994 resultados para TRANSLATIONAL REGULATION
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Dissertation presented to obtain the Ph.D degree in Biology
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Summary of the thesis Glucose has been considered the major, if not the exclusive, energy substrate for the brain. But under certain conditions other substrates, namely monocarboxylates (lactate, pyruvate, and ketone bodies), can contribute significantly to satisfy brain energy demands. These monocarboxylates need to be transported across the blood brain barrier as well as out of astrocytes into the extracellular space and taken up into neurons. It has been shown that monocarboxylates are transported by a family of proton-linked transporters called monocarboxylate transporters (MCTs). In the central nervous system, MCT2 is the predominant neuronal form and little is known about the regulation of its expression. The neurotransmitter noradrenaline (NA) was shown previously to enhance the expression of MCT2 in cultured cortical neurons via a translational mechanism. Here, we demonstrate that two other substances, namely, insulin and IGF-1 enhance MCT2 protein expression in cultured mouse cortical neurons in a time- and concentrationdependent manner without affecting MCT2 mRNA levels. This result confirmed that MCT2 protein expression is translationally regulated and extend the observation to different types of neuroactive substances. Then we sought to determine by which signaling pathway(s) NA, insulin and IGF-1 can induce MCT2 protein expression. First, we observed by Western blot that all three substances cause activation of the MAP kinase ERK as well as the kinase Akt via their phosphorylation. Moreover, the mTOR/S6K pathway which is known to play an important role in translation initiation regulation was also strongly stimulated by all three substances. Second, we sought to determine the implication of these signaling pathways on the NA-, insulin- and IGF-1-induced enhancement of MCT2 protein expression and used specific inhibitors of these signaling pathways. We observed that the Pia kinase and mTOR inhibitors LY294002 and rapamycin respectively, strongly prevent the enhancement. of MCT2 expression caused by either NA, insulin ar IGF-1. In contrast, the MEK inhibitor PD98059 and the p38 MAP kinase inhibitor SB202190 had only a slight effect on the enhancement of MCT2 expression in all three cases. These results suggest that NA, insulin and IGF-1 regulate MCT2 protein expression by a common mechanism most likely involving the Akt/PKB pathway and translational activation via mTOR. In conclusion, considering the roles of NA, insulin and IGF-1 in synaptic plasticity, the tight translational regulation of MCT2 expression by these substances may represent a common mechanism through which supply of potentiated synapses with nonglucose energy substrates can be adapted to the level of activity. Résumé du travail de thèse Le glucose représente le substrat énergétique majeur pour le cerveau. Cependant, dans certaines conditions physiologiques ou pathologiques, le cerveau a la capacité d'utiliser des substrats énergétiques appartenant à la classe des monocarboxylates (lactate, pyruvate et corps cétoniques) afin de satisfaire ses besoins énergétiques. Ces monocarboxylates doivent être transportés à travers la barrière hématoencéphalique mais aussi hors des astrocytes vers l'espace extracellulaire puis re-captés par les neurones. Leur transport est assuré par une famille de transporteurs spécifiques, protons-dépendants, appelés transporteurs aux monocarboxylates (MCTs). Dans le système nerveux central, les neurones expriment principalement l'isoforme MCT2 mais peu d'informations sont disponibles concernant la régulation de son expression. Il a été montré que le neurotransmetteur noradrénaline (NA) augmente l'expression de MCT2 dans les cultures de neurones corticaux de souris par le biais d'un mécanisme de régulation traductionnel. La présente étude nous a permis de démontrer que deux autres substances, l'insuline et 17GF-1, induisent une augmentation de la protéine MCT2 dans ces mêmes cultures selon un décours temporel et une gamme de concentrations particulière. Etonnamment, aucun changement n'a été observé concernant les niveaux d'ARNm de MCT2. Ce résultat .confirme que la protéine MCT2 est régulée de manière traductionnelle et révèle que différentes substances neuro-actives peuvent réguler l'expression de MCT2. Compte tenu de ces