MKRN3-mediated ubiquitination of Poly(A)-binding proteins modulates the stability and translation of <i>GNRH1</i> mRNA in mammalian puberty

Chuanyin Li(Tongji University), Tianting Han(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qingrun Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Menghuan Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Rong Guo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yun Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Wenli Lü(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Zhengwei Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chao Peng(Shanghai Advanced Research Institute), Ping Wu(Shanghai Advanced Research Institute), Xiaoxu Tian(Shanghai Advanced Research Institute), Qinqin Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yuexiang Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Vincent Zhou, Ziyan Han(Occidental College), Hecheng Li(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Feng Wang(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Ronggui Hu(Tongji University)
Nucleic Acids Research
February 26, 2021
Cited by 85Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The family of Poly(A)-binding proteins (PABPs) regulates the stability and translation of messenger RNAs (mRNAs). Here we reported that the three members of PABPs, including PABPC1, PABPC3 and PABPC4, were identified as novel substrates for MKRN3, whose deletion or loss-of-function mutations were genetically associated with human central precocious puberty (CPP). MKRN3-mediated ubiquitination was found to attenuate the binding of PABPs to the poly(A) tails of mRNA, which led to shortened poly(A) tail-length of GNRH1 mRNA and compromised the formation of translation initiation complex (TIC). Recently, we have shown that MKRN3 epigenetically regulates the transcription of GNRH1 through conjugating poly-Ub chains onto methyl-DNA bind protein 3 (MBD3). Therefore, MKRN3-mediated ubiquitin signalling could control both transcriptional and post-transcriptional switches of mammalian puberty initiation. While identifying MKRN3 as a novel tissue-specific translational regulator, our work also provided new mechanistic insights into the etiology of MKRN3 dysfunction-associated human CPP.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis