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The unfolded protein response is shaped by the NMD pathway
Authors:Rachid Karam  Chih-Hong Lou  Heike Kroeger  Lulu Huang  Jonathan H Lin  Miles F Wilkinson
Institution:1Department of Reproductive Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA;2Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA;3Institute of Genomic Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA
Abstract:Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress induces the unfolded protein response (UPR), an essential adaptive intracellular pathway that relieves the stress. Although the UPR is an evolutionarily conserved and beneficial pathway, its chronic activation contributes to the pathogenesis of a wide variety of human disorders. The fidelity of UPR activation must thus be tightly regulated to prevent inappropriate signaling. The nonsense-mediated RNA decay (NMD) pathway has long been known to function in RNA quality control, rapidly degrading aberrant mRNAs, and has been suggested to regulate subsets of normal mRNAs. Here, we report that the NMD pathway regulates the UPR. NMD increases the threshold for triggering the UPR in vitro and in vivo, thereby preventing UPR activation in response to normally innocuous levels of ER stress. NMD also promotes the timely termination of the UPR. We demonstrate that NMD directly targets the mRNAs encoding several UPR components, including the highly conserved UPR sensor, IRE1α, whose NMD-dependent degradation partly underpins this process. Our work not only sheds light on UPR regulation, but demonstrates the physiological relevance of NMD''s ability to regulate normal mRNAs.
Keywords:cancer  ER stress  IRE1  NMD  UPR
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