MRC Toxicology Unit, University of Cambridge, Leicester, UK.
Wiley Interdiscip Rev RNA. 2020 May;11(3):e1578. doi: 10.1002/wrna.1578. Epub 2019 Nov 21.
Following cell stress, a wide range of molecular pathways are initiated to orchestrate the stress response and enable adaptation to an environmental or intracellular perturbation. The post-transcriptional regulation strategies adopted during the stress response result in a substantial reorganization of gene expression, designed to prepare the cell for either acclimatization or programmed death, depending on the nature and intensity of the stress. Fundamental to the stress response is a rapid repression of global protein synthesis, commonly mediated by phosphorylation of translation initiation factor eIF2α. Recent structural and biochemical information have added unprecedented detail to our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying this regulation. During protein synthesis inhibition, the translation of stress-specific mRNAs is nonetheless enhanced, often through the interaction between RNA-binding proteins and specific RNA regulatory elements. Recent studies investigating the unfolded protein response (UPR) provide some important insights into how posttranscriptional events are spatially and temporally fine-tuned in order to elicit the most appropriate response and to coordinate the transition from an early, acute stage into the chronic state of adaptation. Importantly, cancer cells are known to hi-jack adaptive stress response pathways, particularly the UPR, to survive and proliferate in the unfavorable tumor environment. In this review, we consider the implications of recent research into stress-dependent post-transcriptional regulation and make the case for the exploration of the stress response as a strategy to identify novel targets in the development of cancer therapies. This article is categorized under: RNA in Disease and Development > RNA in Disease RNA Evolution and Genomics > RNA and Ribonucleoprotein Evolution Translation > Translation Mechanisms > Translation Regulation.
细胞应激后,会启动多种分子途径来协调应激反应,使细胞适应环境或细胞内的扰动。应激反应中采用的转录后调控策略导致基因表达的大量重排,旨在使细胞适应驯化或程序性死亡,具体取决于应激的性质和强度。应激反应的基础是迅速抑制全局蛋白质合成,通常通过翻译起始因子 eIF2α的磷酸化来介导。最近的结构和生化信息为我们理解这种调控的分子机制提供了前所未有的细节。然而,在蛋白质合成抑制期间,应激特异性 mRNA 的翻译却被增强,通常是通过 RNA 结合蛋白与特定的 RNA 调控元件之间的相互作用。最近研究 unfolded protein response (UPR) 的研究提供了一些重要的见解,即如何在空间和时间上精细地调整转录后事件,以引发最合适的反应,并协调从早期急性阶段到适应的慢性状态的转变。重要的是,已知癌细胞会劫持适应性应激反应途径,特别是 UPR,以在不利的肿瘤环境中存活和增殖。在这篇综述中,我们考虑了最近关于应激依赖性转录后调控的研究的意义,并提出了将应激反应作为一种策略来确定癌症治疗新靶点的探索。本文属于以下分类:RNA 在疾病与发育中的作用 > RNA 在疾病中的作用 RNA 的进化和基因组学 > RNA 和核糖核蛋白的进化 翻译 > 翻译机制 > 翻译调控。