1. Academic Validation
  2. Overcoming the cytoplasmic retention of GDOWN1 modulates global transcription and facilitates stress adaptation

Overcoming the cytoplasmic retention of GDOWN1 modulates global transcription and facilitates stress adaptation

  • Elife. 2022 Dec 7;11:e79116. doi: 10.7554/eLife.79116.
Zhanwu Zhu 1 Jingjing Liu 1 Huan Feng 1 Yanning Zhang 1 Ruiqi Huang 2 Qiaochu Pan 2 Jing Nan 1 Ruidong Miao 1 Bo Cheng 1 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 School of Life Sciences, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, China.
  • 2 Cuiying Honors College, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, China.
  • 3 Key Laboratory of Cell Activities and Stress Adaptations, Ministry of Education, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, China.
Abstract

Dynamic regulation of transcription is crucial for the cellular responses to various environmental or developmental cues. Gdown1 is a ubiquitously expressed, RNA polymerase II (Pol II) interacting protein, essential for the embryonic development of metazoan. It tightly binds Pol II in vitro and competitively blocks the binding of TFIIF and possibly other transcriptional regulatory factors, yet its cellular functions and regulatory circuits remain unclear. Here, we show that human GDOWN1 strictly localizes in the cytoplasm of various types of somatic cells and exhibits a potent resistance to the imposed driving force for its nuclear localization. Combined with the genetic and microscope-based approaches, two types of the functionally coupled and evolutionally conserved localization regulatory motifs are identified, including the CRM1-dependent nucleus export signal (NES) and a novel Cytoplasmic Anchoring Signal (CAS) that mediates its retention outside of the nuclear pore complexes (NPC). Mutagenesis of CAS alleviates GDOWN1's cytoplasmic retention, thus unlocks its nucleocytoplasmic shuttling properties, and the increased nuclear import and accumulation of GDOWN1 results in a drastic reduction of both Pol II and its associated global transcription levels. Importantly, the nuclear translocation of GDOWN1 occurs in response to the oxidative stresses, and the ablation of GDOWN1 significantly weakens the cellular tolerance. Collectively, our work uncovers the molecular basis of GDOWN1's subcellular localization and a novel cellular strategy of modulating global transcription and stress-adaptation via controlling the nuclear translocation of GDOWN1.

Keywords

GDOWN1; RNA polymerase II; cell biology; chromosomes; gene expression; human; mouse; nucleocytoplasmic shuttling; stress adaptive mechanism; transcriptional regulation.

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