Publication | Open Access
Stress-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of RtcB modulates IRE1 activity and signaling outputs
16
Citations
62
References
2022
Year
Molecular RegulationMolecular BiologyCell DeathEr StressOxidative StressTranscriptional RegulationSignaling PathwayReceptor Tyrosine KinaseCellular Regulatory MechanismSignaling OutputsProtein DegradationCell SignalingRna ProcessingMolecular SignalingMolecular PhysiologyTyrosine KinasesGene ExpressionEpigenetic RegulationCell BiologyTranscription RegulationSignal TransductionRtcb InteractionNatural SciencesGene RegulationMedicineStress-induced Tyrosine Phosphorylation
ER stress is mediated by three sensors and the most evolutionary conserved IRE1α signals through its cytosolic kinase and endoribonuclease (RNase) activities. IRE1α RNase activity can either catalyze the initial step of XBP1 mRNA unconventional splicing or degrade a number of RNAs through regulated IRE1-dependent decay. Until now, the biochemical and biological outputs of IRE1α RNase activity have been well documented; however, the precise mechanisms controlling whether IRE1α signaling is adaptive or pro-death (terminal) remain unclear. We investigated those mechanisms and hypothesized that XBP1 mRNA splicing and regulated IRE1-dependent decay activity could be co-regulated by the IRE1α RNase regulatory network. We identified that RtcB, the tRNA ligase responsible for XBP1 mRNA splicing, is tyrosine-phosphorylated by c-Abl and dephosphorylated by PTP1B. Moreover, we show that the phosphorylation of RtcB at Y306 perturbs RtcB interaction with IRE1α, thereby attenuating XBP1 mRNA splicing. Our results demonstrate that the IRE1α RNase regulatory network is dynamically fine-tuned by tyrosine kinases and phosphatases upon various stresses and that the extent of RtcB tyrosine phosphorylation determines cell adaptive or death outputs.
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