36 research outputs found

    Long and repeat-rich intronic sequences favor circular RNA formation under conditions of reduced spliceosome activity

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    Circular RNAs (circRNAs), an important class of regulatory RNAs, have been shown to be the most prevalent in the brain compared with other tissues. However the processes governing their biogenesis in neurons are still elusive. Moreover, little is known about whether and how different biogenesis factors work in synchrony to generate neuronal circRNAs. To address this question, we pharmacologically inhibited the spliceosome and profiled rat neuronal circRNAs using RNA sequencing. We identified over 100 circRNAs that were up-regulated and a few circRNAs that were down-regulated upon spliceosome inhibition. Bioinformatic analysis revealed that up-regulated circRNAs possess significantly longer flanking introns compared with the un-changed circRNA population. Moreover, the flanking introns of up-regulated circRNAs harbor a higher number of distinct repeat sequences and more reverse complementary motifs compared with the unchanged circRNAs. Taken together, our data demonstrate that the biogenesis of circRNAs containing distinct intronic features becomes favored under conditions of limited spliceosome activity

    The SRSF4–GAS5-Glucocorticoid Receptor Axis Regulates Ventricular Hypertrophy.

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    RATIONALE: RBPs (RNA-binding proteins) play critical roles in human biology and disease. Aberrant RBP expression affects various steps in RNA processing, altering the function of the target RNAs. The RBP SRSF4 (serine/arginine-rich splicing factor 4) has been linked to neuropathies and cancer. However, its role in the heart is completely unknown. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the role of SRSF4 in the heart. METHODS AND RESULTS: Echocardiography of mice specifically lacking SRSF4 in the heart (SRSF4 KO) revealed left ventricular hypertrophy and increased cardiomyocyte area, which led to progressive diastolic dysfunction with age. SRSF4 KO mice showed altered electrophysiological activity under isoproterenol-induced cardiac stress, with a post-QRS depression and a longer QT interval, indicating an elevated risk of sudden cardiac death. RNA-Seq analysis revealed expression changes in several long noncoding RNAs, including GAS5 (growth arrest-specific 5), which we identified as a direct SRSF4 target in cardiomyocytes by individual-nucleotideresolution cross-linking and immuno-precipitation. GAS5 is a repressor of the GR (glucocorticoid receptor) and was downregulated in SRSF4 KO hearts. This corresponded with elevated GR transcriptional activity in cardiomyocytes, leading to increases in hypertrophy markers and cell size. Furthermore, hypertrophy in SRSF4 KO cardiomyocytes was reduced by overexpressing GAS5. CONCLUSIONS: Loss of SRSF4 expression results in cardiac hypertrophy, diastolic dysfunction, and abnormal repolarization. The molecular mechanism underlying this effect involves GAS5 downregulation and consequent elevation of GR transcriptional activity. Our findings may help to develop new therapeutic tools for the treatment of cardiac hypertrophy and myocardial pathology in patients with Cushing syndrome.post-print2695 K

    The SRSF4–GAS5-Glucocorticoid Receptor Axis Regulates Ventricular Hypertrophy.

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    RATIONALE: RBPs (RNA-binding proteins) play critical roles in human biology and disease. Aberrant RBP expression affects various steps in RNA processing, altering the function of the target RNAs. The RBP SRSF4 (serine/arginine-rich splicing factor 4) has been linked to neuropathies and cancer. However, its role in the heart is completely unknown. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the role of SRSF4 in the heart. METHODS AND RESULTS: Echocardiography of mice specifically lacking SRSF4 in the heart (SRSF4 KO) revealed left ventricular hypertrophy and increased cardiomyocyte area, which led to progressive diastolic dysfunction with age. SRSF4 KO mice showed altered electrophysiological activity under isoproterenol-induced cardiac stress, with a post-QRS depression and a longer QT interval, indicating an elevated risk of sudden cardiac death. RNA-Seq analysis revealed expression changes in several long noncoding RNAs, including GAS5 (growth arrest-specific 5), which we identified as a direct SRSF4 target in cardiomyocytes by individual-nucleotideresolution cross-linking and immuno-precipitation. GAS5 is a repressor of the GR (glucocorticoid receptor) and was downregulated in SRSF4 KO hearts. This corresponded with elevated GR transcriptional activity in cardiomyocytes, leading to increases in hypertrophy markers and cell size. Furthermore, hypertrophy in SRSF4 KO cardiomyocytes was reduced by overexpressing GAS5. CONCLUSIONS: Loss of SRSF4 expression results in cardiac hypertrophy, diastolic dysfunction, and abnormal repolarization. The molecular mechanism underlying this effect involves GAS5 downregulation and consequent elevation of GR transcriptional activity. Our findings may help to develop new therapeutic tools for the treatment of cardiac hypertrophy and myocardial pathology in patients with Cushing syndrome.post-print2695 K