observations, nous avons voulu déterminer par quelle(s) voie(s) de signalisation la NA, l'insuline et l'IGF-1 exercent leur effet sur l'expression de MCT2. Dans un premier temps, nous avons pu observer par Western blot que ces trois substances activent la MAP kinase ERK ainsi que la kinase Akt via leur phasphorylation. De plus, la voie mTOR/S6K, connue pour son implication dans la régulation de l'initiation de la traduction est aussi fortement activée par ces trois substances. Dans un second temps, nous avons voulu déterminer I implication de chacune de ces voies de signalisation dans l'augmentation de l'expression de la protéine MCT2 observée après stimulation à la NA, à l'insuline et à l'IGF-1. Pour ce faire, nous avons utilisé des inhibiteurs spécifiques de chacune de ces voies. (Vous avons observé que les inhibiteurs des voies PI3 kinase et mTOR (LY294002 et rapamycin respectivement), prévenaient fortement l'augmentation de l'expression de MCT2 induite par la NA, l'insuline ou (IGF-1. A l'inverse, les inhibitions de la MAP kinase .kinase MEK ainsi que de la MAP kinase p38 (par l'utilisation des inhibiteurs spécifiques PD98059 et SB202190 respectivement) n'ont eu qu'un léger effet dans ces mêmes conditions. Ces résultats suggèrent que la NA, 'l'insuline et I~GF-1 régulent l'expression de la protéine MCT2 par un mécanisme commun impliquant probablement la voie Akt/PKB et l'activation de la traduction via mTOR. En conclusion, considérant l'implication de la NA, de l'insuline et de I`IGF-1 dans la plasticité synaptique, le contrôle traductionnel étroit exercé par ces substances sur l'expression de MCT2 pourrait être un moyen d'alimenter en substrats énergétiques autres que le glucose les synapses activées et également d'adapter l'approvisionnement en substrats énergétiques au niveau d'activité. Résumé « grand public » Le cerveau est un organe qui réalise des tâches complexes nécessitant un apport important en énergie. La principale source d'énergie du cerveau est le glucose. Bien que le cerveau ne représente que 2% de la masse corporelle, il consomme à lui seul plus de 25% du glucose et 20% de l'oxygène provenant de la circulation sanguine. La nécessité d'un tel apport en énergie réside dans la nature -même du fonctionnement des milliards de neurones qui utilisent des signaux électriques et chimiques pour communiquer entre eux. Hormis l'utilisation massive du glucose comme source d'énergie, le cerveau est capable de consommer d'autres substrats énergétiques dans certaines conditions physiologiques ou pathologiques. Les monocarboxylates (lactate, pyruvate et corps cétoniques) font partie de ces autres sources d'énergie. Contrairement au glucose, les monocarboxylates ne diffusent pas facilement de la circulation sanguine vers les neurones. Afin de pouvoir être consommés par les neurones, ils doivent être transportés par un système adapté. Ce sont des transporteurs appelés transporteurs aux monocarboxylates ou MCT qui permettent le passage de ces substrats énergétiques du sang vers les neurones. Le but de ce travail de thèse a été de comprendre comment est régulée l'expression de MCT2, l'un de ces transporteurs exprimé spécifiquement à la surface des neurones. Cette étude nous a permis de mettre en évidence que le neurotransmetteur noradrénaline ainsi que les hormones insuline et IGF-1 (insulinlike growth factor-1) sont capables d'induire une augmentation d'expression de MCT2 à la surface des neurones en culture. Nous avons ensuite voulu déterminer par quels mécanismes de signalisation ces substances agissent sur l'expression de MCT2. Nous avons pu observer que la surexpression de la protéine MCT2 est due à une augmentation d'activité traductionnelle (la traduction étant une des étapes qui permet la synthèse des protéines) induite par le biais d'une voie de signalisation particulière. En conclusion, lorsque la noradrénaline, l'insuline ou 17GF-1 agissent sur les neurones, la traduction de la protéine MCT2 est activée et on observe une augmentation de l'expression de MCT2. Ce mécanisme pourrait permettre d'augmenter l'apport énergétique au niveau des neurones en augmentant le nombre de transporteurs pour les substrats énergétiques que sont les monocarboxylates. D'un point de vue physiologique, cette régulation d'expression pourrait jouer un rôle primordial dans des situations d'apprentissage et de mémorisation. Sur le plan pathologique, cela pourrait permettre de prévenir les dommages causes aux neurones dans certains cas d'atteintes cérébrales.
