| Literature DB >> 34161287 |
Sarju J Patel1, Olga Protchenko1, Minoo Shakoury-Elizeh1, Ethan Baratz1, Shyamalagauri Jadhav1, Caroline C Philpott2.
Abstract
Poly(rC)-binding protein (PCBP1) is a multifunctional adaptor protein that can coordinate single-stranded nucleic acids and iron-glutathione complexes, altering the processing and transfer of these ligands through interactions with other proteins. Multiple phenotypes are ascribed to cells lacking PCBP1, but the relative contribution of RNA, DNA, or iron chaperone activity is not consistently clear. Here, we report the identification of amino acid residues required for iron coordination on each structural domain of PCBP1 and confirm the requirement of iron coordination for binding target proteins BolA2 and ferritin. We further construct PCBP1 variants that lack either nucleic acid- or iron-binding activity and examine their functions in human cells and mouse tissues depleted of endogenous PCBP1. We find that these activities are separable and independently confer essential functions. While iron chaperone activity controls cell cycle progression and suppression of DNA damage, RNA/DNA-binding activity maintains cell viability in both cultured cell and mouse models. The coevolution of RNA/DNA binding and iron chaperone activities on a single protein may prove advantageous for nucleic acid processing that depends on enzymes with iron cofactors.Entities:
Keywords: BolA2; DNA damage; RNA-binding protein; ferritin; hnRNP E1
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34161287 PMCID: PMC8237648 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2104666118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205