| Literature DB >> 23658553 |
Anders Rehfeld1, Mireya Plass, Anders Krogh, Lennart Friis-Hansen.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Polyadenylation is the process in which the pre-mRNA is cleaved at the poly(A) site and a poly(A) tail is added - a process necessary for normal mRNA formation. Genes with multiple poly(A) sites can undergo alternative polyadenylation (APA), producing distinct mRNA isoforms with different 3' untranslated regions (3' UTRs) and in some cases different coding regions. Two thirds of all human genes undergo APA. The efficiency of the polyadenylation process regulates gene expression and APA plays an important part in post-transcriptional regulation, as the 3' UTR contains various cis-elements associated with post-transcriptional regulation, such as target sites for micro-RNAs and RNA-binding proteins. Implications of alterations in polyadenylation for endocrine disease: Alterations in polyadenylation have been found to be causative of neonatal diabetes and IPEX (immune dysfunction, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-linked) and to be associated with type I and II diabetes, pre-eclampsia, fragile X-associated premature ovarian insufficiency, ectopic Cushing syndrome, and many cancer diseases, including several types of endocrine tumor diseases. PERSPECTIVES: Recent developments in high-throughput sequencing have made it possible to characterize polyadenylation genome-wide. Antisense elements inhibiting or enhancing specific poly(A) site usage can induce desired alterations in polyadenylation, and thus hold the promise of new therapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: IGF-1; RET; antisense elements; diabetes; gene expression regulation; polyadenylation; pre-eclampsia
Year: 2013 PMID: 23658553 PMCID: PMC3647115 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2013.00053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Types of polyadenylation. Green boxes represent untranslated regions (UTRs), yellow boxes represent shared exons, pink, and white boxes represent unshared exons and the connecting horizontal lines represent introns. Adapted from Di Giammartino et al. (2011). Top: constitutive polyadenylation: gene contains only one poly(A) site and can therefore not undergo APA. Middle: untranslated region (UTR)-APA: gene contains multiple poly(A) sites located in the 3′ UTR of the terminal exon. APA results in mRNAs with different lengths of 3′ UTR, producing the same protein. Proximal polyadenylation (blue arrow) leads to 3′ UTR shortening, less post-transcriptional regulation, and enhanced protein translation. Bottom: coding region (CR)-APA: gene contains additional poly(A) sites located in the CR of exons and in introns. APA results in mRNAs with different 3′ UTRs and C-terminal CRs, producing distinct protein isoforms. Proximal polyadenylation (blue arrow) produces a mRNA with a different C-terminal CR and 3′ UTR, producing a C-terminally truncated protein isoform.
Figure 2Cis-elements and polyadenylation factors. Light-green boxes represent cis-elements in the pre-mRNA and light-purple boxes represent polyadenylation factors. The endonucleolytic cleavage of the pre-mRNA is made by the CPSF-subunit CPSF-73 at the poly(A) site, typically immediately 3′ of a CA dinucleotide. After cleavage, an untemplated poly(A) tail of about 250 adenosine-nucleotides, is added to the upstream cleavage product by PAP. This is stimulated by the CPSF through the nuclear poly(A)-binding protein (PABPN1) which binds the growing poly(A) tail and controls its length.
The core polyadenylation machinery.
| Factor | Subunits | Necsessary for | Interactions with other core factors | Target cis-element | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CPSF | CPSF-30, CPSF-73, CPSF-100, CPSF-160, hFip1, Wdr33, and symplekin | Cleavage step and polyadenylation step | CstF, CF-II, and PAP | The PAS (AAUAAA), binding mediated by CPSF-160 | Murthy and Manley ( |
| CstF | CstF-50, CstF-64, and CstF-77 | Cleavage step | CPSF and CF-II | The DSE (U/GU-rich), binding mediated by CstF-64 | MacDonald et al. ( |
| CF-I | CF-I-25 and either CF-I-68 or CF-I-59 | Cleavage step | CF-II and PAP | The auxiliary motif UGUA | Venkataraman et al. ( |
| CF-II | hPcf11 and hClp1 | Cleavage step | CPSF, CstF, and CF-I | None | Chan et al. ( |
| PAP | None | Cleavage step and polyadenylation step | CPSF and CF-I | None | Chan et al. ( |
Figure 3APA under different cellular conditions. Green boxes represent untranslated regions (UTRs), yellow boxes represent exons, and the connecting horizontal lines represent introns. Adapted from Di Giammartino et al. (2011). Blue poly(A) site represents a proximal poly(A) site, which is normally non-canonical and weaker. Red poly(A) site represents a distal poly(A) site, which is normally canonical and stronger. Blue box: proliferation, dedifferentiation and cell transformation upregulates the levels of polyadenylation factors, enhancing the utilization of the weaker proximal poly(A) site. Red box: differentiation downregulates the levels of polyadenylation factors, leading to a utilization of the stronger distal poly(A) site.