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Several stresses to tissues including hyperthermia, ischemia, mechanical trauma and heavy metals have been demonstrated to affect the regulation of a subset of the family of heat shock proteins of70kOa (hsp70). In several organisms following some of these traumas, the levels of hsp70 mRNA and proteins are dramatically upregulated. However, the effects of the stress on limb and tail amputation in the newt Notophthalmus viridescens, involving mechanical tissue damage, have not adequately been examined. In the present study, three techniques were utilized to quantitate the levels of hsp70 mRNA and protein in the tissues of the forelimbs and tails of newts during the early post-traumatic events following surgical resection of these:: appendages. These included quantitative Western blotting of proteins separated by both one and twodimensional SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and quantitative Northern blot analysis of total RNA. In tissues of both the limb and tail one hour after amputation, there were no significant differences in the levels of hsp70 protein measured by one-dimensional SOSPAGE followed by Western blotting, when compared to the levels measured in the unamputated limb. A 30 minute heat shock at 35°C failed to elicit an increase in the levels of hsp70 protein in these tissues. Further analysis using the more sensitive 20 PAGE separation of stump tissue proteins revealed that at least some of the five hsp70 isoforms of the newt may be differentially regulated in limbs and tails in response to trauma. It appears also that amputation of the tail and limb tissues leads to slight 3 elevation in the levels of HSP70 mRNA when compared to those of their respective unstressed tissues.
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Background: Changes in cellular phenotype result from underlying changes in mRNA transcription and translation. Endothelin-1 stimulates cardiomyocyte hypertrophy with associated changes in mRNA/protein expression and an increase in the rate of protein synthesis. Insulin also increases the rate of translation but does not promote overt cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. One mechanism of translational regulation is through 5' terminal oligopyrimidine tracts (TOPs) that, in response to growth stimuli, promote mRNA recruitment to polysomes for increased translation. TOP mRNAs include those encoding ribosomal proteins, but the full panoply remains to be established. Here, we used microarrays to compare the effects of endothelin-1 and insulin on the global transcriptome of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes, and on mRNA recruitment to polysomes (i.e. the translatome). Results: Globally, endothelin-1 and insulin (1 h) promoted >1.5-fold significant (false discovery rate < 0.05) changes in expression of 341 and 38 RNAs, respectively. For these transcripts with this level of change there was little evidence of translational regulation. However, 1336 and 712 RNAs had >1.25-fold significant changes in expression in total and/or polysomal RNA induced by endothelin-1 or insulin, respectively, of which ~35% of endothelin-1-responsive and ~56% of insulin-responsive transcripts were translationally regulated. Of mRNAs for established proteins recruited to polysomes in response to insulin, 49 were known TOP mRNAs with a further 15 probable/possible TOP mRNAs, but 49 had no identifiable TOP sequences or other consistent features in the 5' untranslated region. Conclusions: Endothelin-1, rather than insulin, substantially affects global transcript expression to promote cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. Effects on RNA recruitment to polysomes are subtle, with differential effects of endothelin-1 and insulin on specific transcripts. Furthermore, although insulin promotes recruitment of TOP mRNAs to cardiomyocyte polysomes, not all recruited mRNAs are TOP mRNAs.
