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    Date Issued2020 - 2022 (1)2010 - 2019 (1)Author
    Richter, Joel D (2)
    Evans, Veronica (1)Ivshina, Maria P (1)Jung, Suna (1)Lin, Chien-Ling (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationProgram in Molecular Medicine (2)Brudnick Neuropsychiatric Research Institute (1)Neurobiology (1)Schafer Lab (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordActive Transport, Cell Nucleus; Alternative Splicing; Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Cell Line; Cell Nucleus; Female; Humans; Mice; Models, Biological; Molecular Sequence Data; NIH 3T3 Cells; Oocytes; Protein Biosynthesis; RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional; RNA, Messenger; RNA-Binding Proteins; Recombinant Proteins; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; Transcription Factors; Xenopus; Xenopus Proteins; mRNA Cleavage and Polyadenylation Factors (1)alternative polyadenylation (1)CPEB1 (1)inflammation (1)Life Sciences (1)View MoreJournalGlia (1)RNA (New York, N.Y.) (1)

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    CPEB1 regulates the inflammatory immune response, phagocytosis, and alternative polyadenylation in microglia

    Ivshina, Maria P; van 't Spijker, Heleen M; Jung, Suna; Ponny, Sithara Raju; Schafer, Dorothy P; Richter, Joel D (2022-05-30)
    Microglia are myeloid cells of the central nervous system that perform tasks essential for brain development, neural circuit homeostasis, and neural disease. Microglia react to inflammatory stimuli by upregulating inflammatory signaling through several different immune cell receptors such as the Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), which signals to several downstream effectors including transforming growth factor beta-activated kinase 1 (TAK1). Here, we show that TAK1 levels are regulated by CPEB1, a sequence-specific RNA binding protein that controls translation as well as RNA splicing and alternative poly(A) site selection in microglia. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) binds the TLR4 receptor, which in CPEB1-deficient mice leads to elevated expression of ionized calcium binding adaptor molecule 1 (Iba1), a microglial protein that increases with inflammation, and increased levels of the cytokine IL6. This LPS-induced IL6 response is blocked by inhibitors of JNK, p38, ERK, NFκB, and TAK1. In contrast, phagocytosis, which is elevated in CPEB1-deficient microglia, is unaffected by LPS treatment or ERK inhibition, but is blocked by TAK1 inhibition. These data indicate that CPEB1 regulates microglial inflammatory responses and phagocytosis. RNA-seq indicates that these changes in inflammation and phagocytosis are accompanied by changes in RNA levels, splicing, and alternative poly(A) site selection. Thus, CPEB1 regulation of RNA expression plays a role in microglial function.
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    The nuclear experience of CPEB: implications for RNA processing and translational control.

    Lin, Chien-Ling; Evans, Veronica; Shen, Shihao; Xing, Yi; Richter, Joel D (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2010-02-01)
    CPEB is a sequence-specific RNA binding protein that promotes polyadenylation-induced translation in early development, during cell cycle progression and cellular senescence, and following neuronal synapse stimulation. It controls polyadenylation and translation through other interacting molecules, most notably the poly(A) polymerase Gld2, the deadenylating enzyme PARN, and the eIF4E-binding protein Maskin. Here, we report that CPEB shuttles between the nucleus and cytoplasm and that its export occurs via the CRM1-dependent pathway. In the nucleus of Xenopus oocytes, CPEB associates with lampbrush chromosomes and several proteins involved in nuclear RNA processing. CPEB also interacts with Maskin in the nucleus as well as with CPE-containing mRNAs. Although the CPE does not regulate mRNA export, it influences the degree to which mRNAs are translationally repressed in the cytoplasm. Moreover, CPEB directly or indirectly mediates the alternative splicing of at least one pre-mRNA in mouse embryo fibroblasts as well as certain mouse tissues. We propose that CPEB, together with Maskin, binds mRNA in the nucleus to ensure tight translational repression upon export to the cytoplasm. In addition, we propose that nuclear CPEB regulates specific pre-mRNA alternative splicing.
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