Regulated Pumilio-2 binding controls RINGO/Spy mRNA translation and CPEB activation

  1. Kiran Padmanabhan and
  2. Joel D. Richter1
  1. Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts 01605, USA

Abstract

CPEB is a sequence-specific RNA-binding protein that controls the polyadenylation-induced translation of mos and cyclin B1 mRNAs in maturing Xenopus oocytes. CPEB activity requires not only the phosphorylation of S174, but also the synthesis of a heretofore-unknown upstream effector molecule. We show that the synthesis of RINGO/Spy, an atypical activator of cyclin-dependent kinases (cdks), is necessary for CPEB-directed polyadenylation. Deletion analysis and mRNA reporter assays show that a cis element in the RINGO/Spy 3′UTR is necessary for translational repression in immature (G2-arrested) oocytes. The repression is mediated by 3′UTR Pumilio-Binding Elements (PBEs), and by its binding protein Pumilio 2 (Pum2). Pum2 also interacts with the Xenopus homolog of human Deleted for Azoospermia-like (DAZL) and the embryonic poly(A)-binding protein (ePAB). Following the induction of maturation, Pum2 dissociates not only from RINGO/Spy mRNA, but from XDAZL and ePAB as well; as a consequence, RINGO/Spy mRNA is translated. These results demonstrate that a reversible Pum2 interaction controls RINGO/Spy mRNA translation and, as a result, CPEB-mediated cytoplasmic polyadenylation.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.1383106.

  • 1 Corresponding author. E-MAIL Joel.richter{at}umassmed.edu; FAX (508) 856-4289.

    • Accepted November 17, 2005.
    • Received October 11, 2005.

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