Publications by authors named "Guillermo Risso"

Pre-mRNA splicing is catalyzed by the spliceosome, a multi-megadalton ribonucleoprotein machine. Previous work from our laboratory revealed the splicing factor SRSF1 as a regulator of the SUMO pathway, leading us to explore a connection between this pathway and the splicing machinery. We show here that addition of a recombinant SUMO-protease decreases the efficiency of pre-mRNA splicing in vitro.

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Dengue virus NS5 protein plays multiple functions in the cytoplasm of infected cells, enabling viral RNA replication and counteracting host antiviral responses. Here, we demonstrate a novel function of NS5 in the nucleus where it interferes with cellular splicing. Using global proteomic analysis of infected cells together with functional studies, we found that NS5 binds spliceosome complexes and modulates endogenous splicing as well as minigene-derived alternative splicing patterns.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Abnormal Akt signaling is linked to several diseases, making it a promising target for new therapies.
  • * Recent studies show that Akt undergoes multiple post-translational modifications beyond just phosphorylation, which can influence its function and specificity in cellular signaling.
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Akt/PKB is a key signaling molecule in higher eukaryotes and a crucial protein kinase in human health and disease. Phosphorylation, acetylation, and ubiquitylation have been reported as important regulatory post-translational modifications of this kinase. We describe here that Akt is modified by SUMO conjugation, and show that lysine residues 276 and 301 are the major SUMO attachment sites within this protein.

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The unfolded protein response (UPR) and the Akt signaling pathway share several regulatory functions and have the capacity to determine cell outcome under specific conditions. However, both pathways have largely been studied independently. Here, we asked whether the Akt pathway regulates the UPR.

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Article Synopsis
  • Alternative splicing and post-translational modifications play crucial roles in creating diverse proteins in eukaryotes, highlighting the complexity of gene expression processes.* -
  • Research has shown that serine/arginine-rich proteins, known for their role in splicing, are also involved in various stages of gene expression, including linking to post-translational modifications.* -
  • There is a significant interaction between different cellular machineries, such as ubiquitin pathways and splicing processes, which suggests a unified mechanism for regulating gene expression activities.*
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Chromatin structure is an important factor in the functional coupling between transcription and mRNA processing, not only by regulating alternative splicing events, but also by contributing to exon recognition during constitutive splicing. We observed that depolarization of neuroblastoma cell membrane potential, which triggers general histone acetylation and regulates alternative splicing, causes a concentration of SR proteins in nuclear speckles. This prompted us to analyze the effect of chromatin structure on splicing factor distribution and dynamics.

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Article Synopsis
  • Serine/arginine-rich (SR) proteins are key splicing regulators with roles in various cellular functions like genome stability, transcription, and mRNA processes.
  • Recent research highlights how SR proteins are regulated through feedback loops, microRNA interactions, and various post-translational modifications.
  • The article also examines newly discovered functions of SR proteins, particularly in micro-RNA processing and SUMO conjugation.
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  • Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) K is crucial for the p53 DNA damage response, acting as a co-factor for p53 and is regulated by ubiquitin and SUMO modifications.
  • SUMO is added to hnRNP K at lysine 422, and its conjugation is controlled by the E3 ligase Pc2/CBX4, increasing in response to DNA damage.
  • The SUMO modification of hnRNP K is necessary for proper p53 transcriptional activation, particularly affecting the regulation of the p53 target gene p21.
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Rac1b is an alternatively spliced isoform of the small GTPase Rac1 that includes the 57-nucleotide exon 3b. Rac1b was originally identified through its over-expression in breast and colorectal cancer cells, and has subsequently been implicated as a key player in a number of different oncogenic signaling pathways, including tumorigenic transformation of mammary epithelial cells exposed to matrix metalloproteinase-3 (MMP-3). Although many of the cellular consequences of Rac1b activity have been recently described, the molecular mechanism by which MMP-3 treatment leads to Rac1b induction has not been defined.

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Protein modification by conjugation of small ubiquitin-related modifier (SUMO) is involved in diverse biological functions, such as transcription regulation, subcellular partitioning, stress response, DNA damage repair, and chromatin remodeling. Here, we show that the serine/arginine-rich protein SF2/ASF, a factor involved in splicing regulation and other RNA metabolism-related processes, is a regulator of the sumoylation pathway. The overexpression of this protein stimulates, but its knockdown inhibits SUMO conjugation.

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Post-splicing activities have been described for a subset of shuttling serine/arginine-rich splicing regulatory proteins, among them SF2/ASF. We showed that growth factors activate a Ras-PI 3-kinase-Akt/PKB signaling pathway that not only modifies alternative splicing of the fibronectin EDA exon, but also alters in vivo translation of reporter mRNAs containing the EDA binding motif for SF2/ASF, providing two co-regulated levels of isoform-specific amplification. Translation of most eukaryotic mRNAs is initiated via the scanning mechanism, which implicates recognition of the m7G cap at the mRNA 5'-terminus by the eIF4F protein complex.

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