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Vol. 19, Issue 10, 4469-4479, October 2008
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*CNRS FRE2937, Institut André Lwoff, 94801 Villejuif cedex, France;
CNRS, Institut de Génétique Moléculaire de Montpellier, Université de Montpellier, 34293 Montpellier, France; and
Department of Molecular Biology, Warsaw Cancer Center, 02-781 Warszawa, Poland
Submitted May 19, 2008;
Revised July 1, 2008;
Accepted July 9, 2008
Monitoring Editor: Marvin P. Wickens
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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, the initiation factor that transfers the initiator methionyl-tRNAi to the 40S ribosomal subunit. Phosphorylation of eIF2-
prevents its reloading with GTP (Wek et al., 2006
, through the cleavage of eIF4G (Mazroui et al., 2006
In mammalian cells, this global translational repression is often accompanied by the assembly of cytoplasmic messenger Ribonucleoprotein (mRNP) granules called stress granules. This has been observed after environmental stresses (Kedersha and Anderson, 2002
), as well as during viral infection (McInerney et al., 2005
; Mazroui et al., 2006
; Smith et al., 2006
; Raaben et al., 2007
). These granules contain mRNAs, proteins of the small ribosomal subunit, several translation initiation factors, such as eIF3 and eIF4F, and repressors of translation, such as TIA1, TIAR, FMRP, RAP55, and CPEB1 (Kedersha and Anderson, 2002
; Mazroui et al., 2002
; Wilczynska et al., 2005
; Yang et al., 2006
). They are thought to be formed from mRNA associated to abortive initiation complexes, assembled in granules due to the self-aggregation properties of components such as TIA1 (Anderson and Kedersha, 2006
). Stress granules assemble rapidly in response to stress and disappear slowly after its removal. For instance, they become visible 15 min after arsenite addition and disappear 2–3 h after arsenite removal (Kedersha et al., 2000
). Previously, we and others have shown that stress granules establish frequent contacts with mRNP granules of smaller size, called GW bodies (Kedersha et al., 2005
; Wilczynska et al., 2005
).
GW bodies, as opposed to stress granules, are present in unstressed cells. They contain 5' to 3' mRNA degradation machinery, including the decapping complex Dcp1/2, its cofactors LSm1–7, Rck/p54 (Dhh1 in yeast, Me31 in Drosophila and Cgh1 in Caenorhabditis elegans) and Ge1/Hedls (Fenger-Gron et al., 2005
), as well as the exonuclease Xrn1. Additionally, they contain translational repressors, such as eIF4ET (Andrei et al., 2005
), CPEB1 (Orb in Drosophila, Cpb3 in C. elegans; Wilczynska et al., 2005
), RAP55 (Yang et al., 2006
), and YB1 (Yang and Bloch, 2007
). Finally, they contain the posttranscriptional gene silencing machinery, which can trigger either degradation or repression of their target mRNA, depending whether it is guided by siRNAs or miRNAs. Beyond this catalogue of components, some experimental data argue in favor of an active role for GW bodies in both mRNA degradation and mRNA storage. Slowing down mRNA degradation results in the accumulation of mRNAs in GW bodies, suggesting that they are indeed sites of degradation (Cougot et al., 2004
; Durand et al., 2007
). However, the cationic amino acid transporter CAT1 mRNA, which is repressed by miR122 in rich cell culture conditions, is stored in GW bodies without degradation, as it can be recycled to polysomes upon amino acid deprivation (Bhattacharyya et al., 2006
). In yeast, the corresponding structures, called P-bodies, fulfill both degradation and storage functions (Sheth and Parker, 2003
; Brengues et al., 2005
). Yeast do not harbor large stress granules observed in mammals, and P-bodies are used for the storage of mRNA after a stress, like glucose deprivation.
