Abstract

microRNAs (miRNAs) are potent regulators of gene expression that function in a variety of developmental and physiological processes by dampening the expression of their target genes at a post-transcriptional level. In many gene regulatory networks (GRNs), miRNAs function in a switch-like manner whereby their expression and activity elicit a transition from one stable pattern of gene expression to a distinct, equally stable pattern required to define a nascent cell fate. While the importance of miRNAs that function in this capacity are clear, we have less of an understanding of the cellular factors and mechanisms that ensure the robustness of this form of regulatory bistability. In a screen to identify suppressors of temporal patterning phenotypes that result from ineffective miRNA-mediated target repression, we identified pqn-59, an ortholog of human UBAP2L, as a novel factor that antagonizes the activities of multiple heterochronic miRNAs. Specifically, we find that depletion of pqn-59 can restore normal development in animals with reduced lin-4 and let-7-family miRNA activity. Importantly, inactivation of pqn-59 is not sufficient to bypass the requirement of these regulatory RNAs within the heterochronic GRN. The pqn-59 gene encodes an abundant, cytoplasmically-localized, unstructured protein that harbors three essential “prion-like” domains. These domains exhibit LLPS properties in vitro and normally function to limit PQN-59 diffusion in the cytoplasm in vivo. Like human UBAP2L, PQN-59’s localization becomes highly dynamic during stress conditions where it re-distributes to cytoplasmic stress granules and is important for their formation. Proteomic analysis of PQN-59 complexes from embryonic extracts indicates that PQN-59 and human UBAP2L interact with orthologous cellular components involved in RNA metabolism and promoting protein translation and that PQN-59 additionally interacts with proteins involved in transcription and intracellular transport. Finally, we demonstrate that pqn-59 depletion reduces protein translation and also results in the stabilization of several mature miRNAs (including those involved in temporal patterning). These data suggest that PQN-59 may ensure the bistability of some GRNs that require miRNA functions by promoting miRNA turnover and, like UBAP2L, enhancing protein translation.

Highlights

  • Cell fate specification during animal development is tightly controlled to yield highly reproducible outcomes and avoid extreme variation

  • Bistability plays a central role in many gene regulatory networks (GRNs) that control developmental processes where distinct and mutually exclusive cell fates are generated in a defined order

  • We leveraged the powerful genetics and phenotypes associated with temporal patterning mutants of C. elegans to identify genes whose depletion restores normal development in animals that express miRNA alleles that do not sufficiently down-regulate their targets

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cell fate specification during animal development is tightly controlled to yield highly reproducible outcomes and avoid extreme variation. While individual cell fates can be described by quantifying the expression levels of RNAs that are expressed at any given time, the stable patterns of gene expression for a distinct cell type are often governed by the presence and levels of a relatively limited number of master regulator genes that function at the top of a gene regulation hierarchy These master regulatory genes typically function in a concentration-dependent manner whereby expression levels above a critical threshold are sufficient to program downstream patterns of transcription in a dominant way. Heterochronic genes, encoding transcription factors (TFs) and RNA-binding proteins, organize the sequence of temporal development through the control of stage-specific patterns of gene expression [3] These factors function in dosage-sensitive manners and exhibit sharp temporal gradients of expression (usually from high expression to low expression) that

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

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

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.