Publication | Open Access
NFAR-1 and -2 modulate translation and are required for efficient host defense
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Citations
40
References
2008
Year
Viral ReplicationEngineeringImmunologyMolecular BiologySpliced Nuclear Factors-2 Modulate TranslationLong Non-coding RnaNfar ProteinsCell SignalingRna ProcessingDefense SystemsHost ResistanceEfficient Host DefenseRna TransportGene ExpressionCell BiologyVirus InfectionMicrobiologySystems BiologyMedicineViral Oncology
We report here that the alternatively spliced nuclear factors associated with double-stranded RNA, NFAR-1 (90 kDa) and -2 (110 kDa), are involved in retaining cellular transcripts in intranuclear foci and can regulate the export of mRNA to the cytoplasm. Furthermore, the NFAR proteins were found to remain associated with exported ribonucleoprotein complexes. Loss of NFAR function, which was embryonic-lethal, caused an increase in protein synthesis rates, an effect augmented by the presence of the mRNA export factors TAP, p15, or Rae1. Significantly, NFAR depletion in normal murine fibroblasts rendered these cells dramatically susceptible to vesicular stomatitis virus replication. Collectively, our data demonstrate that the NFARs exert influence on mRNA trafficking and the modulation of translation rates and may constitute an innate immune translational surveillance mechanism important in host defense countermeasures against virus infection.
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