In addition to the contacts observed between stress granules and GW bodies, in some cases GW body proteins can relocate to stress granules (Kedersha et al., 2005
; Wilczynska et al., 2005
). This apparent fusion between the two structures led us to propose that this could enable a switch from mRNA storage to mRNA degradation (Wilczynska et al., 2005
). Here we studied the relationship between the three compartments—stress granules, GW bodies and the cytosol—in order to obtain insight into the function of stress granules. We show that, although the contacts between stress granules and GW bodies are very stable and appear very early during stress granule assembly, they are not responsible for the appearance of GW body proteins in stress granules. The latter come from the cytosol rather than directly from neighboring GW bodies. In addition, mRNP continuously cycle between stress granules and polysomes. Overall, their residence time within stress granules is brief, compared with their residence time in the cytosol, and this is not due to rapid degradation. These data argue against a direct role of stress granules as a site of mRNP storage and degradation.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Transient transfections were performed with 1.5 µg plasmid DNA or 3 µg si-p54 (MWG Biotech, Roissy, France) per 35-mm-diameter dish by a standard calcium phosphate procedure, as previously described (Serman et al., 2007
). CPEB1-GFP and RFP-p54 contain the full open reading frames of human CPEB1-
5-lg and Rck/p54, respectively, as described previously (Wilczynska et al., 2005
). RFP-Dcp1 was obtained by inserting the full open reading frame of human Dcp1a downstream of RFP in pDsRed2 (BD Biosciences Clontech, Le Pont de Claix, France).
Immunofluorescence
Cells were grown on glass coverslips and fixed in methanol at –20°C for 3 min. Cells were rehydrated in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and incubated with the primary antibody for 1 h, rinsed with PBS, incubated with the secondary antibody for 30 min, rinsed with PBS, and stained with 0.12 µg/ml DAPI for 1 min, all steps being performed at room temperature. Slides were mounted in Citifluor (Citifluor, London, United Kingdom).
Rabbit polyclonal anti-p54 and mouse monoclonal DM1 anti-
-tubulin were purchased from Bethyl Laboratories (Montgomery, TX) and Sigma Aldrich, respectively. The anti-Ge1 antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA) has been characterized previously (Stoecklin et al., 2006
). The anti-hDcp1 rabbit antibody was a kind gift from Bertrand Séraphin (Centre de Génétique Moléculaire, Gif, France) and the anti-eIF3 goat antibody from John Hershey (University of California, Davis, CA). Secondary antibodies conjugated to rhodamine and FITC were purchased from Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories (Immunotech, Marseille, France).
Microscopy
Standard microscopy was performed on a Leica DMR microscope (Leica, Heidelberg, Germany) using a 63x 1.32 oil immersion objective. Photographs were taken using a Micromax CCD camera (Princeton Instruments, Princeton, NJ). Confocal images were obtained on a Leica TCS-NT/SP1 inverted confocal laser-scanning microscope (Leica) using an Apochromat 63x 1.32 oil immersion objective. Fluorescence signals were acquired in 0.16-µm optical sections. A single section is presented in all figures.
For videomicroscopy, cells were grown on glass coverslips and mounted in a POC chamber system (Helmut Saur, Reutlingen, Germany) with 2 ml culture medium maintained at 37°C and 5% CO2. Cells were observed on a Zeiss inverted microscope Axiovert (Carl Zeiss SAS, Le Pecq, France) equipped with a DG4 Lambda switcher (Sutter Instrument, Novato, CA) and driven by the Metamorph software (Universal Imaging, Downingtown, PA). Timed series were acquired using a 63x 1.32 oil immersion objective.
For fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) experiments on green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged CPEB1, cells were grown on glass coverslips, mounted in a POC chamber system, and analyzed on a Leica TCS-NT/SP1 inverted confocal laser-scanning microscope (Leica, Heidelberg, Germany) using an Apochromat 63x 1.32 oil immersion objective. Confocal sections were acquired using an excitation wavelength of 488 nm at 4% power, at a rate of one frame per second. Selected stress granules were photobleached using excitation wavelengths of 488 nm at maximal power. Prebleach, bleach, and postbleach steps were linked and analyzed using Leica software. For FRAP experiments on MS2-GFP tagged mRNA, we used a wide-field Nikon TE200 inverted microscope (Melville, NY; 100x objective, NA 1.45), equipped with an EM-CCD camera (Cascade 512B, Roper Scientific, Tucson, AZ) and a piezzo-motor, to capture z-stacks. We verified on fixed cells that the bleached spot corresponded to the defined ROI (region of interest), and that bleach was homogeneous in the spot. FRAP recovery curves were generated from the background subtracted images, and the signal in the foci was normalized for total fluorescence of the cell. With both apparatuses, we chose to reduce the bleaching time as much as possible in order to avoid phototoxicity, which resulted in only partial bleaching.
