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UPF1 Governs Synaptic Plasticity through Association with a STAU2 RNA Granule.

The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017-08-20)
Tyson E Graber, Erika Freemantle, Mina N Anadolu, Sarah Hébert-Seropian, Robyn L MacAdam, Unkyung Shin, Huy-Dung Hoang, Tommy Alain, Jean-Claude Lacaille, Wayne S Sossin
RÉSUMÉ

Neuronal mRNAs can be packaged in reversibly stalled polysome granules before their transport to distant synaptic locales. Stimulation of synaptic metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) reactivates translation of these particular mRNAs to produce plasticity-related protein; a phenomenon exhibited during mGluR-mediated LTD. This form of plasticity is deregulated in Fragile X Syndrome, a monogenic form of autism in humans, and understanding the stalling and reactivation mechanism could reveal new approaches to therapies. Here, we demonstrate that UPF1, known to stall peptide release during nonsense-mediated RNA decay, is critical for assembly of stalled polysomes in rat hippocampal neurons derived from embryos of either sex. Moreover, UPF1 and its interaction with the RNA binding protein STAU2 are necessary for proper transport and local translation from a prototypical RNA granule substrate and for mGluR-LTD in hippocampal neurons. These data highlight a new, neuronal role for UPF1, distinct from its RNA decay functions, in regulating transport and/or translation of mRNAs that are critical for synaptic plasticity.

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Cyclooctatetraene, 98%