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Regulation of glutamate transporters accompanies plasticity of some glutamatergic synapses. The regulation of glutamate uptake at the Aplysia sensorimotor synapse during long-term facilitation (LTF) was investigated. Previously, increases in levels of ApGT1 (Aplysia glutamate transporter 1) in synaptic membranes were found to be related to long-term increases in glutamate uptake. In this study, we found that regulation of ApGT1 during LTF appears to occur post-translationally. Serotonin (5-HT) a transmitter that induces LTF did not increase synthesis of ApGT1. A pool of ApGT1 appears to exist in sensory neuron somata, which is transported to the terminals by axonal transport. Blocking the rough endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi-trans-Golgi network (TGN) pathway with Brefeldin A prevented the 5-HT-induced increase of ApGT1 in terminals. Also, 5-HT produced changes in post-translational modifications of ApGT1 as well as changes in the levels of an ApGT1-co-precipitating protein. These results suggest that regulation of trafficking of ApGT1 from the vesicular trafficking system (rough endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi-TGN) in the sensory neuron somata to the terminals by post-translational modifications and protein interactions appears to be the mechanism underlying the increase in ApGT1, and thus, glutamate uptake during memory formation.
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Previous results indicated that translation of four mitochondrion-encoded genes and one nucleus-encoded gene (COX4) is repressed in mutants (pgs1Delta) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae lacking phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin. COX4 translation was studied here using a mitochondrially targeted green fluorescence protein (mtGFP) fused to the COX4 promoter and its 5' and 3' untranslated regions (UTRs). Lack of mtGFP expression independent of carbon source and strain background was established to be at the translational level. The translational defect was not due to deficiency of mitochondrial respiratory function but was rather caused directly by the lack of phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin in mitochondrial membranes. Reintroduction of a functional PGS1 gene under control of the ADH1 promoter restored phosphatidylglycerol synthesis and expression of mtGFP. Deletion analysis of the 5' UTR(COX4) revealed the presence of a 50-nucleotide fragment with two stem-loops as a cis-element inhibiting COX4 translation. Binding of a protein factor(s) specifically to this sequence was observed with cytoplasm from pgs1Delta but not PGS1 cells. Using HIS3 and lacZ as reporters, extragenic spontaneous recessive mutations that allowed expression of His3p and beta-galactosidase were isolated, which appeared to be loss-of-function mutations, suggesting that the genes mutated may encode the trans factors that bind to the cis element in pgs1Delta cells.
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The human glutathione S-transferase P1 (GSTP1) protein is an endogenous inhibitor of c-jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs) and an important phase II detoxification enzyme. ^ Recent identification of a cAMP response element (CRE) in the 5 ′-region of the human GSTP1 gene and several putative phosphorylation sites for the Ser/Thr protein kinases, including, cAMP-dependent protein kinases (PKAs), protein kinases C (PKCs), and JNKs in the GSTP1 protein raised the possibility that signaling pathways may play an important role in the transcriptional and post-translational regulation of GSTP1 gene. This study examined (a) whether the signaling pathway mediated by CAMP, via the GSTP1 CRE, is involved in the transcriptional regulation of the GSTP1 gene, (b) whether signaling pathways mediated by the Ser/Thr protein kinases (PKAs, PKCs, and JNKs) induce post-translational modification, viz. phosphorylation of the GSTP1 protein, and (c) whether such phosphorylation of the GSTP1 protein alters its functions in metabolism and in JNK signaling. ^ The first major finding in this study is the establishment of the human GSTP1 gene as a novel CAMP responsive gene in which transcription is activated via an interaction between PKA activated CRE binding protein-1 (CREB-1) and the CRE in the 5′-regulatory region. ^ The second major finding in this study is the observation that the GSTP1 protein undergoes phosphorylation and functionally activated by second messenger-activated protein kinases, PKA and PKC, in tumor cells with activated signaling pathways. Following phosphorylation by PKA or PKC, the catalytic activity of the GSTP1 protein was significantly enhanced, as indicated by a decrease in its Km (2- to 3.6-fold) and an increase in Kcat/ Km (1.6- to 2.5-fold) for glutathione. Given the frequent over-expression of GSTP1 and the aberrant PKA/PKC signaling cascade observed in tumors, these findings suggest that phosphorylation of GSTP1 may contribute to the malignant progression and drug-resistant phenotype of these tumors. ^ The third major finding in this study is that the GSTP1 protein, an inhibitor of JNKs, undergoes significant phosphorylation in tumor cells with activated JNK signaling pathway and in those under oxidative stress. Following phosphorylation by JNK, the ability of GSTP1 to inhibit JNK downstream function, i.e. c-jun phosphorylation, was significantly enhanced, suggesting a feedback mechanism of regulation of JNK-mediated cellular signaling. (Abstract shortened by UMI.) ^