In Situ Hybridization and Traffic Modeling
In situ hybridization was performed as previously described (Fusco et al., 2003
). The formamide concentration was 10% in the hybridization and washing mixture. The sequence of the probes was as follows (X stands for amino-allyl-T): 5'-A X GTCGACCTGCAGACA X GGGTGATCCTCA X GTTTTCTAGGCAAT X A. The modified oligonucleotide probes for RNA FISH were synthesized by J.-M. Escudier (Plateforme de synthèse d'Oligonucléotides modifiés de l'Interface Chimie Biologie de l'ITAV). For quantitative measurements, 11 stacks were captured with a CoolSnap CCD camera (Roper Scientific), on a DMRA microscope equipped for epifluorescence (Leica) with a 100x objective (Planapo, NA 1.4), and controlled by Metamorph (Universal Imaging).
For traffic modeling, movements from and into stress granules were described by first-order reactions: dM(in)/dt = k1M(in) and dM(out)/dt = k2M(out), where M(in) and M(out) are the number of molecules in and out stress granules, respectively, and k1 and k2 the traffic rates from and into stress granules. At steady state, incoming and outgoing flux of molecules are balanced, so that k1M(in) = k2M(out). Therefore, considering the corresponding half-lives t1 and t2 in and out stress granules, respectively, t2M(in) = t1M(out).
| RESULTS |
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Recruitment of GW Body Components by Stress Granules Depends on the Cellular Context
We have previously reported that GW body proteins can relocate to stress granules induced by CPEB1 expression. This relocation becomes more frequent with time, suggesting a progressive fusion event between GW bodies and stress granules (Wilczynska et al., 2005
). Such a relocation is not systematic, as arsenite treatment leads to the formation of distinct stress granules and GW bodies (Cougot et al., 2004
; Wilczynska et al., 2005
). Here we found that this difference is related to the protein content of the cells, rather than to the timing and nature of the stress. When HeLa cells were cotransfected with CPEB1-GFP as a stress granule inducer, and RFP-Dcp1 as a GW body marker, stress granules were present after 20 h in one-third of the cells, as with CPEB1-GFP alone. However, they never merged with GW bodies, as observed with CPEB1-GFP alone (Figure 2A, compare bottom to top panels). Therefore, expression of RFP-Dcp1 prevented GW body stress-granule fusion. Conversely, when untransfected HeLa cells were treated with arsenite for 30 min to induce stress granules, endogenous Rck/p54 protein remained in distinct GW bodies adjacent to stress granules (Figure 2B, top panel). However, the same treatment in HeLa cells transfected with RFP-p54 led to GW body disappearance in half of the cells and relocation of RFP-p54 to stress granules (Figure 2B, bottom panel). Therefore, expression of RFP-p54 promoted GW body stress-granule fusion. In conclusion, the relationship between GW bodies and stress granules depends on the relative levels of GW body components such as Dcp1, Rck/p54, and CPEB1.
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Stress-Granule Exchange with Polysomes
We next asked about the flux of molecules between fully formed stress granules and polysomes. To this end, we used the strategy of trapping mRNP into polysomes with inhibitors of translation elongation such as cycloheximide, as described by others (Mazroui et al., 2002
; Brengues et al., 2005
). Because stress granules are devoid of polysomes, way they clear out in these conditions reflects the passage of mRNP from stress granules to polysomes. HeLa cells were cultured in the presence of various doses of arsenite for 30 min, and further incubated with cycloheximide in the presence of arsenite. Induction of both stress granules and GW bodies was assessed after 30 min of cycloheximide treatment by immunostaining of eIF3 and Dcp1, respectively (Figure 4A). In the presence of 0.5 mM arsenite, cycloheximide had little effect on stress granules, as expected if this concentration of arsenite fully blocks translation initiation. With 0.25 mM arsenite, which enables some residual translation (Kedersha et al., 2000
), cycloheximide led to a strong reduction of stress granules. With 0.12 mM arsenite, stress-granule induction was incomplete, and they fully disappeared after cycloheximide treatment. This suggested that most mRNAs present in stress granules were recycled to polysomes within 30 min in these conditions. By contrast, within the same cells, cycloheximide had no effect on GW bodies, although it was able to fully suppress GW bodies in the absence of arsenite, as previously reported. These results suggest that, in arsenite-treated cells, mRNAs from stress granules can be released from them and undergo some translation, whereas mRNAs from GW bodies do not.
