ZC3H12B is the most enigmatic member of the ZC3H12 protein family. The founding member of this family, Regnase-1/ MCPIP1/ZC3H12A, is a well-known modulator of inflammation and is involved in the degradation of inflammatory mRNAs. In this study, for the first time, we characterized the properties of the ZC3H12B protein. We show that the biological role of ZC3H12B depends on an intact NYN/PIN RNase domain. Using RNA immunoprecipitation, experiments utilizing actinomycin D and ELISA, we show that ZC3H12B binds interleukin-6 (IL-6) mRNA in vivo, regulates its turnover, and results in reduced production of IL-6 protein upon stimulation with IL-1β. We verified that regulation of IL-6 mRNA stability occurs via interaction of ZC3H12B with the stem-loop structure present in the IL-6 3 ′ ′ ′ ′ ′ UTR. The IL-6 transcript is not the only target of ZC3H12B. ZC3H12B also interacts with other known substrates of Regnase-1 and ZC3H12D, such as the 3 ′ ′ ′ ′ ′ UTRs of IER3 and Regnase-1, and binds IER3 mRNA in vivo. Using immunofluorescence, we examined the localization of ZC3H12B within the cell. ZC3H12B forms small, granule-like structures in the cytoplasm that are characteristic of proteins involved in mRNA turnover. The overexpression of ZC3H12B inhibits proliferation by stalling the cell cycle in the G2 phase. This effect of ZC3H12B is also NYN/PIN dependent. The analysis of the ZC3H12B mRNA level reveals its highest expression in the human brain and the neuroblastoma cell line SH-SY5Y, although the factors regulating its expression remain elusive. Down-regulation of ZC3H12B in SH-SY5Y cells by specific shRNAs results in up-regulation of ZC3H12B-target mRNAs.
Although the concept of combining immunofluorescence (IF) with single-molecule RNA fluorescence in situ hybridization (smRNA FISH) seems obvious, the specific materials used during IF and smRNA FISH make it difficult to perform these procedures simultaneously on the same specimen. Even though there are reports where IF and smRNA FISH were combined with success, these were insufficient in terms of signal intensities, staining patterns, and GFP-compatibility, and a detailed exploration of the various factors that influence IF and smRNA FISH outcome has not been published yet. Here, we report a detailed study of conditions and reagents used in classic IF and smRNA FISH that allowed us to establish an easy, robust, and GFP-compatible procedure. Our protocol enables simultaneous detection of mRNA and protein quantity as well as the subcellular distribution of these molecules in single cells by combining an RNase-free modification of the IF technique and the more recent smRNA FISH method. Using this procedure, we have shown the direct interaction of RNase MCPIP1 with IL-6 mRNA. We also demonstrate the use of our protocol in heterogeneous cell population analysis, revealing cell-to-cell differences in mRNA and protein content.
Most proteins involved in the DNA double-strand break response (DSBR) accumulate at the damage sites, where they perform functions related to damage signaling, chromatin remodeling and repair. Over the last two decades, studying the accumulation of many DSBR proteins provided information about their functionality and underlying mechanisms of action. However, comparison and systemic interpretation of these data is challenging due to their scattered nature and differing experimental approaches. Here, we extracted, analyzed and compared the available results describing accumulation of 79 DSBR proteins at sites of DNA damage, which can be further explored using Cumulus (http://www.dna-repair.live/cumulus/)—the accompanying interactive online application. Despite large inter-study variability, our analysis revealed that the accumulation of most proteins starts immediately after damage induction, occurs in parallel and peaks within 15–20 min. Various DSBR pathways are characterized by distinct accumulation kinetics with major non-homologous end joining proteins being generally faster than those involved in homologous recombination, and signaling and chromatin remodeling factors accumulating with varying speeds. Our meta-analysis provides, for the first time, comprehensive overview of the temporal organization of the DSBR in mammalian cells and could serve as a reference for future mechanistic studies of this complex process.
ZC3H12D belongs to a recently discovered family of proteins containing four members of which the most studied and best described is the RNase ZC3H12A (MCPIP1/Regnase-1). ZC3H12A is a crucial negative regulator of inflammation. It accelerates the turnover of transcripts of a spectrum of proinflammatory cytokines, as well as its own mRNA. The biological role of ZC3H12D is less clear, although it was shown that this member of ZC3H12 family is also involved in the regulation of inflammation. Here, we show that ZC3H12A and ZC3H12D recognize a set of common target mRNAs encoding proteins that play important roles in the course of the inflammation. Similarly to ZC3H12A, ZC3H12D participates in the 3'UTR-dependent regulation of the turnover of mRNAs encoding interleukin-6 (IL-6), tumor necrosis factor (TNF), and immediate early response 3 gene (IER3). The ZC3H12A mRNA is also among the identified ZC3H12D targets. Using the combination of immunofluorescence with single molecule RNA fluorescence in situ hybridization (smRNA FISH) we have shown that ZC3H12D protein interacts with the ZC3H12A transcript. The direct binding of these two molecules in vivo was further confirmed by RNA immunoprecipitation. Simultaneously, overexpression of ZC3H12D increases the turnover rate of transcripts containing ZC3H12A 3'UTR. Using reporter gene assays we have confirmed that the Asp95 residue present in the NYN/PIN-like domain is crucial for ZC3H12D biological activity. We have also revealed that ZC3H12D recognizes the same structural elements present in the 3'UTRs of the investigated transcripts, as ZC3H12A. J. Cell. Biochem. 118: 487-498, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
MCPIP1 and IER3 are recently described proteins essential for maintenance of immune homeostasis. IER3 is involved in the regulation of apoptosis and differentiation and has been shown lately to protect activated T cells and macrophages from apoptosis. MCPIP1 is an RNase critical for controlling inflammation-related mRNAs. MCPIP1 interacts with and degrades a set of stem-loop-containing mRNAs (including IL-6). Our results demonstrate the involvement of MCPIP1 in the regulation of IER3 mRNA levels. A dual luciferase assay revealed that over-expression of MCPIP1 resulted in a decrease of luciferase activity in the samples co-transfected with constructs containing luciferase CDS attached to IER3 3′UTR. We identified a stem-loop structure similar to that described to be important for destabilization of the IL-6 mRNA by MCPIP1. Examination of IER3 3′UTR sequence, structure and evolutionary conservation revealed that the identified stem-loop is buried within a bigger element. Deletion of this fragment abolished the regulation of IER3 3′UTR-containing transcript by MCPIP1. Finally, using immunofluorescence-combined single-molecule RNA FISH we have shown that the MCPIP1 protein co-localizes with IER3 mRNA. By this method we also proved that the presence of the wild-type NYN/PIN-like domain of MCPIP1 correlated with the decreased level of IER3 mRNA. RNA immunoprecipitation further confirmed the interaction of MCPIP1 with IER3 transcripts in vivo.
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