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FMRP Stalls Ribosomal Translocation on mRNAs Linked to Synaptic Function and Autism

by: Jennifer C. Darnell, Sarah J. Van Driesche, Chaolin Zhang, Ka Y. Hung, Aldo Mele, Claire E. Fraser, Elizabeth F. Stone, Cynthia Chen, John J. Fak, Sung W. Chi, Donny D. Licatalosi, Joel D. Richter, Robert B. Darnell
Cell, Vol. 146, No. 2. (22 July 2011), pp. 247-261, doi:10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.013  Key: citeulike:9620299

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Abstract

FMRP loss of function causes Fragile X syndrome (FXS) and autistic features. FMRP is a polyribosome-associated neuronal RNA-binding protein, suggesting that it plays a key role in regulating neuronal translation, but there has been little consensus regarding either its RNA targets or mechanism of action. Here, we use high-throughput sequencing of RNAs isolated by crosslinking immunoprecipitation (HITS-CLIP) to identify FMRP interactions with mouse brain polyribosomal mRNAs. FMRP interacts with the coding region of transcripts encoding pre- and postsynaptic proteins and transcripts implicated in autism spectrum disorders (ASD). We developed a brain polyribosome-programmed translation system, revealing that FMRP reversibly stalls ribosomes specifically on its target mRNAs. Our results suggest that loss of a translational brake on the synthesis of a subset of synaptic proteins contributes to FXS. In addition, they provide insight into the molecular basis of the cognitive and allied defects in FXS and ASD and suggest multiple targets for clinical intervention. º Identification of a robust, reproducible, novel set of in vivo FMRP targets º FMRP targets encode key pre- and postsynaptic proteins and autism candidate genes º FMRP stalls ribosomes along the coding region of its mRNA targets º Acute and genetic loss of FMRP relieves stalling and increases protein synthesis


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