AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the binding preferences of ZFP36, an RNA-binding protein that negatively regulates immune-related and cancer-associated transcripts, using cross-linking and immunoprecipitation in human kidney cells.
  • ZFP36 and ELAVL1 (HuR) were found to share many binding sites on RNA sequences, but they have opposing roles, with ZFP36 promoting RNA degradation and ELAVL1 stabilizing RNA.
  • The research highlights that ZFP36's target specificities in live cells align with previous lab findings, showcasing a method to explore how RNA-binding proteins work together to regulate gene expression.

Article Abstract

Background: ZFP36, also known as tristetraprolin or TTP, and ELAVL1, also known as HuR, are two disease-relevant RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) that both interact with AU-rich sequences but have antagonistic roles. While ELAVL1 binding has been profiled in several studies, the precise in vivo binding specificity of ZFP36 has not been investigated on a global scale. We determined ZFP36 binding preferences using cross-linking and immunoprecipitation in human embryonic kidney cells, and examined the combinatorial regulation of AU-rich elements by ZFP36 and ELAVL1.

Results: Targets bound and negatively regulated by ZFP36 include transcripts encoding proteins necessary for immune function and cancer, and transcripts encoding other RBPs. Using partial correlation analysis, we were able to quantify the association between ZFP36 binding sites and differential target RNA abundance upon ZFP36 overexpression independent of effects from confounding features. Genes with increased mRNA half-lives in ZFP36 knockout versus wild-type mouse cells were significantly enriched for our human ZFP36 targets. We identified thousands of overlapping ZFP36 and ELAVL1 binding sites, in 1,313 genes, and found that ZFP36 degrades transcripts through specific AU-rich sequences, representing a subset of the U-rich sequences ELAVL1 interacts with to stabilize transcripts.

Conclusions: ZFP36-RNA target specificities in vivo are quantitatively similar to previously reported in vitro binding affinities. ZFP36 and ELAVL1 bind an overlapping spectrum of RNA sequences, yet with differential relative preferences that dictate combinatorial regulatory potential. Our findings and methodology delineate an approach to unravel in vivo combinatorial regulation by RNA-binding proteins.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4053807PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/gb-2014-15-1-r12DOI Listing

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