Yeou-cherng Bor
University of Virginia
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Featured researches published by Yeou-cherng Bor.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2003
John H. Coyle; Brian W. Guzik; Yeou-cherng Bor; Li Jin; Lucia Eisner-Smerage; Stephen J. Taylor; David Rekosh; Marie-Louise Hammarskjold
ABSTRACT Cells normally restrict the nuclear export and expression of intron-containing mRNA. In many cell lines, this restriction can be overcome by inclusion of cis-acting elements, such as the Mason-Pfizer monkey virus constitutive transport element (CTE), in the RNA. In contrast, we observed that CTE-mediated expression from human immunodeficiency virus Gag-Pol reporters was very inefficient in 293 and 293T cells. However, addition of Sam68 led to a dramatic increase in the amount of Gag-Pol proteins produced in these cells. Enhancement of CTE function was not seen when a Sam68 point mutant (G178E) that is defective for RNA binding was used. Additionally, the effect of Sam68 was inhibited in a dose-dependent manner by coexpression of an activated form of the nuclear kinase Sik/BRK that hyperphosphorylated Sam68. RNA analysis showed that cytoplasmic Gag-Pol-CTE RNA levels were only slightly enhanced by the addition of Sam68, compared to a 60- to 70-fold increase in the levels of Gag-Pol protein expression. Thus, in this system, Sam68 functioned to enhance the cytoplasmic utilization of RNA containing the CTE. These results suggest that Sam68 may interact with specific RNAs in the nucleus to provide a “mark” that affects their cytoplasmic fate. They also provide further evidence of links between signal transduction and RNA utilization.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2001
Brian W. Guzik; Lyne Lévesque; Susan Prasad; Yeou-cherng Bor; Ben E. Black; Bryce M. Paschal; David Rekosh; Marie-Louise Hammarskjold
ABSTRACT TAP, the human homologue of the yeast protein Mex67p, has been proposed to serve a role in mRNA export in mammalian cells. We have examined the ability of TAP to mediate export of Rev response element (RRE)-containing human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) RNA, a well-characterized export substrate in mammalian cells. To do this, the TAP gene was fused in frame to either RevM10 or RevΔ78–79. These proteins are nonfunctional Rev mutant proteins that can bind to HIV RNA containing the RRE in vivo but are unable to mediate the export of this RNA to the cytoplasm. However, the fusion of TAP to either of these mutant proteins gave rise to chimeric proteins that were able to complement Rev function. Significantly, cotransfection with a vector expressing NXT1 (p15), an NTF2-related cellular factor that binds to TAP, led to dramatic enhancement of the ability of the chimeric proteins to mediate RNA export. Mutant-protein analysis demonstrated that the domain necessary for nuclear export mapped to the C-terminal region of TAP and required the domain that interacts with NXT1, as well as the region that has been shown to interact with nucleoporins. RevM10-TAP function was leptomycin B insensitive. In contrast, the function of this protein was inhibited by ΔCAN, a protein consisting of part of the FG repeat domain of CAN/Nup214. These results show that TAP can complement Rev nuclear export signal function and redirect the export of intron-containing RNA to a CRM1-independent pathway. These experiments support the role of TAP as an RNA export factor in mammalian cells. In addition, they indicate that NXT1 serves as a crucial cellular cofactor in this process.
Nature | 2006
Ying Li; Yeou-cherng Bor; Yukiko Misawa; Yuming Xue; David Rekosh; Marie-Louise Hammarskjold
Alternative splicing is a key factor contributing to genetic diversity and evolution. Intron retention, one form of alternative splicing, is common in plants but rare in higher eukaryotes, because messenger RNAs with retained introns are subject to cellular restriction at the level of cytoplasmic export and expression. Often, retention of internal introns restricts the export of these mRNAs and makes them the targets for degradation by the cellular nonsense-mediated decay machinery if they contain premature stop codons. In fact, many of the database entries for complementary DNAs with retained introns represent them as artefacts that would not affect the proteome. Retroviruses are important model systems in studies of regulation of RNAs with retained introns, because their genomic and mRNAs contain one or more unspliced introns. For example, Mason–Pfizer monkey virus overcomes cellular restrictions by using a cis-acting RNA element known as the constitutive transport element (CTE). The CTE interacts directly with the Tap protein (also known as nuclear RNA export factor 1, encoded by NXF1), which is thought to be a principal export receptor for cellular mRNA, leading to the hypothesis that cellular mRNAs with retained introns use cellular CTE equivalents to overcome restrictions to their expression. Here we show that the Tap gene contains a functional CTE in its alternatively spliced intron 10. Tap mRNA containing this intron is exported to the cytoplasm and is present in polyribosomes. A small Tap protein is encoded by this mRNA and can be detected in human and monkey cells. Our results indicate that Tap regulates expression of its own intron-containing RNA through a CTE-mediated mechanism. Thus, CTEs are likely to be important elements that facilitate efficient expression of mammalian mRNAs with retained introns.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Jennifer Swartz; Yeou-cherng Bor; Yukiko Misawa; David Rekosh; Marie-Louise Hammarskjold
The splicing regulatory SR protein, 9G8, has recently been proposed to function in mRNA export in conjunction with the export protein, Tap/NXF1. Tap interacts directly with the Mason-Pfizer monkey virus constitutive transport element (CTE), an element that enables export of unspliced, intron-containing mRNA. Based on our previous finding that Tap can promote polysome association and translation of CTE-RNA, we investigated the effect of 9G8 on cytoplasmic RNA fate. 9G8 was shown to enhance expression of unspliced RNA containing either the Mason-Pfizer monkey virus-CTE or the recently discovered Tap-CTE. 9G8 also enhanced polyribosome association of unspliced RNA containing a CTE. Hyperphosphorylated 9G8 was present in monosomes and small polyribosomes, whereas soluble fractions contained only hypophosphorylated protein. Our results are consistent with a model in which hypophosphorylated SR proteins remain stably associated with messenger ribonucleoprotein (mRNP) complexes during export and are released during translation initiation concomitant with increased phosphorylation. These results provide further evidence for crucial links between RNA splicing, export and translation.
