PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Decreased dicer expression enhances SRP-mediated protein targeting.

  • Yong-Feng Ren,
  • Guiling Li,
  • Yong-Feng Xue,
  • Xue-Jiao Zhang,
  • Yi-Jiang Song,
  • Lu Lv,
  • Jianmin Wu,
  • Yu-Xiao Fang,
  • Yu-Qun Wang,
  • Ke-Qing Shi,
  • Yong-Ping Chen,
  • Kai-Fu Tang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0056950
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
p. e56950

Abstract

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We have shown that Dicer processes 7SL RNA into different fragments ranging from ∼20 to more than 200 nucleotides. Here we addressed the molecular functions of these 7SL RNA fragments and found that some of them functioned as dominant-negative regulators of the full-length 7SL RNA, interfering with signal recognition particle (SRP) complex formation. Transfection of these 7SL RNA fragments inhibited the expression of cell surface glycoproteins, the targeting of a reporter protein to the endoplasmic reticulum, and the secretion of secreted alkaline phosphatase. These results suggest that some Dicer-processed 7SL RNA fragments interfered with SRP-mediated protein targeting. Moreover, we showed that Dicer knockdown enhanced SRP-mediated protein targeting and that transfection of a mixture of the 7SL RNA fragments partially restored this effect. Our data indicate that Dicer can fine-tune the efficiency of SRP-mediated protein targeting via processing a proportion of 7SL RNA into fragments of different lengths.