Programmed cell death 4 mechanism of action: The model to be updated?

Cell Cycle

a Laboratory of Molecular Oncogenetics , Institute of Gene Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences , Moscow , Russia.

Published: October 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Programmed cell death 4 (Pdcd4) is often suppressed in tumors, and its suppression is linked to increased tumor progression by enabling cap-dependent translation through eIF4A.
  • Lower levels of Pdcd4 in cells might allow eIF4A to promote tumor growth, but it's unclear if this is due to simple removal of Pdcd4 or a more complex process.
  • Research indicates that eIF4A1 is present in excess of Pdcd4 in both cancerous and normal cells, leading to the hypothesis that Pdcd4 interacts with target mRNAs in the nucleus, resulting in their translation inhibition in the cytoplasm when bound to Pdcd4.

Article Abstract

Programmed cell death 4 (Pdcd4) is frequently suppressed in tumors of various origins and its suppression correlates with tumor progression. Pdcd4 inhibits cap-dependent translation from mRNAs with highly structured 5'-regions through interaction with the eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4A (eIF4A) helicase and a target transcript. Decrease in Pdcd4 protein is believed to provide a relief of otherwise suppressed eIF4A-dependent translation of proteins facilitating tumor progression. However, it remains unknown if lowered Pdcd4 levels in cells suffices to cause a relief in translation inhibition through appearance of the Pdcd4-free translation-competent eIF4A protein, or more complex and selective mechanisms are involved. Here we showed that eIF4A1, the eIF4A isoform involved in translation, significantly over-represents Pdcd4 both in cancerous and normal cells. This observation excludes the possibility that cytoplasmic Pdcd4 can efficiently exert its translation suppression function owing to excess of eIF4A, with Pdcd4-free eIF4A being in excess over Pdcd4-bound translation-incompetent eIF4A, thus leaving translation from Pdcd4 mRNA targets unaffected. This contradiction is resumed in the proposed model, which supposes initial complexing between Pdcd4 and its target mRNAs in the nucleus, with subsequent transport of translation-incompetent, Pdcd4-bound target mRNAs into the cytoplasm. Noteworthy, loss of nuclear Pdcd4 in cancer cells was reported to correlate with tumor progression, which supports the proposed model of Pdcd4 functioning.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5628633PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15384101.2017.1371881DOI Listing

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