We report here that the alternatively spliced nuclear factors associated with double-stranded RNA, NFAR-1 (90 kDa) and -2 (110 kDa), are involved in retaining cellular transcripts in intranuclear foci and can regulate the export of mRNA to the cytoplasm. Furthermore, the NFAR proteins were found to remain associated with exported ribonucleoprotein complexes. Loss of NFAR function, which was embryonic-lethal, caused an increase in protein synthesis rates, an effect augmented by the presence of the mRNA export factors TAP, p15, or Rae1. Significantly, NFAR depletion in normal murine fibroblasts rendered these cells dramatically susceptible to vesicular stomatitis virus replication. Collectively, our data demonstrate that the NFARs exert influence on mRNA trafficking and the modulation of translation rates and may constitute an innate immune translational surveillance mechanism important in host defense countermeasures against virus infection.innate immunity ͉ mRNA export ͉ vesicular stomatitis virus
Nucleotide-dependent unblocking of chain-terminated DNA by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 reverse transcriptase (RT) is enhanced by the presence of mutations associated with 3-azido-3-deoxythymidine (AZT) resistance. The increase in unblocking activity was greater for mutant combinations associated with higher levels of in vivo AZT resistance. The difference between mutant and wild-type activity was further enhanced by introduction of a methyl group into the nucleotide substrate and was decreased for a nonaromatic substrate, suggesting that -interactions between RT and an aromatic structure may be facilitated by these mutations.Many nucleoside analogues, including 3Ј-azido-3Ј-deoxythymidine (AZT), inhibit human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) replication. The phosphorylated forms of these compounds are incorporated during DNA synthesis by the HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT), resulting in chain termination and inhibition of viral replication (7,9,12,22,31,32). Mutations at codons 41, 67, 70, 210, 215, and 219 in the HIV-1 RT gene result in resistance of HIV-1 to AZT in cell culture assays (29). Substitutions of phenylalanine and tyrosine for threonine at position 215 (T215F and T215Y) are the predominant mutations observed in vivo and are considered the most important for the resistance phenotype (16,17,25).The inhibitory effect of incorporating a chain-terminating nucleotide analogue can be partially relieved by a reaction catalyzed by RT in which the terminating nucleotide is removed from the 3Ј end of a DNA chain by transfer to a nucleotide di-or triphosphate, producing an unblocked DNA chain and dinucleoside polyphosphate with the chain terminator linked to the nucleotide acceptor through a tri-or tetraphosphate chain (19,21). HIV-1 RT can also transfer the chain-terminating residue to pyrophosphate (PP i ), regenerating the triphosphate form of the chain terminator (1, 5, 10, 23). These observations have suggested that enhanced removal of 3Ј-azido-3Ј-deoxythymidine-5Ј-monophosphate (AZTMP) is a possible mechanism for AZT resistance, and an increase in the removal reaction has been reported for RT containing various AZT resistance mutations (1,2,18,19). The biochemical contribution of each of these mutations in the removal reaction remains unclear. Boyer et al. (2) have modeled the amino acid substitutions associated with AZT resistance, as well as ATP or PP i , into the three-dimensional structure of HIV-1 RT and concluded that several of these amino acid substitutions could affect the binding of ATP but are unlikely to affect binding of PP i .In this report we describe further investigation into the contributions made by specific mutations in HIV-1 RT to its removal activity and the effects of changes in the structure of the nucleotide substrate on the wild-type (WT) and mutant activities. The mutations associated with AZT resistance identify a region of HIV-1 RT that may interact with the nucleoside moiety of a transition intermediate to facilitate the formation of the dinucleoside tetraphospha...
The connexin43 (cx43) gene was originally described as consisting of two exons, one coding for most of the 5'-untranslated region (5'-UTR), and the other for the protein sequence and 3'-UTR. We now report that in mouse four additional exons are expressed, all coding for novel 5'-UTRs. Altogether, we found nine different cx43 mRNA species (GenBank accession numbers NM010288, and AY427554 through AY427561) generated by differential promoter usage and alternative splicing mechanisms. The relative abundance of these different mRNAs varied with the tissue source. In addition, the different transcripts showed varying translational efficiencies in several cell lines, indicating the presence of cis-RNA elements that regulate cx43 translation. We propose that it is the promoter driving the expression of the cx43 gene that determines exon choice in the downstream splicing events in a cell-type-dependent fashion. This in turn will affect the translation efficiency of the transcript orchestrating the events that lead to the final expression profile of cx43. Since a similar organization of the cx43 gene was also observed in rat it is likely that the complex regulation of cx43 expression involving transcription, splicing and translation mechanisms is a common trait conserved during evolution.
This article describes the structural and functional characterization of Ini (AF495522), a novel highly conserved zinc-finger protein that had been identified by screening an estrogen-induced rat myometrial expression library. Ini localizes to the nucleus of HeLa cells and binds to the proximal connexin43 (cx43) promoter, as demonstrated by EMSA. In addition, transient transfection experiments performed with estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) cDNA show that overexpression of Ini enhances, in a dose-dependent fashion, the up-regulation of the cx43 gene by estrogen. On binding to the cx43 promoter, Ini stimulates the transcriptional activating function (AF)-1, but not the AF-2, of the ERalpha. This makes Ini one of the few known coactivators specific for AF-1. Because estrogen up-regulates Ini mRNA in the myometrium, it is likely that Ini's physiological role in this tissue is to modulate the response of the cx43 gene to estrogen. Transfection studies with an Ini antisense construct seem to indicate that Ini plays an additional role in the cellular response to estrogen affecting both AF-1 and AF-2 activities of the ERalpha. This broader effect may be associated with cell cycle progression that in yeast has been shown to require Ini.
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