HuR maintains a replicative life span by repressing the ARF tumor suppressor

H Kawagishi, M Hashimoto, H Nakamura… - … and cellular biology, 2013 - Am Soc Microbiol
H Kawagishi, M Hashimoto, H Nakamura, T Tsugawa, A Watanabe, DL Kontoyiannis
Molecular and cellular biology, 2013Am Soc Microbiol
Abstract p19 ARF plays an essential role in the senescence of mouse cells, and its
expression is lost by methylation or deletion of the ARF locus; otherwise, p53 is inactivated
to bypass senescence. ARF expression is tightly regulated, but little is known about its
posttranscriptional regulation. Here, we show that an RNA-binding protein, HuR (human
antigen R), represses ARF mRNA translation, thereby maintaining the replicative life span of
mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs). Loss of HuR results in premature senescence, with …
Abstract
p19 ARF plays an essential role in the senescence of mouse cells, and its expression is lost by methylation or deletion of the ARF locus; otherwise, p53 is inactivated to bypass senescence. ARF expression is tightly regulated, but little is known about its posttranscriptional regulation. Here, we show that an RNA-binding protein, HuR (human antigen R), represses ARF mRNA translation, thereby maintaining the replicative life span of mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs). Loss of HuR results in premature senescence, with concomitant increases in p19 ARF but not p16 Ink4a levels, and this senescence is not observed in ARF-null MEFs that retain an intact Ink4a locus. HuR depletion does not alter ARF transcription or stability but enhances ribosome association with ARF mRNA. Under these conditions, ARF mRNA accumulates in nucleoli, where it associates with nucleolin. Furthermore, adipose-specific deletion of the HuR gene results in increased p19 ARF expression in aged animals, which is accompanied by decreased insulin sensitivity. Together, our findings demonstrate that p19 ARF is also regulated at the translational level, and this translational regulation restrains the cellular life span and tissue functions in vivo.
American Society for Microbiology