Journal of Virology | 2004
Melissa Alexander; Yeou-cherng Bor; Kodimangalam S. Ravichandran; Marie-Louise Hammarskjold; David Rekosh
ABSTRACT Lipid rafts are membrane microdomains that are functionally distinct from other membrane regions. We have shown that 10% of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Nef expressed in SupT1 cells is present in lipid rafts and that this represents virtually all of the membrane-associated Nef. To determine whether raft targeting, rather than simply membrane localization, has functional significance, we created a Nef fusion protein (LAT-Nef) containing the N-terminal 35 amino acids from LAT, a protein that is exclusively localized to rafts. Greater than 90% of the LAT-Nef protein was found in the raft fraction. In contrast, a mutated form, lacking two cysteine palmitoylation sites, showed less than 5% raft localization. Both proteins were equally expressed and targeted nearly exclusively to membranes. The LAT-Nef protein was more efficient than its nonraft mutant counterpart at downmodulating both cell surface CD4 and class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) expression, as well as in enhancing first-round infectivity and being incorporated into virus particles. This demonstrates that targeting of Nef to lipid rafts is mechanistically important for all of these functions. Compared to wild-type Nef, LAT-Nef downmodulated class I MHC nearly as effectively as the wild-type Nef protein, but was only about 60% as effective for CD4 downmodulation and 30% as effective for infectivity enhancement. Since the LAT-Nef protein was found entirely in rafts while the wild-type Nef protein was distributed 10% in rafts and 90% in the soluble fraction, our results suggest that class I MHC downmodulation by Nef may be performed exclusively by raft-bound Nef. In contrast, CD4 downmodulation and infectivity enhancement may require a non-membrane-bound Nef component as well as the membrane-bound form.
RNA | 2011
John H. Coyle; Yeou-cherng Bor; David Rekosh; Marie-Louise Hammarskjold
Post-transcriptional regulation of mRNA includes restriction mechanisms to prevent export and expression of mRNAs that are incompletely spliced. Here we present evidence that the mammalian protein Tpr is involved in this restriction. To study the role of Tpr in export of mRNA with retained introns, we used reporters in which the mRNA was exported either via the Nxf1/Nxt1 pathway using a CTE or via the Crm1 pathway using Rev/RRE. Our data show that even modest knockdown of Tpr using RNAi leads to a significant increase in export and translation from the mRNA containing the CTE. In contrast, Tpr perturbation has no effect on export of mRNA containing the RRE, either in the absence or presence of Rev. Also, no effects were observed on export of a completely spliced mRNA. Taken together, our results indicate that Tpr plays an important role in quality control of mRNA trafficked on the Nxf1 pathway.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2016
Ying Li; Yeou-cherng Bor; Mark Fitzgerald; Kevin S. Lee; David Rekosh; Marie-Louise Hammarskjold
A small Nxf1 protein, expressed from an NXF1 mRNA with a retained intron is highly expressed in rodent hippocampal and neocortical neurons, colocalizes with Staufen2 proteins in neuronal RNA granules, is present in polysomes, and replaces Nxt1 as an Nxf1 cofactor in export and expression of mRNA with retained introns.
Genes & Development | 2003
Li Jin; Brian W. Guzik; Yeou-cherng Bor; David Rekosh; Marie-Louise Hammarskjold
Genes & Development | 2006
Yeou-cherng Bor; Jennifer Swartz; Avril A. Morrison; David Rekosh; Michael R. Ladomery; Marie-Louise Hammarskjold
Virology | 2007
Kevin Olivieri; Robert M. Scoggins; Yeou-cherng Bor; Aprille Matthews; David Mark; James R. Taylor; David Chernauskas; Marie-Louise Hammarskjold; David Rekosh; David Camerini