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The objective of this research was to determine the role of acidic ribosomal protein (ARP) phosphorylation in translation. Ribosomes (Rbs) from germinated maize (Zea mays L.) axes had four ARP bands within 4.2 to 4.5 isoelectric points when analyzed by isoelectric focusing. Two of these bands disappeared after alkaline phosphatase hydrolysis. During germination a progressive change from nonphosphorylated (0 h) to phosphorylated ARP (24 h) forms was observed in the Rbs; a free cytoplasmic pool of nonphosphorylated ARPs was also identified by immunoblot and isoelectric focusing experiments. De novo ARP synthesis initiated very slowly early in germination, whereas ARP phosphorylation occurred rapidly within this period. ARP-phosphorylated versus ARP-nonphosphorylated Rbs were tested in an in vitro reticulocyte lysate translation system. Greater in vitro mRNA translation rates were demonstrated for the ARP-phosphorylated Rbs than for the non-ARP-phosphorylated ones. Rapamycin application to maize axes strongly inhibited S6 ribosomal protein phosphorylation, but did not interfere with the ARP phosphorylation reaction. We conclude that ARP phosphorylation does not depend on ARP synthesis or on ARP assembly into Rbs. Rather, this process seems to be part of a translational regulation mechanism.
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The posttranscriptional control of iron uptake, storage, and utilization by iron-responsive elements (IREs) and iron regulatory proteins (IRPs) provides a molecular framework for the regulation of iron homeostasis in many animals. We have identified and characterized IREs in the mRNAs for two different mitochondrial citric acid cycle enzymes. Drosophila melanogaster IRP binds to an IRE in the 5' untranslated region of the mRNA encoding the iron-sulfur protein (Ip) subunit of succinate dehydrogenase (SDH). This interaction is developmentally regulated during Drosophila embryogenesis. In a cell-free translation system, recombinant IRP-1 imposes highly specific translational repression on a reporter mRNA bearing the SDH IRE, and the translation of SDH-Ip mRNA is iron regulated in D. melanogaster Schneider cells. In mammals, an IRE was identified in the 5' untranslated regions of mitochondrial aconitase mRNAs from two species. Recombinant IRP-1 represses aconitase synthesis with similar efficiency as ferritin IRE-controlled translation. The interaction between mammalian IRPs and the aconitase IRE is regulated by iron, nitric oxide, and oxidative stress (H2O2), indicating that these three signals can control the expression of mitochondrial aconitase mRNA. Our results identify a regulatory link between energy and iron metabolism in vertebrates and invertebrates, and suggest biological functions for the IRE/IRP regulatory system in addition to the maintenance of iron homeostasis.
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mRNA localization is emerging as a critical cellular mechanism for the spatiotemporal regulation of protein expression and serves important roles in oogenesis, embryogenesis, cell fate specification, and synapse formation. Signal sequence-encoding mRNAs are localized to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane by either of two mechanisms, a canonical mechanism of translation on ER-bound ribosomes (signal recognition particle pathway), or a poorly understood direct ER anchoring mechanism. In this study, we identify that the ER integral membrane proteins function as RNA-binding proteins and play important roles in the direct mRNA anchoring to the ER. We report that one of the ER integral membrane RNA-binding protein, AEG-1 (astrocyte elevated gene-1), functions in the direct ER anchoring and translational regulation of mRNAs encoding endomembrane transmembrane proteins. HITS-CLIP and PAR-CLIP analyses of the AEG-1 mRNA interactome of human hepatocellular carcinoma cells revealed a high enrichment for mRNAs encoding endomembrane organelle proteins, most notably encoding transmembrane proteins. AEG-1 binding sites were highly enriched in the coding sequence and displayed a signature cluster enrichment downstream of encoded transmembrane domains. In overexpression and knockdown models, AEG-1 expression markedly regulates translational efficiency and protein functions of two of its bound transcripts, MDR1 and NPC1. This study reveals a molecular mechanism for the selective localization of mRNAs to the ER and identifies a novel post-transcriptional gene regulation function for AEG-1 in membrane protein expression.
