4.6 Article

Novel FMRP interaction networks linked to cellular stress

Journal

FEBS JOURNAL
Volume 288, Issue 3, Pages 837-860

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/febs.15443

Keywords

FMRP; fragile X mental retardation protein; protein interaction network; RNA-binding; stress granule

Funding

  1. German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) [A/09/92338]
  2. Research Committee of the Medical Faculty of the Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf [2018-38]
  3. German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft) through the Collaborative Research Center 974 [SFB 974, 190586431]
  4. European Network on Noonan Syndrome and Related Disorders (NSEuroNet) [01GM1602B]
  5. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)-German Network of RASopathy Research (GeNeRARe) [01GM1519D 01GM1902C]

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The study found that FMRP interacts with a wide range of proteins, suggesting its involvement in multiple cellular processes, particularly under stress conditions. This indicates the important role of FMRP in cells, especially during stress.
Silencing of the fragile X mental retardation 1 (FMR1) gene and consequently lack of synthesis of FMR protein (FMRP) are associated with fragile X syndrome, which is one of the most prevalent inherited intellectual disabilities, with additional roles in increased viral infection, liver disease, and reduced cancer risk. FMRP plays critical roles in chromatin dynamics, RNA binding, mRNA transport, and mRNA translation. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms, including the (sub)cellular FMRP protein networks, remain elusive. Here, we employed affinity pull-down and quantitative LC-MS/MS analyses with FMRP. We identified known and novel candidate FMRP-binding proteins as well as protein complexes. FMRP interacted with 180 proteins, 28 of which interacted with its N terminus. Interaction with the C terminus of FMRP was observed for 102 proteins, and 48 proteins interacted with both termini. This FMRP interactome comprises known FMRP-binding proteins, including the ribosomal proteins FXR1P, NUFIP2, Caprin-1, and numerous novel FMRP candidate interacting proteins that localize to different subcellular compartments, including CARF, LARP1, LEO1, NOG2, G3BP1, NONO, NPM1, SKIP, SND1, SQSTM1, and TRIM28. Our data considerably expand the protein and RNA interaction networks of FMRP, which thereby suggest that, in addition to its known functions, FMRP participates in transcription, RNA metabolism, ribonucleoprotein stress granule formation, translation, DNA damage response, chromatin dynamics, cell cycle regulation, ribosome biogenesis, miRNA biogenesis, and mitochondrial organization. Thus, FMRP seems associated with multiple cellular processes both under normal and cell stress conditions in neuronal as well as non-neuronal cell types, as exemplified by its role in the formation of stress granules.

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