Preferential binding of a stable G3BP ribonucleoprotein complex to intron-retaining transcripts in mouse brain and modulation of their expression in the cerebellum

Sophie Martin, Nicolas Bellora, Juan González-Vallinas, Manuel Irimia, Karim Chebli, Marion de Toledo, Monika Raabe, Eduardo Eyras, Henning Urlaub, Ben J. Blencowe, Jamal Tazi*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Neuronal granules play an important role in the localization and transport of translationally silenced messenger ribonucleoproteins in neurons. Among the factors associated with these granules, the RNA-binding protein G3BP1 (stress-granules assembly factor) is involved in neuronal plasticity and is induced in Alzheimer's disease. We immunopurified a stable complex containing G3BP1 from mouse brain and performed high-throughput sequencing and cross-linking immunoprecipitation to identify the associated RNAs. The G3BP-complex contained the deubiquitinating protease USP10, CtBP1 and the RNA-binding proteins Caprin-1, G3BP2a and splicing factor proline and glutamine rich, or PSF. The G3BP-complex binds preferentially to transcripts that retain introns, and to non-coding sequences like 3’-untranslated region and long non-coding RNAs. Specific transcripts with retained introns appear to be enriched in the cerebellum compared to the rest of the brain and G3BP1 depletion decreased this intron retention in the cerebellum of G3BP1 knockout mice. Among the enriched transcripts, we found an overrepresentation of genes involved in synaptic transmission, especially glutamate-related neuronal transmission. Notably, G3BP1 seems to repress the expression of the mature Grm5 (metabotropic glutamate receptor 5) transcript, by promoting the retention of an intron in the immature transcript in the cerebellum. Our results suggest that G3BP is involved in a new functional mechanism to regulate non-coding RNAs including intron-retaining transcripts, and thus have broad implications for neuronal gene regulation, where intron retention is widespread. (Figure presented.).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)349-368
Number of pages20
JournalJournal of Neurochemistry
Volume139
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2016
Externally publishedYes

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Preferential binding of a stable G3BP ribonucleoprotein complex to intron-retaining transcripts in mouse brain and modulation of their expression in the cerebellum'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this