| Literature DB >> 33511665 |
Hung-Chieh Lee1, Chuan-Yang Fu1, Cheng-Yung Lin1, Jia-Rung Hu2, Ting-Ying Huang2, Kai-Yin Lo3, Hsin-Yue Tsai4, Jin-Chuan Sheu5, Huai-Jen Tsai1,2,6.
Abstract
Upstream open reading frames (uORFs) are known to negatively affect translation of the downstream ORF. The regulatory proteins involved in relieving this inhibition are however poorly characterized. In response to cellular stress, eIF2α phosphorylation leads to an inhibition of global protein synthesis, while translation of specific factors such as CHOP is induced. We analyzed a 105-nt inhibitory uORF in the transcript of human CHOP (huORFchop ) and found that overexpression of the zebrafish or human ENDOU poly(U)-endoribonuclease (Endouc or ENDOU-1, respectively) increases CHOP mRNA translation also in the absence of stress. We also found that Endouc/ENDOU-1 binds and cleaves the huORFchop transcript at position 80G-81U, which induces CHOP translation independently of phosphorylated eIF2α. However, both ENDOU and phospho-eIF2α are nonetheless required for maximal translation of CHOP mRNA. Increased levels of ENDOU shift a huORFchop reporter as well as endogenous CHOP transcripts from the monosome to polysome fraction, indicating an increase in translation. Furthermore, we found that the uncapped truncated huORFchop -69-105-nt transcript contains an internal ribosome entry site (IRES), facilitating translation of the cleaved transcript. Therefore, we propose a model where ENDOU-mediated transcript cleavage positively regulates CHOP translation resulting in increased CHOP protein levels upon stress. Specifically, CHOP transcript cleavage changes the configuration of huORFchop thereby releasing its inhibition and allowing the stalled ribosomes to resume translation of the downstream ORF.Entities:
Keywords: CHOP; Zebrafish Endouc; human ENDOU-1; translational control; uORF
Year: 2021 PMID: 33511665 DOI: 10.15252/embj.2019104123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EMBO J ISSN: 0261-4189 Impact factor: 11.598