TY - JOUR
T1 - Conserved structures formed by heterogeneous RNA sequences drive silencing of an inflammation responsive post-transcriptional operon
AU - Basu, Abhijit
AU - Jain, Niyati
AU - Tolbert, Blanton S.
AU - Komar, Anton A A
AU - Mazumder, Barsanjit
PY - 2017/12/15
Y1 - 2017/12/15
N2 - RNA-protein interactions with physiological outcomes usually rely on conserved sequences within the RNA element. By contrast, activity of the diverse gamma-interferon-activated inhibitor of translation (GAIT)-elements relies on the conserved RNA folding motifs rather than the conserved sequence motifs. These elements drive the translational silencing of a group of chemokine (CC/CXC) and chemokine receptor (CCR) mRNAs, thereby helping to resolve physiological inflammation. Despite sequence dissimilarity, these RNA elements adopt common secondary structures (as revealed by 2D-1H NMRspectroscopy), providing a basis for their interaction with the RNAbinding GAIT complex. However, many of these elements (e.g. those derived from CCL22, CXCL13, CCR4 and ceruloplasmin (Cp) mRNAs) have substantially different affinities for GAIT complex binding. Toeprinting analysis shows that different positions within the overall conserved GAIT element structure contribute to differential affinities of the GAIT protein complex towards the elements. Thus, heterogeneity of GAIT elements may provide hierarchical fine-tuning of the resolution of inflammation.
AB - RNA-protein interactions with physiological outcomes usually rely on conserved sequences within the RNA element. By contrast, activity of the diverse gamma-interferon-activated inhibitor of translation (GAIT)-elements relies on the conserved RNA folding motifs rather than the conserved sequence motifs. These elements drive the translational silencing of a group of chemokine (CC/CXC) and chemokine receptor (CCR) mRNAs, thereby helping to resolve physiological inflammation. Despite sequence dissimilarity, these RNA elements adopt common secondary structures (as revealed by 2D-1H NMRspectroscopy), providing a basis for their interaction with the RNAbinding GAIT complex. However, many of these elements (e.g. those derived from CCL22, CXCL13, CCR4 and ceruloplasmin (Cp) mRNAs) have substantially different affinities for GAIT complex binding. Toeprinting analysis shows that different positions within the overall conserved GAIT element structure contribute to differential affinities of the GAIT protein complex towards the elements. Thus, heterogeneity of GAIT elements may provide hierarchical fine-tuning of the resolution of inflammation.
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U2 - 10.1093/nar/gkx979
DO - 10.1093/nar/gkx979
M3 - Article
C2 - 29069516
SN - 0305-1048
VL - 45
SP - 12987
EP - 13003
JO - Nucleic Acids Research
JF - Nucleic Acids Research
IS - 22
ER -