Mithu Majumder
Case Western Reserve University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mithu Majumder.
Nature | 2009
Partho Sarothi Ray; Jie Jia; Peng Yao; Mithu Majumder; Maria Hatzoglou; Paul L. Fox
Ligand binding to structural elements in the non-coding regions of messenger RNA modulates gene expression. Ligands such as free metabolites or other small molecules directly bind and induce conformational changes in regulatory RNA elements known as riboswitches. Other types of RNA switches are activated by complexed metabolites—for example, RNA-ligated metabolites such as aminoacyl-charged transfer RNA in the T-box system, or protein-bound metabolites in the glucose- or amino-acid-stimulated terminator-anti-terminator systems. All of these switch types are found in bacteria, fungi and plants. Here we report an RNA switch in human vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGFA, also known as VEGF) mRNA 3′ untranslated region (UTR) that integrates signals from interferon (IFN)-γ and hypoxia to regulate VEGFA translation in myeloid cells. Analogous to riboswitches, the VEGFA 3′ UTR undergoes a binary conformational change in response to environmental signals. However, the VEGFA 3′ UTR switch is metabolite-independent, and the conformational change is dictated by mutually exclusive, stimulus-dependent binding of proteins, namely, the IFN-γ-activated inhibitor of translation complex and heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein L (HNRNPL, also known as hnRNP L). We speculate that the VEGFA switch represents the founding member of a family of signal-mediated, protein-dependent RNA switches that evolved to regulate gene expression in multicellular animals in which the precise integration of disparate inputs may be more important than the rapidity of response.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Yi Li; Elena Bevilacqua; Calin Bogdan Chiribau; Mithu Majumder; Chuanping Wang; Colleen M. Croniger; Martin D. Snider; Peter F. Johnson; Maria Hatzoglou
The accumulation of unfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) triggers a stress response program that protects cells early in the response and can lead to apoptosis during prolonged stress. The basic leucine zipper transcription factor, CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein β (C/EBPβ), is one of the genes with increased expression during ER stress. Translation of the C/EBPβ mRNA from different initiation codons leads to the synthesis of two transcriptional activators (LAP-1 and -2) and a transcriptional repressor (LIP). The LIP/LAP ratio is a critical factor in C/EBPβ-mediated gene transcription. It is shown here that the LIP/LAP ratio decreased by 5-fold during the early phase of ER stress and increased by 20-fold during the late phase, mostly because of changes in LIP levels. The early decrease in LIP required degradation via the proteasome pathway and phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor, eIF2α. The increased LIP levels during the late phase were due to increased synthesis and increased stability of the protein. It is proposed that regulation of synthesis and degradation rates during ER stress controls the LIP/LAP ratio. The importance of C/EBPβ in the ER-stress response program was demonstrated using C/EBPβ-deficient mouse embryonic fibroblasts. It is shown that C/EBPβ attenuates expression of pro-survival ATF4 target genes in late ER stress and enhances expression of cell death-associated genes downstream of CHOP. The inhibitory effect of LIP on ATF4-induced transcription was demonstrated for the cat-1 amino acid transporter gene. We conclude that regulation of LIP/LAP ratios during ER stress is a novel mechanism for modulating the cellular stress response.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2010
Hala Muaddi; Mithu Majumder; Philippos Peidis; Andreas I. Papadakis; Martin Holcik; Donalyn Scheuner; Randal J. Kaufman; Maria Hatzoglou; Antonis E. Koromilas
Glucose deficiency leads to the induction of eIF2α phosphorylation at serine 51, which results in a global inhibition of protein synthesis. Phosphorylation of eIF2α is an adaptive process that establishes a cytoprotective state in glucose-deficient cells, with possible implications in biological responses that interfere with glucose metabolism.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2009
