Login / Signup

eIF4G2 balances its own mRNA translation via a PCBP2-based feedback loop.

Victoria V SmirnovaEkaterina D ShestakovaDmitry V BikmetovAnastasia A ChugunovaIlya A OstermanMarina V SerebryakovaOlga V SergeevaTatiana A PrikazchikovaIvan N ShatskyIlya M Terenin
Published in: RNA (New York, N.Y.) (2019)
Poly(rC)-binding protein 2 (PCBP2, hnRNP E2) is one of the most abundant RNA-binding proteins in mammalian cells. In humans, it exists in seven isoforms, which are assumed to play similar roles in cells. The protein is shown to bind 3'-untranslated regions (3'-UTRs) of many mRNAs and regulate their translation and/or stability, but nothing is known about the functional consequences of PCBP2 binding to 5'-UTRs. Here we show that the PCBP2 isoform f interacts with the 5'-UTRs of mRNAs encoding eIF4G2 (a translation initiation factor with a yet unknown mechanism of action, also known as DAP5) and Cyclin I, and inhibits their translation in vitro and in cultured cells, while the PCBP2 isoform e only affects Cyclin I translation. Furthermore, eIF4G2 participates in a cap-dependent translation of the PCBP2 mRNA. Thus, PCBP2 and eIF4G2 seem to regulate one another's expression via a novel type of feedback loop formed by the translation initiation factor and the RNA-binding protein.
Keyphrases