Bacterial superantigen toxins bind directly to the dimer interface of CD28, the principal co-stimulatory receptor, to induce a lethal cytokine storm, and peptides that prevent this binding can suppress superantigen lethality.
PKR, an interferon (IFN)-inducible protein kinase activated by double-stranded RNA, inhibits translation by phosphorylating the initiation factor eIF2alpha chain. We show that human IFN-gamma mRNA uses local activation of PKR in the cell to control its own translation yield. IFN-gamma mRNA activates PKR through a pseudoknot in its 5' untranslated region. Mutations that impair pseudoknot stability reduce the ability to activate PKR and strongly increase the translation efficiency of IFN-gamma mRNA. Nonphosphorylatable mutant eIF2alpha, knockout of PKR and PKR inhibitors 2-aminopurine, transdominant-negative PKR, or vaccinia E3L correspondingly enhances translation of IFN-gamma mRNA. The potential to form the pseudoknot is phylogenetically conserved. We propose that the RNA pseudoknot acts to adjust translation of IFN-gamma mRNA to the PKR level expressed in the cell.
Superantigens trigger an excessive cellular immune response, leading to toxic shock. We have designed a peptide antagonist that inhibits superantigen-induced expression of human genes for interleukin-2, gamma interferon and tumor necrosis factor-b, which are cytokines that mediate shock. The peptide shows homology to a b-strand-hinge-a-helix domain that is structurally conserved in superantigens, yet is remote from known binding sites for the major histocompatibility class II molecule and T-cell receptor. Superantigens depend on this domain for T-cell activation. The peptide protected mice against lethal challenge with staphylococcal and streptococcal superantigens. Moreover, it rescued mice undergoing toxic shock. Surviving mice rapidly developed protective antibodies against superantigen that rendered them resistant to further lethal challenges, even with different superantigens. Thus, the lethal effect of superantigens can be blocked with a peptide antagonist that inhibits their action at the beginning of the toxicity cascade, before activation of T cells takes place.
We report a role for the 3-untranslated region in control of mRNA splicing and show that human TNF-␣ 3 UTR harbors a cis-acting element that renders splicing of precursor transcripts dependent on activation of PKR, the RNA-activated protein kinase that phosphorylates eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF2). When this element, designated 2-APRE, is present, splicing becomes sensitive to inhibition by the PKR inhibitor, 2-aminopurine, or by coexpression of transdominant-negative mutant PKR. Our results reveal that activation of PKR is required for splicing of mRNA when precursor transcripts contain the 2-APRE and that increased expression of wild-type PKR enhances their splicing efficiency. Thus, PKR responds as trans-acting factor to the 2-APRE. 2-APRE RNA forms a stable, 17-bp stem-loop structure and strongly activates PKR in vitro, inducing eIF2␣ phosphorylation. Despite its ability to activate PKR during splicing, the 2-APRE within the 3 UTR does not affect translation efficiency of the resulting TNF-␣ mRNA in transfected cells. PKR and the 3 UTR thus interact during mRNA splicing to confer a novel type of regulation on expression of the TNF-␣ gene.
Interferon-gamma mRNA activates the RNA-dependent protein kinase PKR, which in turn strongly attenuates translation of interferon-gamma mRNA. Unlike riboswitches restricted to noncoding regions, the interferon-gamma RNA domain that activates PKR comprises the 5' UTR and 26 translated codons. Extensive interferon-gamma coding sequence is thus dedicated to activating PKR and blocking interferon-gamma synthesis. This implies that the PKR activator is disrupted by ribosomes during translation initiation and must refold promptly to restore PKR activation. The activator structure harbors an essential kink-turn, probably to allow formation of a pseudoknot that is critical for PKR activation. Three indispensable short helices, bordered by orientation-sensitive base pairs, align with the pseudoknot stem, generating RNA helix of sufficient length to activate PKR. Through gain-of-function mutations, we show that the RNA activator can adopt alternative conformations that activate PKR. This flexibility promotes efficient refolding of interferon-gamma mRNA, which is necessary for its dual function as translation template and activator of PKR, and which thus prevents overexpression of this inflammatory cytokine.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.