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MCT2 is the predominant neuronal monocarboxylate transporter allowing lactate use as an alternative energy substrate. It is suggested that MCT2 is upregulated to meet enhanced energy demands after modifications in synaptic transmission. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a promoter of synaptic plasticity, significantly increased MCT2 protein expression in cultured cortical neurons (as shown by immunocytochemistry and western blot) through a translational regulation at the synaptic level. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor can cause translational activation through different signaling pathways. Western blot analyses showed that p44/p42 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), Akt, and S6 were strongly phosphorylated on BDNF treatment. To determine by which signal transduction pathway(s) BDNF mediates its upregulation of MCT2 protein expression, the effect of specific inhibitors for p38 MAPK, phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K), mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) kinase (MEK), p44/p42 MAPK (ERK), and Janus kinase 2 (JAK2) was evaluated. It could be observed that the BDNF-induced increase in MCT2 protein expression was almost completely blocked by all inhibitors, except for JAK2. These data indicate that BDNF induces an increase in neuronal MCT2 protein expression by a mechanism involving a concomitant stimulation of PI3K/Akt/mTOR/S6, p38 MAPK, and p44/p42 MAPK. Moreover, our observations suggest that changes in MCT2 expression could participate in the process of synaptic plasticity induced by BDNF.
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Mammalian gene expression displays widespread circadian oscillations. Rhythmic transcription underlies the core clock mechanism, but it cannot explain numerous observations made at the level of protein rhythmicity. We have used ribosome profiling in mouse liver to measure the translation of mRNAs into protein around the clock and at high temporal and nucleotide resolution. We discovered, transcriptome-wide, extensive rhythms in ribosome occupancy and identified a core set of approximately 150 mRNAs subject to particularly robust daily changes in translation efficiency. Cycling proteins produced from nonoscillating transcripts revealed thus-far-unknown rhythmic regulation associated with specific pathways (notably in iron metabolism, through the rhythmic translation of transcripts containing iron responsive elements), and indicated feedback to the rhythmic transcriptome through novel rhythmic transcription factors. Moreover, estimates of relative levels of core clock protein biosynthesis that we deduced from the data explained known features of the circadian clock better than did mRNA expression alone. Finally, we identified uORF translation as a novel regulatory mechanism within the clock circuitry. Consistent with the occurrence of translated uORFs in several core clock transcripts, loss-of-function of Denr, a known regulator of reinitiation after uORF usage and of ribosome recycling, led to circadian period shortening in cells. In summary, our data offer a framework for understanding the dynamics of translational regulation, circadian gene expression, and metabolic control in a solid mammalian organ.
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Whereas it is well known that T3 inhibits TSH beta gene transcription, its effects on TSH beta mRNA stability and translation have been poorly investigated. This study examined these possibilities, by evaluating the TSH beta transcripts poly(A) tail length, translational rate and binding to cytoskeleton, in pituitaries of thyroidectomized and sham-operated rats treated with T3 or saline, and killed 30 min thereafter. The hypothyroidism induced an increase of TSH beta transcript poly(A) tail, as well as of its content in ribosomes and attachment to cytoskeleton. The hypothyroid rats acutely treated with T3 exhibited a reduction of TSH beta mRNA poly(A) tail length and recruitment to ribosomes, indicating that this treatment decreased the stability and translation rate of TSH beta mRNA. Nevertheless, acute T3 administration to sham-operated rats provoked an increase of TSH beta transcripts binding to ribosomes. These data add new insight to an important role of T3 in rapidly regulating TSH gene expression at posttranscriptional level. