Publication:

Differential role for phosphorylation in alternative polyadenylation function versus nuclear import of SR-like protein CPSF6

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2019

Published Version

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford Academic
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Sooin Jang, Nicola J Cook, Valerie E Pye, Gregory J Bedwell, Amanda M Dudek, Parmit K Singh, Peter Cherepanov, Alan N Engelman, Differential role for phosphorylation in alternative polyadenylation function versus nuclear import of SR-like protein CPSF6, Nucleic Acids Research, Volume 47, Issue 9, 21 May 2019, Pages 4663–4683, https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkz206

Abstract

Cleavage factor I mammalian (CFIm) complex, composed of cleavage and polyadenylation specificity factor 5 (CPSF5) and serine/arginine-like protein CPSF6, regulates alternative polyadenylation (APA). Loss of CFIm function results in proximal polyadenylation site usage, shortening mRNA 3  untranslated regions (UTRs). Although CPSF6 plays additional roles in human disease, its nuclear translocation mechanism remains unresolved. Two  - karyopherins, transportin (TNPO) 1 and TNPO3, can bind CPSF6 in vitro, and we demonstrate here that while the TNPO1 binding site is dispensable for CPSF6 nuclear import, the arginine/serine (RS)-like domain (RSLD) that mediates TNPO3 binding is critical. The crystal structure of the RSLD-TNPO3 complex revealed potential CPSF6 interaction residues, which were confirmed to mediate TNPO3 binding and CPSF6 nuclear import. Both binding and nuclear import were independent of RSLD phosphorylation, though a hyperphosphorylated mimeticmutant failed to bind TNPO3 and mislocalized to the cell cytoplasm. Although hypophosphorylated CPSF6 largely supported normal polyadenylation site usage, a significant number of mRNAs harbored unnaturally extended 3  UTRs, similar to what is observed when other APA regulators, such as CFIIm component proteins, are depleted. Our results clarify the mechanism of CPSF6 nuclear import and highlight differential roles for RSLD phosphorylation in

Description

Other Available Sources

Research Data

Keywords

Terms of Use

This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Attribution, Non-commercial (CC-BY-NC)

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Related Stories