Abstract

Rapid expression of critical stress response factors is a key survival strategy for diseased or stressed cells. During cell stress, translation is inhibited, and a pre-existing pool of cytoplasmic mRNA-protein complexes reversibly assembles into cytoplasmic stress granules (SGs). Gle1 is a conserved modulator of RNA-dependent DEAD-box proteins required for mRNA export, translation, and stress responses. Proper Gle1 function is critical as reflected by some human diseases such as developmental and neurodegenerative disorders and some cancers linked to gle1 mutations. However, the mechanism by which Gle1 controls SG formation is incompletely understood. Here, we show that human Gle1 is regulated by phosphorylation during heat shock stress. In HeLa cells, stress-induced Gle1 hyperphosphorylation was dynamic, primarily in the cytoplasmic pool, and followed changes in translation factors. MS analysis identified 14 phosphorylation sites in the Gle1A isoform, six of which clustered in an intrinsically disordered, low-complexity N-terminal region flanking the coil-coiled self-association domain. Of note, two mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), phosphorylated the Gle1A N-terminal domain, priming it for phosphorylation by glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3). A phosphomimetic gle1A6D variant (in which six putative Ser/Thr phosphorylation sites were substituted with Asp) perturbed self-association and inhibited DEAD-box helicase 3 (X-linked) (DDX3) ATPase activity. Expression of alanine-substituted, phosphodeficient GFP-gle1A6A promoted SG assembly, whereas GFP-gle1A6D enhanced SG disassembly. We propose that MAPKs and GSK3 phosphorylate Gle1A and thereby coordinate SG dynamics by altering DDX3 function.

Highlights

  • Rapid expression of critical stress response factors is a key survival strategy for diseased or stressed cells

  • We propose that mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) and glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3) phosphorylate Gle1A and thereby coordinate stress granules (SGs) dynamics by altering DDX3 function

  • The GLE1 gene is alternatively spliced to generate at least two isoforms, Gle1A and Gle1B [25]. Both human isoforms share high sequence similarity and common functional motifs: an amino (N)-terminal region that interacts with the human nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) component Nup155; a coiled-coil region that is involved in Gle1 self-association; a carboxyl (C)-terminal domain that interacts with DDX19B, DDX3, and inositol hexakisphosphate (IP6); and a shuttling domain that mediates its translocation between the nucleus and cytoplasm [21, 25,26,27]

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Summary

Results

We previously found a critical role for Gle1A in the SG response [17]. the molecular events directing Gle1A activity during stress were not defined. The same distribution was observed in untreated cells with basally phosphorylated Gle remaining soluble when incubated with b-isox (data not shown) These data indicated that the N-terminal low-complexity domain of phosphodeficient Gle is highly disordered and prone to aggregation like that of many SG components. In the heat-shocked GLE1 siRNA–treated cells, GFPgle1A6A expression resulted in greater rescue of the SG defect than GFP-GLE1A or GFP-gle1A6D (Fig. 4A) This analysis indicated that Gle1A-mediated SG assembly is not dependent on phosphorylation of the N-terminal Ser88–Thr102 cluster. Gle1A function and phosphorylation state modulate several aspects of the stress response, including SG assembly, disassembly, and DDX3 activity, it was unclear whether Gle1A is transiently localized at SGs like a nucleator or whether it is a stable SG component To address this question, the exchange rate of Gle1A between SGs and the cytoplasm was examined under heat shock conditions. The N-terminal domain of Gle was implicated in regulation of SG biology, as either the PFQ insertion in the coiled-coil domain or phosphomimetic alterations in the intrinsically disordered, low-complexity region impacted SG dynamics

Discussion
Experimental procedures
Plasmids and transfections
Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching
Subcellular fractionation
In vitro kinase assay
Mass spectrometry
Protein purification
Electron microscopy
ATPase assay
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