학술논문

A p53-dependent translational program directs tissue-selective phenotypes in a model of ribosomopathies
Document Type
article
Source
Developmental Cell. 56(14)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Biotechnology
Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Non-Human
Genetics
Stem Cell Research
Rare Diseases
Generic health relevance
Adaptor Proteins
Signal Transducing
Animals
Body Patterning
Cell Cycle Proteins
Extremities
Gene Expression Regulation
Developmental
Haploinsufficiency
Mice
Mice
Knockout
Phenotype
Protein Biosynthesis
Protein Processing
Post-Translational
Ribosomal Proteins
Ribosomes
Tumor Suppressor Protein p53
4E-BP1
limb development
nucleolar stress
p53
ribosomal protein haploinsufficiency
ribosome profiling
ribosomopathy
translational control
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Language
Abstract
In ribosomopathies, perturbed expression of ribosome components leads to tissue-specific phenotypes. What accounts for such tissue-selective manifestations as a result of mutations in the ribosome, a ubiquitous cellular machine, has remained a mystery. Combining mouse genetics and in vivo ribosome profiling, we observe limb-patterning phenotypes in ribosomal protein (RP) haploinsufficient embryos, and we uncover selective translational changes of transcripts that controlling limb development. Surprisingly, both loss of p53, which is activated by RP haploinsufficiency, and augmented protein synthesis rescue these phenotypes. These findings are explained by the finding that p53 functions as a master regulator of protein synthesis, at least in part, through transcriptional activation of 4E-BP1. 4E-BP1, a key translational regulator, in turn, facilitates selective changes in the translatome downstream of p53, and this thereby explains how RP haploinsufficiency may elicit specificity to gene expression. These results provide an integrative model to help understand how in vivo tissue-specific phenotypes emerge in ribosomopathies.