Splice factors affecting polyadenylation.
| Splice factor | Motif | Mechanism | Effect on polyadenylation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FOX-1/FOX-2 (neuronal-specific) | UGCAUG | Motifs are found in 3′ UTRs between poly(A) sites, indicating a role in APA regulation | Unknown | Wang et al. ( |
| Nova (neuronal-specific) | YCAY | Enhances or inhibits polyadenylation depending on the position of its motif relative to the PAS | Enhance/inhibit | Licatalosi et al. ( |
| U1 | 5′ splice site | Represses adjacent downstream intronic poly(A) site usage | Inhibit | Kaida et al. ( |
| Inhibits the PAP | Inhibit | Gunderson et al. ( | ||
| Intronic enhancer element (with both 5’ and 3’ splice sites) | Enhances upstream polyadenylation | Enhance | Lou et al. ( | |
| U1A (component of U1) | AUGCN(1-3)C | Binds motifs downstream of poly(A) site and inhibits CstF binding to the DSE | Inhibit | Phillips et al. ( |
| USE | Enhances polyadenylation | Enhance | Hall-Pogar et al. ( | |
| AUUGCAC | Inhibits the PAP | Inhibit | Gunderson et al. ( | |
| U2 | 3′ splice site | Enhances adjacent downstream poly(A) site usage | Enhance | Kyburz et al. ( |
| U2 auxiliary factor 1 (U2AF1) | USE | Enhances polyadenylation | Enhance | Danckwardt et al. ( |
| U2 auxiliary factor 2 (U2AF2) | 3′ splice site | Enhances adjacent downstream poly(A) site usage | Enhance | Millevoi et al. ( |
| Inhibits the PAP | Inhibit | Ko and Gunderson ( | ||
| hnRNP F | DSE | Competes with CstF for DSE binding | Inhibit | Veraldi et al. ( |
| hnRNP L | CA-rich elements | Inhibits the usage of intronic poly(A) sites | Inhibit | Hung et al. ( |
| hnRNP H | Aux-DSE | Enhances polyadenylaiton | Enhance | Dalziel et al. ( |
| hnRNP I (PTB) | DSE | Competes with CstF for DSE binding | Inhibit | Castelo-Branco et al. ( |
| USE | Enhances polyadenylation | Enhance | Millevoi et al. ( | |
| PTB associated splicing factor | USE | Enhances polyadenylation | Enhance | Hall-Pogar et al. ( |
| SR proteins | Unknown | Enhances polyadenylation | Enhance | Blechingberg et al. ( |
| SRp20 | Intronic enhancer element (with both 5’ and 3’ splice sites) | Enhances upstream polyadenylation | Enhance | Lou et al. ( |
| SRp75 | Unknown | Inhibits the PAP | Inhibit | Ko and Gunderson ( |
| SRm160 | Unknown | Enhances polyadenylation | Enhance | McCracken et al. ( |
Non-splice factors affecting polyadenylation.
| Factor | Motif | Mechanism | Effect on polyadenylation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| E2F | TTGGCGG | Motifs are enriched in promoter-regions of many polyadenylation factors and E2F enhances their expression | Upregulation of polyadenylation factors leading to 3′ UTR shortening | Elkon et al. ( |
| Hu proteins | U-rich sequences | Inhibits CstF binding to the DSE at poly(A) sites containing U-rich sequences | Inhibit | Zhu et al. ( |
| NS1 (Influenza A virus protein) | None | Interacts with CPSF-30 and inhibits polyadenylation of host pre-mRNAs in infected cells | Inhibit | Nemeroff et al. ( |
| 14-3-3ε | None | Inhibits the PAP and redistributes it to the cytoplasm | Inhibit | Kim et al. ( |
| CSR1 | None | Redistributes CPSF-73 to the cytoplasm | Inhibit | Zhu et al. ( |
| IRBIT | None | In response to oxidative stress, IRBIT is phosphorylated, whereby it both inhibits PAP and redistributes the CPSF-subunit hFip1 to the cytoplasm | Inhibit | Kiefer et al. ( |
| p53 | None | In response to DNA damage, p53 complexes with BARD1 and CstF-50, lowering the free levels of CstF-50 | Inhibit | Nazeer et al. ( |
| BRCA1 | None | In response to DNA damage, BRCA1 complexes with BARD1 and CstF-50, lowering the free levels of CstF-50 | Inhibit | Kleiman and Manley ( |
| Cdc73 | None | Associates with CPSF-CstF complexes and stimulates polyadenylation of specific target genes | Enhance | Rozenblatt-Rosen et al. ( |
| HSF1 | None | In response to cellular stress, HSF1 complexes with symplekin and CstF-64 and enhances polyadenylation of Hsp70 | Enhance | Xing et al. ( |
| P54 | USE | Enhances polyadenylation | Enhance | Hall-Pogar et al. ( |
| p38 MAPK | None | In response to cellular stess, p38 MAPK phosphorylates RBPs blocking the USE, leading to their dissociation, and upregulates several polyadenylation factors, both events leading to enhanced polyadenylation | Enhance | Danckwardt et al. ( |
| T3 | None | T3 stimulates the nuclear polyadenylaiton step, mediated by PAP, increasing poly(A) tail length of P450R | Enhance | Liu and Waxman ( |
| FSH | None | Stimulates proximal poly(A) site usage in | Enhance | Foulkes et al. ( |
| Estrogen | None | Induces 3′ UTR shortening of the DNA replication regulator CDC6 | Enhance | Akman et al. ( |
Figure 43′ UTR length and developmental potential. The developmental potency of a cell seems to be inversely correlated to 3′ UTR length. The 3′ UTR is shortest in germ cells < stem cells < partly differentiated cells < terminally differentiated cells, due to different APA patterns in these cells.