Mithu Majumder; Ibrahim Yaman; Francesca Gaccioli; Vladimir V. Zeenko; Chuanping Wang; Mark G. Caprara; Richard C. Venema; Anton A. Komar; Martin D. Snider; Maria Hatzoglou
ABSTRACT The response to amino acid starvation involves the global decrease of protein synthesis and an increase in the translation of some mRNAs that contain an internal ribosome entry site (IRES). It was previously shown that translation of the mRNA for the arginine/lysine amino acid transporter Cat-1 increases during amino acid starvation via a mechanism that utilizes an IRES in the 5′ untranslated region of the Cat-1 mRNA. It is shown here that polypyrimidine tract binding protein (PTB) and an hnRNA binding protein, heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein L (hnRNP L), promote the efficient translation of Cat-1 mRNA during amino acid starvation. Association of both proteins with Cat-1 mRNA increased during starvation with kinetics that paralleled that of IRES activation, although the levels and subcellular distribution of the proteins were unchanged. The sequence CUUUCU within the Cat-1 IRES was important for PTB binding and for the induction of translation during amino acid starvation. Binding of hnRNP L to the IRES or the Cat-1 mRNA in vivo was independent of PTB binding but was not sufficient to increase IRES activity or Cat-1 mRNA translation during amino acid starvation. In contrast, binding of PTB to the Cat-1 mRNA in vivo required hnRNP L. A wider role of hnRNP L in mRNA translation was suggested by the decrease of global protein synthesis in cells with reduced hnRNP L levels. It is proposed that PTB and hnRNP L are positive regulators of Cat-1 mRNA translation via the IRES under stress conditions that cause a global decrease of protein synthesis.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Elena Bevilacqua; Xinglong Wang; Mithu Majumder; Francesca Gaccioli; Celvie L. Yuan; Chuanping Wang; Xiongwei Zhu; Lindsay E. Jordan; Donalyn Scheuner; Randal J. Kaufman; Antonis E. Koromilas; Martin D. Snider; Martin Holcik; Maria Hatzoglou
Regulation of cell volume is of great importance because persistent swelling or shrinkage leads to cell death. Tissues experience hypertonicity in both physiological (kidney medullar cells) and pathological states (hypernatremia). Hypertonicity induces an adaptive gene expression program that leads to cell volume recovery or apoptosis under persistent stress. We show that the commitment to apoptosis is controlled by phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF2α, the master regulator of the stress response. Studies with cultured mouse fibroblasts and cortical neurons show that mutants deficient in eIF2α phosphorylation are protected from hypertonicity-induced apoptosis. A novel link is revealed between eIF2α phosphorylation and the subcellular distribution of the RNA-binding protein heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A1 (hnRNP A1). Stress-induced phosphorylation of eIF2α promotes apoptosis by inducing the cytoplasmic accumulation of hnRNP A1, which attenuates internal ribosome entry site-mediated translation of anti-apoptotic mRNAs, including Bcl-xL that was studied here. Hypertonic stress induced the eIF2α phosphorylation-independent formation of cytoplasmic stress granules (SGs, structures that harbor translationally arrested mRNAs) and the eIF2α phosphorylation-dependent accumulation of hnRNP A1 in SGs. The importance of hnRNP A1 was demonstrated by induction of apoptosis in eIF2α phosphorylation-deficient cells that express exogenous cytoplasmic hnRNP A1. We propose that eIF2α phosphorylation during hypertonic stress promotes apoptosis by sequestration of specific mRNAs in SGs in a process mediated by the cytoplasmic accumulation of hnRNP A1.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013
Dawid Krokowski; Jaeseok Han; Mridusmita Saikia; Mithu Majumder; Celvie L. Yuan; Bo-Jhih Guan; Elena Bevilacqua; Ovidio Bussolati; Stefan Bröer; Peter Arvan; Marek Tchórzewski; Martin D. Snider; Michelle A. Puchowicz; Colleen M. Croniger; Scot R. Kimball; Tao Pan; Antonis E. Koromilas; Randal J. Kaufman; Maria Hatzoglou
