MK2-induced tristetraprolin:14-3-3 complexes prevent stress granule association and ARE-mRNA decay

Stoecklin, Georg, Tiffany Stubbs, Nancy Kedersha, Stephen Wax, William F.C. Rigby, T.Keith Blackwell, and Paul Anderson. 2004. “MK2-Induced Tristetraprolin:14-3-3 Complexes Prevent Stress Granule Association and ARE-MRNA Decay”. The EMBO Journal 23 (6): 1313-24.

Abstract

Stress granules (SGs) are dynamic cytoplasmic foci at which stalled translation initiation complexes accumulate in cells subjected to environmental stress. SG-associated proteins such as TIA-1, TIAR and HuR bind to AU-rich element (ARE)-containing mRNAs and control their translation and stability. Here we show that tristetraprolin (TTP), an ARE-binding protein that destabilizes ARE-mRNAs, is recruited to SGs that are assembled in response to FCCP-induced energy deprivation, but not arsenite-induced oxidative stress. Exclusion of TTP from arsenite-induced SGs is a consequence of MAPKAP kinase-2 (MK2)-induced phosphorylation at serines 52 and 178, which promotes the assembly of TTP:14-3-3 complexes. 14-3-3 binding excludes TTP from SGs and inhibits TTP-dependent degradation of ARE-containing transcripts. In activated RAW 264.7 macrophages, endogenous TTP:14-3-3 complexes bind to ARE-RNA. Our data reveal the mechanism by which the p38-MAPK/MK2 kinase cascade inhibits TTP-mediated degradation of ARE-containing transcripts and thereby contributes to lipopolysaccharide-induced TNFalpha expression.

Last updated on 06/26/2024