4.8 Article

Gcn2 eIF2α kinase mediates combinatorial translational regulation through nucleotide motifs and uORFs in target mRNAs

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 48, Issue 16, Pages 8977-8992

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkaa608

Keywords

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Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [JP18K05556, JP19H05264]
  2. KINBRE program Pilot Grant [P20 GM103418]
  3. National Institutes of Health [GM125671]
  4. Kansas State University (KSU) Terry Johnson Cancer Center
  5. KSU Arts and Science Research Scholarship
  6. K-INBRE Semester Scholarship [P20 GM103418]
  7. K-INBRE Star Trainee program [P20 GM103418]
  8. Goldwater Scholarship
  9. NIH [GM125671]

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The protein kinase Gcn2 is a central transducer of nutritional stress signaling important for stress adaptation by normal cells and the survival of cancer cells. In response to nutrient deprivation, Gcn2 phosphorylates eIF2 alpha, thereby repressing general translation while enhancing translation of specific mRNAs with upstream ORFs (uORFs) situated in their 5-leader regions. Here we performed genome-wide' measurements of mRNA translation during histidine starvation in fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Polysome analyses were combined with microarray measurements to identify gene transcripts whose translation was up-regulated in response to the stress in a Gcn2-dependent manner. We determined that translation is reprogrammed to enhance RNA metabolism and chromatin regulation and repress ribosome synthesis. Interestingly, translation of intron-containing mRNAs was up-regulated. The products of the regulated genes include additional eIF2 alpha kinase Hri2 amplifying the stress signaling and Gcn5 histone acetyl transferase and transcription factors, together altering genome-wide transcription. Unique dipeptide-coding uORFs and nucleotide motifs, such as '5'-UGA(C/G)GG-3', are found in 5' leader regions of regulated genes and shown to be responsible for translational control.

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