15 research outputs found

    RNA chiropractics

    No full text

    A new human gene KCNRG encoding potassium channel regulating protein is a cancer suppressor gene candidate located in 13q14.3

    Get PDF
    We report the primary characterization of a new gene KCNRG mapped at chromosome band 13q14.3. This gene includes three exons and has two alternatively spliced isoforms that are expressed in normal tissues and in some tumor cell lines. Protein KCNRG has high homology to tetramerization domain of voltage-gated K + channels. Using the patch-clamp technique we determined that KCNRG suppresses K + channel activity in human prostate cell line LNCaP. It is known that selective blockers of K + channels suppress lymphocyte and LNCaP cell line proliferation. We suggest that KCNRG is a candidate for a B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia and prostate cancer tumor suppressor gene

    Functional characterization of the EMCV IRES in plants

    No full text
    The translation of eukaryotic messenger RNA is typically dependent upon the presence of an mGpppN cap structure at the 5' end of the transcript. However, several animal viruses, including the Picorna viruses, have been shown to exhibit cap-independent translation through the presence of an internal ribosome entry site or IRES. This IRES-mediated cap-independent internal translation initiation has been exploited to generate bicistronic transcripts that function in animal cells. Recently IRES elements have also been identified in a small number of vertebrate, insect and yeast cellular messenger RNAs although no such sequences have been identified in endogenous plant genes and there are no reports of animal virus derived IRES activity in plant cells. Here we have constructed a bicistronic gene containing both green fluorescent protein and luciferase open-reading frames separated by the encephalomyocarditis IRES element under the control of the CaMV 35S promoter. Northern analysis reveals expression of the bicistronic transcript and in vivo imaging of GFP and luciferase activities demonstrates the functional presence of both proteins. Western blot analysis confirms the independent translation of both reporter proteins. These data suggest that insertion of the encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV) IRES element between two open-reading frames of a plant bicistronic transcript can mediate translation of the second open-reading frame. This activity is more apparent in the leaves, than in the roots, of transgenic seedlings carrying the bicistronic reporter gene construct

    Evidence That Ternary Complex (eIF2-GTP-tRNA(i)(Met))–Deficient Preinitiation Complexes Are Core Constituents of Mammalian Stress Granules

    Get PDF
    Environmental stress-induced phosphorylation of eIF2α inhibits protein translation by reducing the availability of eIF2-GTP-tRNA(i)Met, the ternary complex that joins initiator tRNA(Met) to the 43S preinitiation complex. The resulting untranslated mRNA is dynamically routed to discrete cytoplasmic foci known as stress granules (SGs), a process requiring the related RNA-binding proteins TIA-1 and TIAR. SGs appear to be in equilibrium with polysomes, but the nature of this relationship is obscure. We now show that most components of the 48S preinitiation complex (i.e., small, but not large, ribosomal subunits, eIF3, eIF4E, eIF4G) are coordinately recruited to SGs in arsenite-stressed cells. In contrast, eIF2 is not a component of newly assembled SGs. Cells expressing a phosphomimetic mutant (S51D) of eIF2α assemble SGs of similar composition, confirming that the recruitment of these factors is a direct consequence of blocked translational initiation and not due to other effects of arsenite. Surprisingly, phospho-eIF2α is recruited to SGs that are disassembling in cells recovering from arsenite-induced stress. We discuss these results in the context of a translational checkpoint model wherein TIA and eIF2 are functional antagonists of translational initiation, and in which lack of ternary complex drives SG assembly
    corecore