by AtGRP7 but not by AtGRP7-RQ. In mutants impaired in the nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) components UPF1 or UPF3, levels of the alternatively spliced AtGRP7 and AtGRP8 transcripts that contain premature termination codons are strongly elevated, implicating UPF1 and UPF3 in the decay of these clock-regulated transcripts.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17924945     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-313X.2007.03302.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant J        ISSN: 0960-7412            Impact factor:   6.417


  50 in total

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Journal:  Plant Cell Rep       Date:  2012-06-15       Impact factor: 4.570

Review 2.  Spotlight on post-transcriptional control in the circadian system.

Authors:  Dorothee Staiger; Tino Köster
Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci       Date:  2010-08-30       Impact factor: 9.261

Review 3.  Processing bodies and plant development.

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Journal:  Curr Opin Plant Biol       Date:  2010-11-11       Impact factor: 7.834

4.  Translational Regulation of Cytoplasmic mRNAs.

Authors:  Bijoyita Roy; Albrecht G von Arnim
Journal:  Arabidopsis Book       Date:  2013-07-18

5.  Structure function analysis of an ADP-ribosyltransferase type III effector and its RNA-binding target in plant immunity.

Authors:  Byeong-ryool Jeong; Yan Lin; Anna Joe; Ming Guo; Christin Korneli; Huirong Yang; Ping Wang; Min Yu; Ronald L Cerny; Dorothee Staiger; James R Alfano; Yanhui Xu
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2011-10-19       Impact factor: 5.157

6.  Quantitative analysis of single-molecule RNA-protein interaction.

Authors:  Alexander Fuhrmann; Jan C Schoening; Dario Anselmetti; Dorothee Staiger; Robert Ros
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2009-06-17       Impact factor: 4.033

7.  A proteomic analysis of oligo(dT)-bound mRNP containing oxidative stress-induced Arabidopsis thaliana RNA-binding proteins ATGRP7 and ATGRP8.

Authors:  Fabian Schmidt; Aline Marnef; Man-Kim Cheung; Ian Wilson; John Hancock; Dorothee Staiger; Michael Ladomery
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2009-08-12       Impact factor: 2.316

8.  Structural basis of nucleic acid binding by Nicotiana tabacum glycine-rich RNA-binding protein: implications for its RNA chaperone function.

Authors:  Fariha Khan; Mark A Daniëls; Gert E Folkers; Rolf Boelens; S M Saqlan Naqvi; Hugo van Ingen
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2014-06-23       Impact factor: 16.971

Review 9.  Functional diversity of the plant glycine-rich proteins superfamily.

Authors:  Amanda Mangeon; Ricardo Magrani Junqueira; Gilberto Sachetto-Martins
Journal:  Plant Signal Behav       Date:  2010-02-14

10.  Aberrant mRNA transcripts and the nonsense-mediated decay proteins UPF2 and UPF3 are enriched in the Arabidopsis nucleolus.

Authors:  Sang Hyon Kim; Olga A Koroleva; Dominika Lewandowska; Ali F Pendle; Gillian P Clark; Craig G Simpson; Peter J Shaw; John W S Brown
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2009-07-14       Impact factor: 11.277

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