[HTML][HTML] The PARN deadenylase targets a discrete set of mRNAs for decay and regulates cell motility in mouse myoblasts

JE Lee, JY Lee, J Trembly, J Wilusz, B Tian, CJ Wilusz - 2012 - journals.plos.org
JE Lee, JY Lee, J Trembly, J Wilusz, B Tian, CJ Wilusz
2012journals.plos.org
PARN is one of several deadenylase enzymes present in mammalian cells, and as such the
contribution it makes to the regulation of gene expression is unclear. To address this, we
performed global mRNA expression and half-life analysis on mouse myoblasts depleted of
PARN. PARN knockdown resulted in the stabilization of 40 mRNAs, including that encoding
the mRNA decay factor ZFP36L2. Additional experiments demonstrated that PARN
knockdown induced an increase in Zfp36l2 poly (A) tail length as well as increased …
PARN is one of several deadenylase enzymes present in mammalian cells, and as such the contribution it makes to the regulation of gene expression is unclear. To address this, we performed global mRNA expression and half-life analysis on mouse myoblasts depleted of PARN. PARN knockdown resulted in the stabilization of 40 mRNAs, including that encoding the mRNA decay factor ZFP36L2. Additional experiments demonstrated that PARN knockdown induced an increase in Zfp36l2 poly(A) tail length as well as increased translation. The elements responsible for PARN-dependent regulation lie within the 3′ UTR of the mRNA. Surprisingly, changes in mRNA stability showed an inverse correlation with mRNA abundance; stabilized transcripts showed either no change or a decrease in mRNA abundance. Moreover, we found that stabilized mRNAs had reduced accumulation of pre–mRNA, consistent with lower transcription rates. This presents compelling evidence for the coupling of mRNA decay and transcription to buffer mRNA abundances. Although PARN knockdown altered decay of relatively few mRNAs, there was a much larger effect on global gene expression. Many of the mRNAs whose abundance was reduced by PARN knockdown encode factors required for cell migration and adhesion. The biological relevance of this observation was demonstrated by the fact that PARN KD cells migrate faster in wound-healing assays. Collectively, these data indicate that PARN modulates decay of a defined set of mRNAs in mammalian cells and implicate this deadenylase in coordinating control of genes required for cell movement.
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