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Publication : Inhibition of a constitutive translation initiation factor 2alpha phosphatase, CReP, promotes survival of stressed cells.

First Author  Jousse C Year  2003
Journal  J Cell Biol Volume  163
Issue  4 Pages  767-75
PubMed ID  14638860 Mgi Jnum  J:86710
Mgi Id  MGI:2681361 Doi  10.1083/jcb.200308075
Citation  Jousse C, et al. (2003) Inhibition of a constitutive translation initiation factor 2alpha phosphatase, CReP, promotes survival of stressed cells. J Cell Biol 163(4):767-75
abstractText  Phosphorylation of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2alpha (eIF2alpha) on serine 51 is effected by specific stress-activated protein kinases. eIF2alpha phosphorylation inhibits translation initiation promoting a cytoprotective gene expression program known as the integrated stress response (ISR). Stress-induced activation of GADD34 feeds back negatively on this pathway by promoting eIF2alpha dephosphorylation, however, GADD34 mutant cells retain significant eIF2alpha-directed phosphatase activity. We used a somatic cell genetic approach to identify a gene encoding a novel regulatory subunit of a constitutively active holophosphatase complex that dephosphorylates eIF2alpha. RNAi of this gene, which we named constitutive repressor of eIF2alpha phosphorylation (CReP, or PPP1R15B), repressed the constitutive eIF2alpha-directed phosphatase activity and activated the ISR. CReP RNAi strongly protected mammalian cells against oxidative stress, peroxynitrite stress, and more modestly against accumulation of malfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum. These findings suggest that therapeutic inhibition of eIF2alpha dephosphorylation by targeting the CReP-protein-phosphatase-1 complex may be used to access the salubrious qualities of the ISR.
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