The lupus autoantigen La/Ssb is anXist-binding protein involved inXistfolding and cloud formation
Author(s) -
Norbert Ha,
Nan Ding,
Hong Ru,
Rubing Liu,
Xavier Roca,
Yingyuan Luo,
Xiaowei Duan,
Xiao Wang,
Peiling Ni,
Haiyang Wu,
LiFeng Zhang,
Lingyi Chen
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkab1003
Subject(s) - xist , biology , x inactivation , gene knockdown , rna , rna binding protein , microbiology and biotechnology , chromatin , genetics , x chromosome , gene
Using the programmable RNA-sequence binding domain of the Pumilio protein, we FLAG-tagged Xist (inactivated X chromosome specific transcript) in live mouse cells. Affinity pulldown coupled to mass spectrometry was employed to identify a list of 138 candidate Xist-binding proteins, from which, Ssb (also known as the lupus autoantigen La) was validated as a protein functionally critical for X chromosome inactivation (XCI). Extensive XCI defects were detected in Ssb knockdown cells, including chromatin compaction, death of female mouse embryonic stem cells during in vitro differentiation and chromosome-wide monoallelic gene expression pattern. Live-cell imaging of Xist RNA reveals the defining XCI defect: Xist cloud formation. Ssb is a ubiquitous and versatile RNA-binding protein with RNA chaperone and RNA helicase activities. Functional dissection of Ssb shows that the RNA chaperone domain plays critical roles in XCI. In Ssb knockdown cells, Xist transcripts are unstable and misfolded. These results show that Ssb is critically involved in XCI, possibly as a protein regulating the in-cell structure of Xist.
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