Mathematical Biology Seminar
Julie Hollien Biology
Department, University of Utah
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
3:05pm in LCB 215
mRNA degradation and how cells cope with stress
Abstract:
Proteins that are destined to be secreted from the cell are initially
synthesized at the surface of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and
processed within the lumen of the ER. In addition to folding and
processing an enormous flux of secreted proteins, the ER must maintain
a strict quality control system to ensure that potentially harmful,
misfolded proteins do not traffic to the cell surface. Normally the
cell maintains a balance between the load of incoming proteins and the
capacity of the folding machinery within the ER. When this balance is
disrupted (a situation referred to as ER stress), the cell initiates a
broad transcriptional remodeling of the ER, by upregulating chaperones
and many other genes associated with ER function. We have found that
cells also respond to ER stress by rapidly degrading mRNAs associated
with the ER membrane. This pathway has the potential both to
immediately relieve the load on the ER (by destroying the templates
for proteins that are processed in the ER) and to clear out
translation and folding machinery to accommodate the influx of new
chaperones and other ER-associated factors. We are currently working
to understand the mechanism and specificity of this process, as well
as developing new tools to look at mRNA degradation and regulation on
a genome-wide scale.
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