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Autogenous Cross-Regulation Of Quaking mRNA Processing And Translation Balances Quaking Functions In Splicing And Translation

Authors: 
Fagg WS, Liu N, Fair JH, Shiue L, Katzmann S, Donohue J-P, Ares M
Citation: 
bioRxiv. 2017. doi:doi.org/10.1101/127936
Abstract: 
Quaking protein isoforms arise from a single Quaking gene, and bind the same RNA motif to regulate splicing, translation, decay, and localization of a large set of RNAs. However, the mechanisms by which Quaking expression is controlled to ensure that appropriate amounts of each isoform are available for such disparate gene expression processes are unknown. Here we explore how levels of two isoforms, nuclear Quaking-5 (Qk5) and cytoplasmic Quaking-6 (Qk6), are regulated in mouse myoblasts. We find that Qk5 and Qk6 proteins have distinct functions in splicing and translation respectively, enforced through differential subcellular localization. We show that Qk5 and Qk6 regulate distinct target mRNAs in the cell, and act in distinct ways on their own and each others transcripts to create a network of auto- and cross-regulatory feedback controls. Morpholino-mediated inhibition of Qk translation confirms that Qk5 controls Qk RNA levels by promoting accumulation and alternative splicing of Qk RNA, whereas Qk6 promotes its own translation while repressing Qk5. This Qk isoform cross-regulatory network responds to additional cell type and developmental controls to generate a spectrum of Qk5/Qk6 ratios, where they likely contribute to the wide range of functions of Quaking in development and cancer.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
cell culture: mouse myoblasts