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Developmental Cytoplasmic-to-Nuclear Translocation of RNA-Binding Protein HuR Is Required for Adult Neurogenesis
Author(s) -
Yuhan Wang,
Ye Guo,
Changyong Tang,
Xiu Han,
Mingyue Xu,
Jing Sun,
Yifei Zhao,
Yiwen Zhang,
Min Wang,
Xiaofeng Cao,
Xiaojuan Zhu,
Weixiang Guo
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.10.127
Subject(s) - neurogenesis , biology , rna binding protein , microbiology and biotechnology , neural stem cell , embryonic stem cell , alternative splicing , gene isoform , translation (biology) , rna splicing , focal adhesion , messenger rna , rna , stem cell , signal transduction , genetics , gene
Although adult neurogenesis recapitulates processes that occur during embryonic development, it exhibits distinct characteristics from the embryonic counterpart. However, the intrinsic mechanism underlying the differential regulation of neurogenesis between these two stages remains unclear. Herein, we show that the ablation of RNA-binding protein HuR in NSCs impairs adult but not embryonic neurogenesis. HuR is predominantly expressed in the cytoplasm of embryonic NSCs but translocates into the nucleus of adult NSCs. Transcriptomic analysis of HuR-deficient adult NSCs revealed that HuR primarily regulates alternative splicing of numerous premRNA transcripts, including focal adhesion kinase (FAK). HuR-deficient adult NSCs generate increased FAK mRNA isoforms with shorter 5'-UTRs, leading to enhanced FAK mRNA translation and hyperactivated FAK signaling, and inhibition of FAK ameliorates defective adult neurogenesis and impaired hippocampus-dependent learning in HuR-deficient mice. These findings provide mechanistic insights into the differential regulation of embryonic and adult neurogenesis through developmental cytoplasmic-to-nuclear translocation of HuR.

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