IRE1α Cleaves Select microRNAs During ER Stress to Derepress Translation of Proapoptotic Caspase-2

John-Paul Upton(University of California, San Francisco), Likun Wang(University of California, San Francisco), Dan Han(University of California, San Francisco), Eric S. Wang(University of California, San Francisco), Noelle E. Huskey(University of California, San Francisco), Lionel Lim(University of California, San Francisco), Morgan Truitt(University of California, San Francisco), Michael T. McManus(University of California, San Francisco), Davide Ruggero(University of California, San Francisco), Andrei Goga(University of California, San Francisco), Feroz R. Papa(QB3), Scott A. Oakes(University of California, San Francisco)
Science
October 5, 2012
Cited by 636

Abstract

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the primary organelle for folding and maturation of secretory and transmembrane proteins. Inability to meet protein-folding demand leads to "ER stress," and activates IRE1α, an ER transmembrane kinase-endoribonuclease (RNase). IRE1α promotes adaptation through splicing Xbp1 mRNA or apoptosis through incompletely understood mechanisms. Here, we found that sustained IRE1α RNase activation caused rapid decay of select microRNAs (miRs -17, -34a, -96, and -125b) that normally repress translation of Caspase-2 mRNA, and thus sharply elevates protein levels of this initiator protease of the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway. In cell-free systems, recombinant IRE1α endonucleolytically cleaved microRNA precursors at sites distinct from DICER. Thus, IRE1α regulates translation of a proapoptotic protein through terminating microRNA biogenesis, and noncoding RNAs are part of the ER stress response.


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