Drosophila miR2 primarily targets the 7 GpppN cap structure for translational repression

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Zdanowicz, Agnieszka
Thermann, Rolf
Kowalska, Joanna
Jemielity, Jacek
Duncan, Kent
Preiss, Thomas
Darzynkiewicz, Edward
Hentze, Matthias

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Cell Press

Abstract

Understanding the molecular mechanism(s) of how miRNAs repress mRNA translation is a fundamental challenge in RNA biology. Here we use a validated cell-free system from Drosophila embryos to investigate how miR2 inhibits translation initiation. By screening a library of chemical m7GpppN cap structure analogs, we identified defined modifications of the triphosphate backbone that augment miRNA-mediated inhibition of translation initiation but are "neutral" toward general cap-dependent translation. Interestingly, these caps also augment inhibition by 4E-BP. Kinetic dissection of translational repression and miR2-induced deadenylation shows that both processes proceed largely independently, with establishment of the repressed state involving a slow step. Our data demonstrate a primary role for the m7GpppN cap structure in miRNA-mediated translational inhibition, implicate structural determinants outside the core eIF4E-binding region in this process, and suggest that miRNAs may target cap-dependent translation through a mechanism related to the 4E-BP class of translational regulators.

Description

Citation

Source

Molecular Cell

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31