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mRNP Residence Time Is Short in Stress Granules
To obtain a better appreciation of the kinetics of mRNP traffic between stress granules and cytosol, we performed FRAP experiments of stress-granule components. We first analyzed the mobility of CPEB1, which is both a component and an inducer of stress granules. HeLa cells were transfected with CPEB1-GFP. Twenty hours later, single stress granules were photobleached, and the fluorescence recovery over a period of 150 s was monitored by confocal microscopy (Figure 5A). The procedure was repeated twice to verify the reproducibility of the recovery. CPEB1 protein was mostly mobile in stress granules, as all fluorescence was recovered 150 s after photobleaching, compared with a distant unbleached stress granule within the same cell (Figure 5B). In addition, the fluorescence recovery followed first-order kinetics, with half of the fluorescence being recovered after 33 and 28 s for the first and second bleach, respectively. This is indicative of a rapid trafficking of the CPEB1 protein in and out of stress granules. We then repeated the experiment on arsenite-induced stress granules. We took advantage of the HeLa/CPEB1 cells, which express CPEB1-GFP without assembling stress granules in the absence of stress (Wilczynska et al., 2005
). Cells were treated with arsenite for 30 min to induce stress granules, the medium was replaced, and the FRAP experiment was performed as described above (Figure 5C). This time, only 50% of CPEB1 was mobile over 150 s. For this mobile fraction, half of the fluorescence was recovered after 21 s, indicating a similar exchange rate of CPEB1 protein in CPEB1- and arsenite-induced stress granules. This mobility represents either the replacement of CPEB1 protein on mRNA sequestered in stress granule or the replacement of CPEB1 protein along with its bound mRNA. As to the immobile fraction observed within the time scale of the experiment, it is likely to correspond to a second pool exchanging more slowly, because we showed above that stress granules disassemble within 30 min in the presence of cycloheximide.
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mRNP Have a Longer Residence Time in the Cytosol than in Stress Granules
The fact that both proteins and mRNA have a short residence time in stress granules raises the question of their role in mRNP storage. A condition for a role as a site of storage is that mRNP spend more time sheltered by stress granules, whatever the residence time is, than outside. FRAP experiments described above monitor the replacement of bleached molecules of stress granules by fluorescent molecules coming from the cytosol. Thus, the molecule half-life outside stress granules, t1/2out, is related to the half-life inside stress granules, t1/2in, as follows: t1/2out Min = t1/2in Mout, where Min and Mout are the number of molecules in and out stress granules, respectively (see details in Material and Methods). We first applied this modeling to CPEB1 protein, by quantifying its abundance in and out stress granules in the cells used for the FRAP experiments, before photobleaching (Figure 5A). In these single confocal planes, which represent the main section of stress granules, the average fluorescence within granules represented only 18% of total cytoplasmic fluorescence, indicating that the half-life of CPEB1 protein is at least 4.7-fold longer outside than inside stress granules. As stated above, the nature of cytosolic CPEB1, whether it is bound to mRNA or free, is uncertain, so that it is difficult to infer the half-life of CPEB1-bound mRNA outside stress granules.
To get insight into the kinetics of mRNP traffic, we performed the same analysis on MS2-GFP, using images obtained by wide-field microscopy through the entire cell volume (Figure 5D). The fluorescence within stress granules represents 7.3% of total cytoplasmic fluorescence, indicating that MS2-GFP half-life outside stress granules is 12.7-fold longer than inside (up to 12 min). Because MS2-GFP accumulation in SG depends on the presence of mRNA with the MS2 motif, the fluorescence in stress granules corresponds in most part to mRNA-bound MS2. However, as for CPEB1, we cannot exclude that part of the MS2 protein present outside is free and not taking part in the mRNP traffic to stress granules. We therefore performed FISH experiments in order to directly quantify the β-Gal mRNA. Cells were transfected with the β-Gal reporter, along with MLN51-CFP as a stress-granule marker (Baguet et al., 2007
). After 48 h, stress granules were induced with arsenite, and β-Gal mRNA was detected by hybridization with a fluorescent MS2 oligonucleotide probe (Figure 6A). Quantification through the entire cell volume, indicated that the β-Gal mRNA in stress granules represented only 8.8% of the total cytoplasmic β-Gal mRNA, in accordance with the quantification based on MS2-GFP.
