Abstract
PCBP1, a member of the poly(C)-binding protein (PCBP) family, has the capability of binding heavily oxidized RNA and therefore participates in the cellular response to oxidative conditions, helping to induce apoptosis. There are four other members of this family, PCBP2, PCBP3, PCBP4, and hnRNPK, but it is not known whether they play similar roles. To learn more, we first tested their affinity for an RNA strand carrying two 8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) residues at sites located in close proximity to each other, representative of a heavily oxidized strand or RNA with one 8-oxoG or none. Among them, only PCBP2 exhibited highly selective binding to RNA carrying two 8-oxoG residues similar to that observed with PCBP1. In contrast, PCBP3, PCBP4, and hnRNPK bound RNA with or without 8-oxoG modifications and exhibited slightly increased binding to the former. Mutations in conserved RNA-binding domains of PCBP2 disrupted the specific interaction with heavily oxidized RNA. We next tested PCBP2 activity in cells. Compared with WT HeLa S3 cells, PCBP2-KO cells established by gene editing exhibited increased apoptosis with increased caspase-3 activity and PARP1 cleavage under oxidative conditions, which were suppressed by the expression of WT PCBP2 but not one of the mutants lacking binding activity. In contrast, PCBP1-KO cells exhibited reduced apoptosis with much less caspase-3 activity and PARP cleavage than WT cells. Our results indicate that PCBP2 as well as PCBP1 bind heavily oxidized RNA; however, the former may counteract PCBP1 to suppress apoptosis under oxidative conditions.
Highlights
Almost all cellular components, such as sugars, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids, are always at high risk of being oxidized by one-electron oxidants and reactive oxygen species (ROS), including hydroxyl radical (·OH) and singlet oxygen (1O2)
Our results indicate that PCBP2 may counteract PCBP1 to suppress apoptosis induced under oxidative stress by binding to heavily oxidized RNA
We previously reported that PCBP1, which was originally identified as poly(C)-binding protein belonging to a subfamily of K homology (KH) domain RNA-binding proteins [13, 14], binds heavily oxidized RNA [12]
Summary
Almost all cellular components, such as sugars, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids, are always at high risk of being oxidized by one-electron oxidants and reactive oxygen species (ROS), including hydroxyl radical (·OH) and singlet oxygen (1O2). We examined all members of the PCBP protein family to investigate whether some of them can bind 8-oxoG–containing RNA and control apoptosis under oxidative conditions, compared with PCBP1. PCBP family proteins bind heavily oxidized RNA
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