AI Article Synopsis

  • Studies have shown that mRNA degradation is crucial for regulating various biological pathways, while the mechanisms of non-coding RNA (ncRNA) turnover are less understood.
  • The growth arrest-specific 5 (GAS5) ncRNA accumulates during growth arrest and is degraded by the nonsense-mediated RNA decay (NMD) pathway, which also controls the abundance of physiological transcripts.
  • In experiments, GAS5 levels increased in cells lacking UPF1, leading to down-regulation of apoptosis-related genes, demonstrating that RNA degradation pathways can influence the function of GAS5 in mammalian cells.

Article Abstract

Studies of various mRNAs have revealed that changes in the abundance of transcripts, through mRNA degradation, act as a critical step in the control of various biological pathways. Similarly, the regulation of non-coding RNA (ncRNA) levels is also considered to be important for their biological functions; however, far less is known about the mechanisms and biological importance of ncRNA turnover for the regulation of ncRNA functions. The growth arrest-specific 5 (GAS5) ncRNA accumulates during growth arrest induced by serum starvation and its transcript is degraded by the well characterized nonsense-mediated RNA decay (NMD) pathway. Historically, NMD was discovered as a RNA quality control system to eliminate aberrant transcripts; however, accumulating evidence shows that NMD also regulates the abundance of physiological transcripts. Interestingly, the GAS5 transcript has the ability to bind the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), resulting in the inhibition of its ligand-dependent association with DNA. The GR binds the promoters of various glucocorticoid-responsive genes, including apoptosis-related genes. In this study, we examined whether the RNA degradation pathway can regulate this function of GAS5. We measured the steady-state abundance and the decay rate of GAS5 in UPF1-depleted human cells using the 5'-bromo-uridine immunoprecipitation chase (BRIC) method, an inhibitor-free method for directly measuring RNA stability. We found that levels of the GAS5 transcript were elevated owing to prolonged decay rates in response to UPF1 depletion, and consequently the apoptosis-related genes, cIAP2 and SGK1, were down-regulated. In addition, serum starvation also increased the transcript levels of GAS5 because of prolonged decay rates, and conversely decreased levels of cIAP2 and SGK1 mRNA. Taken together, we found that the RNA degradation pathway can regulate the function of the GAS5 ncRNA in mammalian cells.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3559549PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0055684PLOS

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