| Literature DB >> 18172692 |
Beatriz Aranda-Orgillés1, Alexander Trockenbacher, Jennifer Winter, Johanna Aigner, Andrea Köhler, Ewa Jastrzebska, Joachim Stahl, Eva-Christina Müller, Albrecht Otto, Erich E Wanker, Rainer Schneider, Susann Schweiger.
Abstract
Opitz BBB/G syndrome (OS) is a heterogenous malformation syndrome mainly characterised by hypertelorism and hypospadias. In addition, patients may present with several other defects of the ventral midline such as cleft lip and palate and congenital heart defects. The syndrome-causing gene encodes the X-linked E3 ubiquitin ligase MID1 that mediates ubiquitin-specific modification and degradation of the catalytic subunit of the translation regulator protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A). Here, we show that the MID1 protein also associates with elongation factor 1alpha (EF-1alpha) and several other proteins involved in mRNA transport and translation, including RACK1, Annexin A2, Nucleophosmin and proteins of the small ribosomal subunits. Mutant MID1 proteins as found in OS patients lose the ability to interact with EF-1alpha. The composition of the MID1 protein complex was determined by several independent methods: (1) yeast two-hybrid screening and (2) immunofluorescence, (3) a biochemical approach involving affinity purification of the complex, (4) co-fractionation in a microtubule assembly assay and (5) immunoprecipitation. Moreover, we show that the cytoskeleton-bound MID1/translation factor complex specifically associates with G- and U-rich RNAs and incorporates MID1 mRNA, thus forming a microtubule-associated ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex. Our data suggest a novel function of the OS gene product in directing translational control to the cytoskeleton. The dysfunction of this mechanism would lead to malfunction of microtubule-associated protein translation and to the development of OS.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18172692 PMCID: PMC3774420 DOI: 10.1007/s00439-007-0456-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genet ISSN: 0340-6717 Impact factor: 4.132
Fig. 1a EF-1α interacts with the MID1 protein. a Deletion mapping of the EF-1α binding site on the MID1 protein in a yeast two-hybrid assay. While two C-terminal peptides (aa 311- aa 667 and aa 474- aa 667) show clear binding to EF-1α full-length protein, no binding was seen with any of the shorter constructs, as indicated on the right panel by the appearance or lack of yeast growth, respectively. b Yeast two-hybrid interaction assay between EF-1α full-length and two mutated MID1 variants as found in Opitz syndrome patients. Both MID1 mutations result in a frame shift and a truncation of the resulting MID1 proteins. The upper MID1 variant harbours a 4 bp deletion at position 1800 and the lower one a G-insertion at position 1558 resulting in a wrong reading frame after amino acid 600 and 519, respectively (arrows), the hatched regions indicate the amino acid sequence corresponding to the wrong reading frame until the first stop codon is reached. On the right panel the respective parts of the yeast plates are shown; they show no growth and hence no interaction. c Immunofluorescence microscopy of COS-7 cells transiently transfected with ECFP-MID1 and EF-1α (upper panel) and EF-1α alone (lower panel). The distribution of EF-1α when expressed alone shows a diffuse cytoplasmic staining patter, whereas co-expressed with ECFP-MID1 it co-localises with ECFP-MID1 at the microtubules
Fig. 2a Knockdown of α4 protein in HeLa cells- α4 protein in HeLa cell lysates after transfection with a specific α4 RNAi oligonucleotide (α4, first lane) or a non-silencing oligonucleotide (ns, second lane) are shown. Detection of actin was used as loading control. b SDS-gel stained with colloidal Coomassie showing the proteins eluted from streptavidin beads coupled to a biotinylated 44 aa α4 peptide (left lane) or from unmodified beads (right lane). Differential bands were excised and analysed by mass spectrometry. Protein identities are given. The asterisk indicates the position of the MID1 protein band, which is masked by an abundant E. coli band derived protein band contaminating the eluting peptide (also present in the control). c Co-immunoprecipitation of FLAG-MID1 with different components of the complex. HeLa cell lysates overexpressing FLAG-MID1 were immunoprecipitated with anti-FLAG antibody (left lane). Western blots were incubated with specific antibodies against the respective proteins. HeLa cell lysates without FLAG-MID1 overexpression were used as background control (right lane). d Co-immunoprecipitation of endogenous EF-1α with MID1, α4, Hsp90 and Hsc70. HeLa cell lysates were immunoprecipitated with anti-EF1α (lanes 1 and 3) or with unspecific IgGs (lanes 2 and 4). Input lysates (lanes 1 and 2) and immunoprecipitates (lanes 3 and 4) were loaded on an SDS-Page and analysed with anti-EF-1α, anti-MID1, anti-α(, anti-Hsp90 and anti-Hsc70 antibodies. e Microtubule-association of the complex partners. Pellets from microtubule-assembly experiments at 37°C (left lane) and 4°C (right lane) were dissolved and loaded on a Western blot and detected with the respective antibodies
