252 research outputs found

    BTG/TOB factors impact deadenylases.

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    BTG/TOB factors are a family of antiproliferative proteins whose expression is altered in numerous cancers. They have been implicated in cell differentiation, development and apoptosis. Although proposed to affect transcriptional regulation, these factors interact with CAF1, a subunit of the main eukaryotic deadenylase, and with poly(A)-binding-proteins, strongly suggesting a role in post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression. The recent determination of the structures of BTG2, TOB1 N-terminal domain (TOB1N138) and TOB1N138-CAF1 complexes support a role for BTG/TOB proteins in mRNA deadenylation, a function corroborated by recently published functional characterizations. We highlight molecular mechanisms by which BTG/TOB proteins influence deadenylation and discuss the need for a better understanding of BTG/TOB physiological functions

    The human CNOT1-CNOT10-CNOT11 complex forms a structural platform for protein-protein interactions

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    The evolutionary conserved CCR4-NOT complex functions in the cytoplasm as the main mRNA deadenylase in both constitutive mRNA turnover and regulated mRNA decay pathways. The versatility of this complex is underpinned by its modular multi-subunit organization, with distinct structural modules actuating different functions. The structure and function of all modules are known, except for that of the N-terminal module. Using different structural approaches, we obtained high-resolution data revealing the architecture of the human N-terminal module composed of CNOT1, CNOT10, and CNOT11. The structure shows how two helical domains of CNOT1 sandwich CNOT10 and CNOT11, leaving the most conserved domain of CNOT11 protruding into solvent as an antenna. We discovered that GGNBP2, a protein identified as a tumor suppressor and spermatogenic factor, is a conserved interacting partner of the CNOT11 antenna domain. Structural and biochemical analyses thus pinpoint the N-terminal CNOT1-CNOT10-CNOT11 module as a conserved protein-protein interaction platform

    IDEFIX: a versatile performance-portable Godunov code for astrophysical flows

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    Exascale super-computers now becoming available rely on hybrid energy-efficient architectures that involve an accelerator such as Graphics Processing Units (GPU). Leveraging the computational power of these machines often means a significant rewrite of the numerical tools each time a new architecture becomes available. To address these issues, we present Idefix, a new code for astrophysical flows that relies on the Kokkos meta-programming library to guarantee performance portability on a wide variety of architectures while keeping the code as simple as possible for the user. Idefix is based on a Godunov finite-volume method that solves the non-relativistic HD and MHD equations on various grid geometries. Idefix includes a wide choice of solvers and several additional modules (constrained transport, orbital advection, non-ideal MHD) allowing users to address complex astrophysical problems. Idefix has been successfully tested on Intel and AMD CPUs (up to 131 072 CPU cores on Irene-Rome at TGCC) as well as NVidia and AMD GPUs (up to 1024 GPUs on Adastra at CINES). Idefix achieves more than 1e8 cell/s in MHD on a single NVidia V100 GPU and 3e11 cell/s on 256 Adastra nodes (1024 GPUs) with 95% parallelization efficiency (compared to a single node). For the same problem, Idefix is up to 6 times more energy efficient on GPUs compared to Intel Cascade Lake CPUs. Idefix is now a mature exascale-ready open-source code that can be used on a large variety of astrophysical and fluid dynamics applications.Comment: 18 pages, 18 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic

    The enzyme activities of Caf1 and Ccr4 are both required for deadenylation by the human Ccr4-Not nuclease module

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    In eukaryotic cells, the shortening and removal of the poly(A) tail (deadenylation) of cytoplasmic mRNA is a key event in regulated mRNA degradation. A major enzyme involved in deadenylation is the Ccr4-Not deadenylase complex, which can be recruited to its target mRNA by RNA-binding proteins or the miRNA repression complex. In addition to six non-catalytic components, the complex contains two enzymatic subunits with ribonuclease activity: Ccr4 and Caf1 (Pop2). In vertebrates, each deadenylase subunit is encoded by two paralogues: Caf1, which can interact with the anti-proliferative protein BTG2, is encoded by CNOT7 and CNOT8, while Ccr4 is encoded by the highly similar genes CNOT6 and CNOT6L. Currently, it is unclear whether the catalytic subunits work cooperatively, or whether the nuclease components have unique roles in deadenylation. We therefore developed a method to express and purify a minimal human BTG2-Caf1-Ccr4 nuclease sub-complex from bacterial cells. By using chemical inhibition and well-characterised inactivating amino acid substitutions, we demonstrate that the enzyme activities of Caf1 and Ccr4 are both required for deadenylation in vitro. These results indicate that Caf1 and Ccr4 cooperate in mRNA deadenylation and suggest that the enzyme activities of Caf1 and Ccr4 are regulated via allosteric interactions within the nuclease module

    Endosome to Golgi Retrieval of the Vacuolar Protein Sorting Receptor, Vps10p, Requires the Function of the VPS29, VPS30, and VPS35 Gene Products

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    Mutations in the S. cerevisiae VPS29 and VPS30 genes lead to a selective protein sorting defect in which the vacuolar protein carboxypeptidase Y (CPY) is missorted and secreted from the cell, while other soluble vacuolar hydrolases like proteinase A (PrA) are delivered to the vacuole. This phenotype is similar to that seen in cells with mutations in the previously characterized VPS10 and VPS35 genes. Vps10p is a late Golgi transmembrane protein that acts as the sorting receptor for soluble vacuolar hydrolases like CPY and PrA, while Vps35p is a peripheral membrane protein which cofractionates with membranes enriched in Vps10p. The sequences of the VPS29, VPS30, and VPS35 genes do not yet give any clues to the functions of their products. Each is predicted to encode a hydrophilic protein with homologues in the human and C. elegans genomes. Interestingly, mutations in the VPS29, VPS30, or VPS35 genes change the subcellular distribution of the Vps10 protein, resulting in a shift of Vps10p from the Golgi to the vacuolar membrane. The route that Vps10p takes to reach the vacuole in a vps35 mutant does not depend upon Sec1p mediated arrival at the plasma membrane but does require the activity of the pre-vacuolar endosomal t-SNARE, Pep12p. A temperature conditional allele of the VPS35 gene was generated and has been found to cause missorting/secretion of CPY and also Vps10p to mislocalize to a vacuolar membrane fraction at the nonpermissive temperature. Vps35p continues to cofractionate with Vps10p in vps29 mutants, suggesting that Vps10p and Vps35p may directly interact. Together, the data indicate that the VPS29, VPS30, and VPS35 gene products are required for the normal recycling of Vps10p from the prevacuolar endosome back to the Golgi where it can initiate additional rounds of vacuolar hydrolase sorting

    The human Pat1b protein: a novel mRNA deadenylation factor identified by a new immunoprecipitation technique

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    The complex of the yeast Lsm1p-7p proteins with Pat1p is an important mRNA decay factor that is involved in translational shutdown of deadenylated mRNAs and thus prepares these mRNAs for degradation. While the Lsm proteins are highly conserved, there is no unique mammalian homolog of Pat1p. To identify proteins that interact with human LSm1, we developed a novel immunoprecipitation technique that yields virtually pure immunocomplexes. Mass-spec analysis therefore identifies mostly true positives, avoiding tedious functional screening. The method unambiguously identified the Pat1p homolog in HeLa cells, Pat1b. When targeted to a reporter mRNA, Pat1b represses gene expression by inducing deadenylation of the mRNAs. This demonstrates that Pat1b, unlike yPat1p, acts as an mRNA-specific deadenylation factor, highlighting the emerging importance of deadenylation in the mRNA regulation of higher eukaryotes
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