Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

RNF14-dependent atypical ubiquitylation promotes translation-coupled resolution of RNA-protein crosslinks

2023; Elsevier BV; Volume: 83; Issue: 23 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.molcel.2023.10.012

ISSN

1097-4164

Autores

Shubo Zhao, Jacqueline Cordes, Karolina Magdalena Caban, Maximilian J. Götz, Timur Mackens‐Kiani, Anthony J. Veltri, Niladri K. Sinha, Pedro Weickert, Shunji KAYA, Graeme Hewitt, Danny D. Nedialkova, Thomas Fröhlich, Roland Beckmann, Allen R. Buskirk, Rachel Green, Julian Stingele,

Tópico(s)

RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms

Resumo

Reactive aldehydes are abundant endogenous metabolites that challenge homeostasis by crosslinking cellular macromolecules. Aldehyde-induced DNA damage requires repair to prevent cancer and premature aging, but it is unknown whether cells also possess mechanisms that resolve aldehyde-induced RNA lesions. Here, we establish photoactivatable ribonucleoside-enhanced crosslinking (PAR-CL) as a model system to study RNA crosslinking damage in the absence of confounding DNA damage in human cells. We find that such RNA damage causes translation stress by stalling elongating ribosomes, which leads to collisions with trailing ribosomes and activation of multiple stress response pathways. Moreover, we discovered a translation-coupled quality control mechanism that resolves covalent RNA-protein crosslinks. Collisions between translating ribosomes and crosslinked mRNA-binding proteins trigger their modification with atypical K6- and K48-linked ubiquitin chains. Ubiquitylation requires the E3 ligase RNF14 and leads to proteasomal degradation of the protein adduct. Our findings identify RNA lesion-induced translational stress as a central component of crosslinking damage.

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