    Loss of SRSF3 in Cardiomyocytes Leads to Decapping of Contraction-Related mRNAs and Severe Systolic Dysfunction

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    RATIONALE: RBPs (RNA binding proteins) play critical roles in the cell by regulating mRNA transport, splicing, editing, and stability. The RBP SRSF3 (serine/arginine-rich splicing factor 3) is essential for blastocyst formation and for proper liver development and function. However, its role in the heart has not been explored. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the role of SRSF3 in cardiac function. METHODS AND RESULTS: Cardiac SRSF3 expression was high at mid gestation and decreased during late embryonic development. Mice lacking SRSF3 in the embryonic heart showed impaired cardiomyocyte proliferation and died in utero. In the adult heart, SRSF3 expression was reduced after myocardial infarction, suggesting a possible role in cardiac homeostasis. To determine the role of this RBP in the adult heart, we used an inducible, cardiomyocyte-specific SRSF3 knockout mouse model. After SRSF3 depletion in cardiomyocytes, mice developed severe systolic dysfunction that resulted in death within 8 days. RNA-Seq analysis revealed downregulation of mRNAs encoding sarcomeric and calcium handling proteins. Cardiomyocyte-specific SRSF3 knockout mice also showed evidence of alternative splicing of mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) mRNA, generating a shorter protein isoform lacking catalytic activity. This was associated with decreased phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 (eIF4E-binding protein 1), a protein that binds to eIF4E (eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E) and prevents mRNA decapping. Consequently, we found increased decapping of mRNAs encoding proteins involved in cardiac contraction. Decapping was partially reversed by mTOR activation. CONCLUSIONS: We show that cardiomyocyte-specific loss of SRSF3 expression results in decapping of critical mRNAs involved in cardiac contraction. The molecular mechanism underlying this effect likely involves the generation of a short mTOR isoform by alternative splicing, resulting in reduced 4E-BP1 phosphorylation. The identification of mRNA decapping as a mechanism of systolic heart failure may open the way to the development of urgently needed therapeutic tools.This study was supported by grants from the European Union (CardioNeT-ITN-289600 and CardioNext-ITN-608027 to E.L-P.), from the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (RTI2018-096961-BI00, SAF2015-65722-R and SAF2012-31451 to E.L-P.; BIO2015-67580-P and PGC2018-097019-B-I00 to J.V.), the Spanish Carlos III Institute of Health (CPII14/00027 to E.L-P, RD12/0042/066 to P.G.-P. and E.L-P, and RD12/0042/0056, PRB2-IPT13/0001-ISCIII-SGEFI/FEDER, ProteoRed to J.V.), the Madrid Regional Government (2010-BMD-2321 “Fibroteam” to E.L-P.). This study was also supported by the Plan Estatal de I+D+I 2013-2016 – European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) “A way of making Europe”, Spain. The CNIC is supported by the Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (MCNU) and the Pro CNIC Foundation, and is a Severo Ochoa Center of Excellence (SEV-2015-0505).S

    Host Factors interacting with the Pestivirus N terminal protease, Npro are Components of the Ribonucleoprotein Complex