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| DISCUSSION |
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In either case, the fact that stress granules establish contacts with GW bodies as soon as they are assembled raises the possibility that the interaction plays a role in their function. Because stress granules are seen to be adjacent to GW bodies after 30 min of arsenite treatment, but seem mostly intermingled with them after 20 h of CPEB1 overexpression, we have previously hypothesized that the contact between the two structures could progressively lead to their fusion (Wilczynska et al., 2005
). This fusion would enable a transition from mRNA storage to mRNA degradation. Here we show that the fusion is not dependent on time, but on the protein content of the cell. Dcp1 overexpression inhibits fusion, even after 20 h of CPEB1 overexpression, whereas Rck/p54 activates it in <30 min during arsenite treatment. Importantly, we never observed any sensu stricto fusion event in live cells. The GW body–specific proteins relocating to stress granules issue from the cytoplasm and not from contiguous GW bodies. Accordingly, the recruitment of endogenous GW body proteins to stress granules is also observed when GW bodies have been previously suppressed by Rck/p54 depletion. The possibility that some stress-granule proteins initially originate from GW bodies was recently discussed for the Argonaute proteins. A quantitative analysis of Ago2 localization in fixed cells also suggested that the protein present in the stress granules issued from elsewhere in the cytoplasm (Leung et al., 2006
).
The exchanges between stress granules and cytosol are not restricted to the recruitment of GW body proteins. The mRNA found in stress granules also traffics. It is continuously recruited to polysomes, as demonstrated by the effect of cycloheximide, an inhibitor of translation elongation that traps mRNA within polysomes. During arsenite treatment, cycloheximide dissolves stress granules within 30 min, provided that there is some residual translation initiation. This indicates that the mRNA content of the stress granules will have undergone a round of translation in <30 min. Similar observations have been previously reported for FMRP-induced granules and stress-induced granules using cycloheximide and emetine, respectively (Kedersha et al., 2000
; Mazroui et al., 2002
). Yet stress granules are stable over 30 min in the absence of cycloheximide, indicating that mRNAs continuously refeed stress granules. Importantly, this is also true after arsenite withdrawal. After a treatment with high doses of arsenite, which suppress translation initiation, stress granules need 2 to 3 h before spontaneously dissolving. However, they dissolve in less than 1 h if cycloheximide is added, indicating that translation initiation resumes long before stress granules vanish. Therefore, the time needed for the disappearance of stress granules does not correspond to the duration of mRNA immobilization within the stress granules. It rather seems to reflect the time during which translation initiation is rate-limiting.
In the same experiments, GW bodies are enhanced by arsenite, indicating either that there is an increase in mRNAs to be degraded or that part of mRNA storage occurs in GW bodies in stressed cells. This enhancement persists after arsenite withdrawal and cycloheximide treatment, although cycloheximide suppresses GW bodies in unstressed cells, as previously described (Cougot et al., 2004
; Wilczynska et al., 2005
). How can cycloheximide have such opposite effects? Concerning unstressed cells, the current interpretation is that GW bodies disappear due to the lack of mRNA to degrade (Sheth and Parker, 2003
). Because this happens rapidly—within 15 min (Cougot et al., 2004
)—it means that the whole process of mRNA targeting to the GW bodies and degradation is rapid. GW bodies have been also shown to be capable of storing miRNA-repressed mRNA without degradation (Bhattacharyya et al., 2006
). The rapid effect of cycloheximide indicates that storage concerns very few molecules in unstressed cells or that miRNA-silenced mRNA, similarly to stress granule mRNA, cycle through polysomes. After arsenite treatment, the fact that cycloheximide does not dissolve GW bodies as it does for stress granules argues against a major participation of GW bodies in storage of arrested mRNA. It rather suggests that mRNA degradation is jammed. As Dcp1 protein of GW bodies has the same mobility before and after arsenite treatment, as evaluated by photobleaching experiments (data not shown), degradation does not seem to be slowed down after arsenite treatment. We rather speculate that the amount of mRNA targeted for degradation increases after stress. These mRNAs would not arrive from polysomes, as cycloheximide does not reverse the increase of GW body number, but directly from nonpolysomal-arrested mRNA. The persistence of enhanced GW bodies after the dissolution of stress granules using cycloheximide argues in favor of these untranslated mRNAs originating from the cytosol rather than from stress granules.
