| Literature DB >> 31556460 |
Julie Lorent1, Eric P Kusnadi2,3,4, Vincent van Hoef1, Richard J Rebello2,3, Matthew Leibovitch5, Johannes Ristau1, Shan Chen1, Mitchell G Lawrence2,3,4, Krzysztof J Szkop1, Baila Samreen1, Preetika Balanathan3, Francesca Rapino6, Pierre Close6, Patricia Bukczynska2, Karin Scharmann7,8, Itsuhiro Takizawa3, Gail P Risbridger2,3,4, Luke A Selth9, Sebastian A Leidel7,8,10, Qishan Lin11, Ivan Topisirovic5, Ola Larsson1, Luc Furic2,3,4.
Abstract
Estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) activity is associated with increased cancer cell proliferation. Studies aiming to understand the impact of ERα on cancer-associated phenotypes have largely been limited to its transcriptional activity. Herein, we demonstrate that ERα coordinates its transcriptional output with selective modulation of mRNA translation. Importantly, translational perturbations caused by depletion of ERα largely manifest as "translational offsetting" of the transcriptome, whereby amounts of translated mRNAs and corresponding protein levels are maintained constant despite changes in mRNA abundance. Transcripts whose levels, but not polysome association, are reduced following ERα depletion lack features which limit translation efficiency including structured 5'UTRs and miRNA target sites. In contrast, mRNAs induced upon ERα depletion whose polysome association remains unaltered are enriched in codons requiring U34-modified tRNAs for efficient decoding. Consistently, ERα regulates levels of U34-modifying enzymes and thereby controls levels of U34-modified tRNAs. These findings unravel a hitherto unprecedented mechanism of ERα-dependent orchestration of transcriptional and translational programs that may be a pervasive mechanism of proteome maintenance in hormone-dependent cancers.Entities:
Keywords: 5′ UTR; U34 tRNA modification; estrogen receptor; hormone-dependent cancer; mRNA translation
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31556460 PMCID: PMC6885737 DOI: 10.15252/embj.2018101323
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EMBO J ISSN: 0261-4189 Impact factor: 11.598