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    The viral N-terminal protease N(pro) of pestiviruses counteracts cellular antiviral defenses through inhibition of IRF3. Here we used mass spectrometry to identify a new role for N(pro) through its interaction with over 55 associated proteins, mainly ribosomal proteins and ribonucleoproteins, including RNA helicase A (DHX9), Y-box binding protein (YBX1), DDX3, DDX5, eIF3, IGF2BP1, multiple myeloma tumor protein 2, interleukin enhancer binding factor 3 (IEBP3), guanine nucleotide binding protein 3, and polyadenylate-binding protein 1 (PABP-1). These are components of the translation machinery, ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs), and stress granules. Significantly, we found that stress granule formation was inhibited in MDBK cells infected with a noncytopathic bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) strain, Kyle. However, ribonucleoproteins binding to N(pro) did not inhibit these proteins from aggregating into stress granules. N(pro) interacted with YBX1 though its TRASH domain, since the mutant C112R protein with an inactive TRASH domain no longer redistributed to stress granules. Interestingly, RNA helicase A and La autoantigen relocated from a nuclear location to form cytoplasmic granules with N(pro). To address a proviral role for N(pro) in RNP granules, we investigated whether N(pro) affected RNA interference (RNAi), since interacting proteins are involved in RISC function during RNA silencing. Using glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) silencing with small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) followed by Northern blotting of GAPDH, expression of N(pro) had no effect on RNAi silencing activity, contrasting with other viral suppressors of interferon. We propose that N(pro) is involved with virus RNA translation in the cytoplasm for virus particle production, and when translation is inhibited following stress, it redistributes to the replication complex. IMPORTANCE Although the pestivirus N-terminal protease, N(pro), has been shown to have an important role in degrading IRF3 to prevent apoptosis and interferon production during infection, the function of this unique viral protease in the pestivirus life cycle remains to be elucidated. We used proteomic mass spectrometry to identify novel interacting proteins and have shown that N(pro) is present in ribosomal and ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs), indicating a translational role in virus particle production. The virus itself can prevent stress granule assembly from these complexes, but this inhibition is not due to N(pro). A proviral role to subvert RNA silencing through binding of these host RNP proteins was not identified for this viral suppressor of interferon

    Photoproduction of ηπ pairs off nucleons and deuterons

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    Quasi-free photoproduction of πη-pairs has been investigated from threshold up to incident photon energies of 1.4 GeV, respectively up to photon-nucleon invariant masses up to 1.9 GeV. Total cross sections, angular distributions, invariant-mass distributions of the πη and meson-nucleon pairs, and beamhelicity asymmetries have been measured for the reactions γp → pπ0η, γn → nπ0η, γp → nπ+η, and γn → pπ-n from nucleons bound inside the deuteron. For the γp initial-state data for free protons have also been analyzed. Finally, the total cross sections for quasi-free production of π0η pairs from nucleons bound in 3He nuclei have been investigated in view of final state interaction (FSI) effects. The experiments were performed at the tagged photon beam facility of the Mainz MAMI accelerator using an almost 4π covering electromagnetic calorimeter composed of the Crystal Ball and TAPS detectors. The shapes of all differential cross section data and the asymmetries are very similar for protons and neutrons and agree with the conjecture that the reactions are dominated by the sequential Δ*3/2- → ηΔ(1232) → πηN decay chain, mainly with Δ(1700)3/2- and Δ(1940)3/2-. The ratios of the magnitude of the total cross sections also agree with this assumption. However, the absolute magnitudes of the cross sections are reduced by FSI effects with respect to free proton data

    How cells get the message: dynamic assembly and function of mRNA-protein complexes.

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    mRNA is packaged into ribonucleoprotein particles called mRNPs. A multitude of RNA-binding proteins as well as a host of associated proteins participate in the fate of mRNA from transcription and processing in the nucleus to translation and decay in the cytoplasm. Methodological innovations in cell biology and genome-wide high-throughput approaches have revealed an unexpected diversity of mRNA-associated proteins and unforeseen interconnections between mRNA-processing steps. Recent insights into mRNP formation in vivo have also highlighted the importance of mRNP packaging, which can sort RNAs on the basis of their length and determine mRNA fate through alternative mRNP assembly, processing and export pathways
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