4.5 Article

A Stress-Activated, p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase-ATF/CREB Pathway Regulates Posttranscriptional, Sequence-Dependent Decay of Target RNAs

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 15, Pages 3026-3035

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/MCB.00349-13

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM62244, GM81766]
  2. UAMS Research Council
  3. UAMS Graduate Student Research Fund
  4. National Institutes of Health Translational Research Institute grant [UL1 TR000039]

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Broadly conserved, mitogen-activated/stress-activated protein kinases (MAPK/SAPK) of the p38 family regulate multiple cellular processes. They transduce signals via dimeric, basic leucine zipper (bZIP) transcription factors of the ATF/CREB family (such as Atf2, Fos, and Jun) to regulate the transcription of target genes. We report additional mechanisms for gene regulation by such pathways exerted through RNA stability controls. The Spc1 (Sty1/Phh1) kinase-regulated Atf1-Pcr1 (Mts1-Mts2) heterodimer of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe controls the stress-induced, posttranscriptional stability and decay of sets of target RNAs. Whole transcriptome RNA sequencing data revealed that decay is associated nonrandomly with transcripts that contain an M26 sequence motif. Moreover, the ablation of an M26 sequence motif in a target mRNA is sufficient to block its stress-induced loss. Conversely, engineered M26 motifs can render a stable mRNA into one that is targeted for decay. This stress-activated RNA decay (SARD) provides a mechanism for reducing the expression of target genes without shutting off transcription itself. Thus, a single p38-ATF/CREB signal transduction pathway can coordinately induce (promote transcription and RNA stability) and repress (promote RNA decay) transcript levels for distinct sets of genes, as is required for developmental decisions in response to stress and other stimuli.

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