Abstract

Upon binding to double-stranded (ds) RNA, the dsRNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR) sequentially undergoes autophosphorylation and activation. Activated PKR may exist as a dimer and phosphorylates the eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 alpha subunit (cIF-2 alpha) to inhibit polypeptide chain initiation. Transfection of COS-1 cells with a plasmid cDNA expression vector encoding a marker gene, activates endogenous PKR, and selectively inhibits translation of the marker mRNA, dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). This system was used to study the dsRNA binding and dimerization requirements for over-expressed PKR mutants and subdomains to affect DHFR translation. DHFR translation was rescued by expression of either an ATP hydrolysis defective mutant PKR K296P, the amino-terminal 1-243 fragment containing two dsRNA binding motifs, or the isolated first RNA binding motif (amino acids 1-123). Mutation of K64E within the dsRNA binding motif 1 destroyed dsRNA binding and the ability to rescue DHFR translation. Immunoprecipitation of T7 epitope-tagged PKR derivatives from cell lysates detected interaction between intact PKR and the amino-terminal 1-243 fragment as well as a 1-243 fragment harboring the K64E mutation. Expression of adenovirus VAI RNA, a potent inhibitor of PKR activity, did not disrupt this interaction. In contrast, intact PKR did not interact with fragments containing the first dsRNA binding motif (1-123), the second dsRNA binding motif (98-243), or the isolated PKR kinase catalytic domain (228-551). These results demonstrate that the translational stimulation mediated by the dominant negative PKR mutant does not require dimerization, but requires the ability to bind dsRNA and indicate these mutants act by competition for binding to activators.

Highlights

  • Phosphorylation of translation initiation and elongation factors is a fundamental mechanism that regulates the rate of protein synthesis as cells respond to their external environment [1]

  • The best well characterized mechanism that regulates the rate of polypeptide chain initiation is phosphorylation of the ␣ subunit of the translation initiation factor 2.1 eIF-2 is a heterotrimer of ␣, ␤, and ␥ subunits that is essential

  • Since the mRNA derived from pETFVAϪ does not activate PKR and is efficiently translated [39], it is possible to measure the ability of the protein expressed from pETFVAϪ to rescue translation of dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) mRNA derived from pD61

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Phosphorylation of translation initiation and elongation factors is a fundamental mechanism that regulates the rate of protein synthesis as cells respond to their external environment [1]. By immunoprecipitation of T7 epitope-tagged proteins transiently expressed in COS-1 cells, we demonstrated that dsRNA-independent dimerization of PKR is mediated through the intact dsRNA binding domain (residues 1–243).

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call