Background: Protein synthesis control is important for β-cell fate during ER stress. Results: Increased protein synthesis during chronic ER stress in β-cells involves the transcriptional induction of an amino acid transporter network. Conclusion: Increased amino acid uptake in β-cells during ER stress promotes apoptosis. Significance: Induced expression of a network of amino acid transporters in islets can contribute to chronic ER stress-induced diabetes. Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress-induced responses are associated with the loss of insulin-producing β-cells in type 2 diabetes mellitus. β-Cell survival during ER stress is believed to depend on decreased protein synthesis rates that are mediated via phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF2α. It is reported here that chronic ER stress correlated with increased islet protein synthesis and apoptosis in β-cells in vivo. Paradoxically, chronic ER stress in β-cells induced an anabolic transcription program to overcome translational repression by eIF2α phosphorylation. This program included expression of amino acid transporter and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase genes downstream of the stress-induced ATF4-mediated transcription program. The anabolic response was associated with increased amino acid flux and charging of tRNAs for branched chain and aromatic amino acids (e.g. leucine and tryptophan), the levels of which are early serum indicators of diabetes. We conclude that regulation of amino acid transport in β-cells during ER stress involves responses leading to increased protein synthesis, which can be protective during acute stress but can lead to apoptosis during chronic stress. These studies suggest that the increased expression of amino acid transporters in islets can serve as early diagnostic biomarkers for the development of diabetes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Bo Jhih Guan; Dawid Krokowski; Mithu Majumder; Christine L. Schmotzer; Scot R. Kimball; William C. Merrick; Antonis E. Koromilas; Maria Hatzoglou
Background: Chronic ER stress suppresses mTORC1 activity. Results: mTORC1-mediated suppression of translation during chronic ER stress is independent of the stress-induced eIF2α-P/ATF4 signaling. Conclusion: The eIF2α-P/ATF4-induced network of amino acid transporters promotes protein synthesis in part by increasing mTORC1-mediated translational control. Significance: The eIF2α-P/ATF4/mTORC1 network controls protein synthesis rates during chronic ER stress and mediates the degree of stress response and survival outcomes. The accumulation of unfolded/misfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) causes stress to which an unfolded protein response is activated to render cell survival or apoptosis (chronic stress). Transcriptional and translational reprogramming is tightly regulated during the unfolded protein response to ensure specific gene expression. The master regulator of this response is the PERK/eIF2α/ATF4 signaling where eIF2α is phosphorylated (eIF2α-P) by the kinase PERK. This signal leads to global translational shutdown, but it also enables translation of the transcription factor ATF4 mRNA. We showed recently that ATF4 induces an anabolic program through the up-regulation of selected amino acid transporters and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. Paradoxically, this anabolic program led cells to apoptosis during chronic ER stress in a manner that involved recovery from stress-induced protein synthesis inhibition. By using eIF2α-P-deficient cells as an experimental system, we identified a communicating network of signaling pathways that contribute to the inhibition of protein synthesis during chronic ER stress. This eIF2α-P-independent network includes (i) inhibition of mammalian target of rapamycin kinase protein complex 1 (mTORC1)-targeted protein phosphorylation, (ii) inhibited translation of a selective group of 5′-terminal oligopyrimidine mRNAs (encoding proteins involved in the translation machinery and translationally controlled by mTORC1 signaling), and (iii) inhibited translation of non-5′-terminal oligopyrimidine ribosomal protein mRNAs and ribosomal RNA biogenesis. We propose that the PERK/eIF2α-P/ATF4 signaling acts as a brake in the decline of protein synthesis during chronic ER stress by positively regulating signaling downstream of the mTORC1 activity. These studies advance our knowledge on the complexity of the communicating signaling pathways in controlling protein synthesis rates during chronic stress.
