| Literature DB >> 33346941 |
Doowon Huh1, Maria C Passarelli1, Jenny Gao1, Shahnoza N Dusmatova1, Clara Goin1, Lisa Fish2, Alexandra M Pinzaru1, Henrik Molina3, Zhiji Ren1, Elizabeth A McMillan1, Hosseinali Asgharian2, Hani Goodarzi2, Sohail F Tavazoie1.
Abstract
Eukaryotic transfer RNAs can become selectively fragmented upon various stresses, generating tRNA-derived small RNA fragments. Such fragmentation has been reported to impact a small fraction of the tRNA pool and thus presumed to not directly impact translation. We report that oxidative stress can rapidly generate tyrosine-tRNAGUA fragments in human cells-causing significant depletion of the precursor tRNA. Tyrosine-tRNAGUA depletion impaired translation of growth and metabolic genes enriched in cognate tyrosine codons. Depletion of tyrosine tRNAGUA or its translationally regulated targets USP3 and SCD repressed proliferation-revealing a dedicated tRNA-regulated growth-suppressive pathway for oxidative stress response. Tyrosine fragments are generated in a DIS3L2 exoribonuclease-dependent manner and inhibit hnRNPA1-mediated transcript destabilization. Moreover, tyrosine fragmentation is conserved in C. elegans. Thus, tRNA fragmentation can coordinately generate trans-acting small RNAs and functionally deplete a tRNA. Our findings reveal the existence of an underlying adaptive codon-based regulatory response inherent to the genetic code.Entities:
Keywords: hnRNPA1; oxidative stress; tRNA; tRNA fragments; translation
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33346941 PMCID: PMC7809793 DOI: 10.15252/embj.2020106696
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EMBO J ISSN: 0261-4189 Impact factor: 11.598