Experiments using cycloheximide demonstrate mRNP movements from stress granules to polysomes within 30 min, but this traffic could be either slow or rapid within this time scale. We therefore turned to photobleaching experiments to evaluate the mRNP exchange rate between stress granules and the cytosol. Over 2.5 min, all CPEB1 was mobile in stress granules induced by CPEB1 overexpression, but only half of it in stress granules induced by CPEB1 overexpression. This difference is likely to correspond to a different role of CPEB1 in both types of granules. Indeed, stress granules are induced by arsenite even when CPEB1 is depleted by RNA interference (Serman et al., 2007
), whereas CPEB1 clearly takes part to the mechanism of stress-granule induction when overexpressed. Nevertheless, the mobility of the mobile fraction was similar, with a residence time between 20 and 30 s. Such a high mobility has been previously reported for most other tested stress-granule proteins, including TIA1, TTP, G3BP (Kedersha et al., 2005
), and PCB2 (Fujimura et al., 2008
). In the case of CPEB1, we have shown that the protein present in the stress granules is bound to mRNA, as a point mutation within the RNA-binding domain prevents its accumulation in stress granules (Wilczynska et al., 2005
). This is also likely to be the case for the proteins cited above. Nevertheless, as the exchange rate of these proteins on mRNA is unknown, it is not possible to infer from these data the mobility of the mRNA, which is the central question for the role of stress granules in mRNP metabolism. We therefore investigated the mobility of an MS2-tagged mRNA in stress granules. Because the affinity of the MS2 protein for the MS2 RNA sequence is high, the MS2-GFP protein remains fully associated to mRNA over more than 10 min (Boireau et al., 2007
). We found that most of the mRNA is mobile in arsenite-induced stress granules. Its movement is limited by binding and dissociation to cellular components, and not by diffusion, in agreement with single particle tracking experiments (Fusco et al., 2003
). Kinetics analysis of the fluorescence recovery indicates that mRNAs have a residence time of 1-min in stress granules, despite the persistence of the granules over 2 to 3 h.
We considered the possibility that mRNA would then be degraded. However, in the absence of transcription, stress granules were fully maintained for up to an hour. This demonstrated that degradation is not responsible for the 1-min half-life of mRNP in stress granules and argued against a major role of stress granules in targeting mRNA to neighboring GW bodies for rapid degradation during stress. After 1 min, mRNP are either redirected to the cytosol as silent mRNP or to polysomes for a translation round, as discussed above. Noteworthy, at any time, stress granules contain only a small part of the arrested mRNPs. Whether based on quantification of fluorescent mRNA binding proteins CPEB1 and MS2, or on mRNA detected by FISH, the analysis leads to a similar conclusion that there are
10-fold more molecules outside than inside stress granules. Using a simple model of traffic in and out stress granules, we deduced that mRNP residence time outside of stress granules is
10-fold longer than inside.
In conclusion, our observations lead us to reconsider the function of stress granules in response to stress. Despite the close proximity of stress granules and GW bodies, we could not find any evidence of protein or mRNP traffic between the two structures. The question is still open as to which type of material, mRNA or proteins, can be exchanged, and in which direction. Although stress granules appear clearly related to situations where translation is inhibited, kinetic parameters are not consistent with a function as storage structure. There is no evidence either that mRNAs transiting through stress granules are particularly unstable, which would be the case if stress granules direct them to degradation. We can envision two hypotheses. The former is that stress granules have no specific role. For instance, a protein (yet to be identified) might accumulate locally when translation is rate-limiting, and, due to some affinity for mRNP, lead to a local enrichment. The latter is that they play a role during stress by enabling a brief but necessary process. For instance, they could refresh the protein cover of arrested mRNA, so that they are kept intact until translation resumes, an mRNA quality control process of sorts. This could mean reloading a protein or adding a posttranslational mark on the protein cover. The next challenge would be to identify this specific process and its machinery.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| Footnotes |
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Present address: Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1GA, United Kingdom. ![]()
Address correspondence to: Dominique Weil (weil{at}vjf.cnrs.fr)
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