eLife | 2015
Xing Huang Gao; Dawid Krokowski; Bo Jhih Guan; Ilya R. Bederman; Mithu Majumder; Marc Parisien; Luda Diatchenko; Omer Kabil; Belinda Willard; Ruma Banerjee; Benlian Wang; Gurkan Bebek; Charles R. Evans; Paul L. Fox; Stanton L. Gerson; Charles L. Hoppel; Ming Liu; Peter Arvan; Maria Hatzoglou
The sulfhydration of cysteine residues in proteins is an important mechanism involved in diverse biological processes. We have developed a proteomics approach to quantitatively profile the changes of sulfhydrated cysteines in biological systems. Bioinformatics analysis revealed that sulfhydrated cysteines are part of a wide range of biological functions. In pancreatic β cells exposed to endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, elevated H2S promotes the sulfhydration of enzymes in energy metabolism and stimulates glycolytic flux. We propose that transcriptional and translational reprogramming by the integrated stress response (ISR) in pancreatic β cells is coupled to metabolic alternations triggered by sulfhydration of key enzymes in intermediary metabolism. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.10067.001
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2012
Mithu Majumder; Charlie Huang; Martin D. Snider; Anton A. Komar; Junichi Tanaka; Randal J. Kaufman; Dawid Krokowski; Maria Hatzoglou
ABSTRACT The accumulation of unfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) triggers transcriptional and translational reprogramming. This unfolded protein response (UPR) protects cells during transient stress and can lead to apoptosis during prolonged stress. Two key mediators of the UPR are PKR-like ER kinase (PERK), which phosphorylates the α subunit of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 (eIF2α), resulting in decreased protein synthesis, and the α subunit of inositol-requiring enzyme 1 (IRE1α), which initiates cytoplasmic splicing of the mRNA encoding the transcription factor X-box binding protein 1 (XBP1). XBP1 induces transcription of genes involved in protein quality control. This report describes cross talk between these two pathways: phosphorylation of eIF2α was required for maximal induction of spliced XBP1 (XBP1s) protein levels via a mechanism that involved stabilization of XBP1s mRNA. By using mouse embryo fibroblasts deficient in UPR signaling pathways, we demonstrate that stress-induced stabilization of XBP1s mRNA requires cytoplasmic splicing of the mRNA and inhibition of its translation. Because the XBP1s protein promotes transcription of its own gene, the UPR-induced mRNA stabilization is part of a positive feedback loop that induces XBP1s protein accumulation and transcription of target genes during stress. We propose a model in which eIF2α phosphorylation-mediated control of mRNA turnover is a molecular switch that regulates the stress response transcription program and the ERs capacity for protein folding during stress.
Cell Cycle | 2011
Dawid Krokowski; Francesca Gaccioli; Mithu Majumder; Michael R. Mullins; Celvie L. Yuan; Barbara Papadopoulou; William C. Merrick; Anton A. Komar; Derek J. Taylor; Maria Hatzoglou
Protein synthesis across kingdoms involves the assembly of 70S (prokaryotes) or 80S (eukaryotes) ribosomes on the mRNAs to be translated. 70S ribosomes are protected from degradation in bacteria during stationary growth or stress conditions by forming dimers that migrate in polysome profiles as 100S complexes. Formation of ribosome dimers in Escherichia coli is mediated by proteins, namely the ribosome modulation factor (RMF), which is induced in the stationary phase of cell growth. It is reported here a similar ribosomal complex of 110S in eukaryotic cells, which forms during nutrient starvation. The dynamic nature of the 110S ribosomal complex (mammalian equivalent of the bacterial 100S) was supported by the rapid conversion into polysomes upon nutrient-refeeding via a mechanism sensitive to inhibitors of translation initiation. Several experiments were used to show that the 110S complex is a dimer of nontranslating ribosomes. Cryo-electron microscopy visualization of the 110S complex revealed that two 80S ribosomes are connected by a flexible, albeit localized, interaction. We conclude that, similarly to bacteria, rat cells contain stress-induced ribosomal dimers. The identification of ribosomal dimers in rat cells will bring new insights in our thinking of the ribosome structure and its function during the cellular response to stress conditions.
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University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
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