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Die Myelinisierung neuronaler Axone ermöglicht eine schnelle und energieeffiziente Weiterleitung von Informationen im Nervensystem. Durch lokale Synthese von Myelinproteinen kann die Myelinschicht, zeitlich und räumlich reguliert, gebildet werden. Dieser Prozess ist abhängig von verschiedensten axonalen Eigenschaften und muss damit lokal reguliert werden. Die Myelinisierung im zentralen sowie im peripheren Nervensystem hängt unter anderem stark von kleinen regulatorischen RNA Molekülen ab. In Oligodendrozyten wird das Myelin Basische Protein (MBP) von der sncRNA715 translational reguliert, indem diese direkt innerhalb der 3’UTR der Mbp mRNA bindet und damit die Proteinsynthese verhindert. Mbp mRNA wird in hnRNP A2‐enthaltenen RNA Granula in die Zellperipherie transportiert, wo in Antwort auf axonale Signale die membranständige Tyrosin‐ Kinase Fyn aktiviert wird, welche Granula‐Komponenten wie hnRNP A2 und F phosphoryliert wodurch die lokale Translation initiiert wird. Während des Transports wird die mRNA durch die Bindung der sncRNA715 translational reprimiert. SncRNAs bilden zusammen mit Argonaut‐Proteinen den microRNA induced silencing complex (miRISC), welcher die translationale Inhibition oder den Abbau von mRNAs vermittelt. In der vorliegenden Arbeit sollte zum einen die Regulation der sncRNA715‐abhängigen translationalen Repression der Mbp mRNA in oligodendroglialen Zellen genauer untersucht werden und im zweiten Teil wurde die Rolle der sncRNA715 in den myelinbildenden Zellen des peripheren Nervensystems, den Schwann Zellen, analysiert. Es konnte in oligodendroglialen Zellen die mRNA‐Expression der vier, in Säugern bekannten Argonaut‐Proteinen nachgewiesen werden. Außerdem konnten die beiden Proteine Ago1 und Ago2 in vitro sowie in vivo detektiert werden. Ago2 interagiert mit hnRNP A2, Mbp mRNA und sncRNA715, womit es als neue Komponente des Mbp mRNA Transportgranulas identifiziert werden konnte. Des Weiteren colokalisiert Ago2 mit der Fyn‐Kinase und alle vier Argonaut‐Proteine werden Fyn‐abhängig Tyrosin‐phosphoryliert. Die Fyn‐abhängige Phosphorylierung der Granula‐Komponenten in Antwort auf axo‐glialen Kontakt führt zum Zerfall des RNA‐Granulas und zur gesteigerten MBP Proteinsynthese. Dies wird möglicherweise durch Abstoßungskräfte der negativ geladenen phosphorylierten Proteine vermittelt, wodurch diese sich voneinander und von der mRNA entfernen. Durch die Ablösung des miRISCs von der Mbp mRNA wird die Translation möglicherweise reaktiviert und die Myelinisierung kann starten. Mit der Identifizierung von Ago2 als neuer Mbp mRNA Transportgranula‐Komponente konnte ein weiterer Einblick in die Regulation der lokalen Translation von MBP gewährt werden. Das Verständnis dieses Prozesses ist entscheidend für die Entwicklung neuer Therapien von demyelinisierenden Erkrankungen, da neue Faktoren als eventuelle Ziele für pharmakologische Manipulationen identifiziert und möglichweise neue Therapiemöglichkeiten entstehen könnten. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurde die translationale Regulation von Mbp mRNA in Schwann Zellen untersucht. Auch Schwann Zell‐Mbp wird als mRNA translational inaktiviert zur axo‐glialen Kontaktstelle transportiert, wo vermutlich auch lokale Translation in Antwort auf spezifische Signale stattfindet. Allerdings bleiben die genauen Mechanismen der mRNA‐Lokalisation und damit verbundenen translationalen Repression bislang ungeklärt. Es konnte hier gezeigt werden, dass auch in Schwann Zellen die sncRNA715 exprimiert wird und die Translation von Mbp reguliert. Überexpression der synthetischen sncRNA715 führt zu einer signifikanten Reduktion der MBP Proteinmengen in differenzierten primären Schwann Zellen. Damit kann vermutet werden, dass die Regulation der lokalen MBP Proteinsynthese in Schwann Zellen der in Oligodendrozyten ähnelt