Summary of proteins that were found in the MID1/α4/PP2A protein complex and their most important functions
| Protein | Accession number | Function | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heat shock protein HSP9O-beta (Hsp90) | P08238 | RNA binding protein, cell cycle progression, centrosome duplication, reduction of Huntingtin aggregates | Burrows et al. ( |
| 30 kDa heat shock protein (CH60) | P10809 | Chaperon, mitochondrial functions, regulation of stress-induced apoptosis | Bukau and Horwich ( |
| Heat shock cognate 71 kDa protein (Hsc70) | P11142 | Chaperon, associates with Huntingtin aggregates | Jana et al. ( |
| Tubulin beta-5 chain | P05218 | Microtubule dynamics | Cooper ( |
| Elongation factor 1-alpha 1 | P04720 | Peptide chain elongation, cytoskeleton regulation, microtubules dynamics, associates with Huntingtin aggregates | Condeelis ( |
| 40s ribosomal protein SA (p40; 34/67 kDa laminin receptor) | P08865 | Tumor cell growth and proliferation, RNA processing and ribosome maturation | Ford et al. ( |
| Annexin A2 (ANXA2) | P07355 | RNA/DNA binding, mediator of Ca2+ regulated endocytosis and exocytosis inhibition of cell adhesion | Balch and Dedman ( |
| Receptor for activated C kinase 1 (RACK1) | P25388 | RNA binding, scaffold protein, cell cycle regulation, constituent of the eukaryotic ribosomes, positioning of ribosomes, intracellular Ca2+ regulation, regulation of integrin-mediated adhestion | Cox et al. ( |
| 40s ribosomal protein S3 (S3) | P23396 | Constituent of the small ribosome subunit, DNA repair, apoptosis/cell growth regulation | Jang et al. ( |
| Q subcomponent binding protein (C1qBP) | Q07021 | Chaperon, mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, splicing modulation | Chattopadhyay et al. ( |
| 40s ribosomal protein S8 (S8) | P62241 | Constituent of the small ribosome subunit | Bommer and Stahl ( |
| Nucleophosmin/B23.2 (NPM) | Q9BYG9 | RNA binding; pre mRNA processing; ribosome biogenesis, regulation of transcription, apoptosis, cancer pathogenesis, centrosome duplication, cytoplasmic nuclear trafficking | Fankhauser et al. ( |
Fig. 3The MID1 protein complex associates with RNA. Cytosol of HeLa cells with (FLAG-MID1) and without (control) FLAG-MID1 overexpression were immunoprecipitated using an anti-FLAG antibody. Immunoblots of lysates (upper left panel) and immunoprecipitates (upper right panel) probed with an anti-FLAG antibody are shown. RNA was isolated from the samples, labelled with [5´-32P]pCp and analysed on an agarose gel (lower left panel) and in a scintillation counter (lower right panel)
Fig. 4Association of FLAG-MID1 and some of the complex partners with poly-ribonucleotides. a Lysates from FLAG-MID1 overexpressing HeLa cells were incubated with immobilised poly-rU (lane 2), poly-rG (lane 3), poly-rC (lane 4) or poly-rA (lane 5), washed and boiled at 95°C. Lysate (lane 1) and eluted fractions were immunoblotted and analysed with the respective antibodies. Poly-rU binding HuR protein was used as control. b Influence of free poly-rG and poly-rU competitors and increasing salt or heparin concentrations on the FLAG-MID1/poly-rG interaction
Fig. 5The MID1 complex assembles its own mRNA. a G and U-rich sequences present in the MID1 3′UTR that show a high interspecies conservation. Positions 3′ to the translational stop codon are (from top to bottom) 3101, 3172, 185, 1502, 2441 and 2644 bp. Accession number NM_000381. b HeLa cells were transfected with FLAG-MID1 and subjected to RNP coimmunoprecipitation. Subsequently, RNA was isolated from the precipitation and subjected for RT-PCR using MID1 and PIP-specific primers. Immunoprecipitation was done with mouse IgG as a negative control. c The MID1 mRNA localises to the centrosomal region. The endogenous MID1 mRNA was detected in U373 cells by in situ hybridisation using a pool of six different digoxigenin-labelled oligonucleotides specific for the MID1 sequence and alkaline phosphatase-linked anti-digoxigenin antibody with NBT/BCIP as substrate. The centrosome was co-stained by a mouse anti-γ-tubulin antibody and an FITC-linked anti-mouse antibody (see arrows). n nucleus, c cytoplasm