Description du projet
Exploration du décalage du cadre ribosomique dans les cellules humaines
De nombreux virus, y compris le VIH, utilisent un processus connu sous le nom de décalage du cadre ribosomique programmé (PRF) où, pendant la synthèse des protéines, le ribosome glisse vers une autre position. Ce processus modifie le code et conduit à la génération de différentes protéines à partir du même ARNm, ajoutant un autre niveau de régulation de l’expression génique. Le projet T-FRAME, financé par l’UE, compte étudier le phénomène du PRF dans les cellules humaines et souhaite identifier les facteurs qui le régulent. Les scientifiques utiliseront les lymphocytes T humains et le VIH-1 comme système modèle pour étudier l’impact du PRF sur l’infection et l’immunité innée. Les résultats fourniront des connaissances sans précédent sur cette voie alternative au décodage standard et ouvriront la voie à la conception de nouvelles thérapies antivirales.
Objectif
The coding region of many genes contains sequence elements that constitute roadblocks during mRNA translation. These roadblocks present problems, but also opportunities for the cell to increase the coding capacity of the genome by so-called programmed ribosome frameshifting (PRF). PRF is a universal gene expression strategy that brings plasticity to the proteome. It is widely studied in viruses and bacteria, yet poorly understood in humans.
My own mechanistic discoveries have highlighted that, regardless of various stimulatory structures and slippery nucleotides involved, PRF in bacterial and viral mRNAs follows one of the two general pathways depending on substrate. In contrast, many questions remain regarding the occurrences of PRF in humans and its regulation by recently discovered trans-acting viral and cellular factors.
In T-FRAME, I will investigate the mechanism of PRF and its role in disease using HIV infection of human-T lymphocytes as an in vivo paradigm. To study molecular details of how trans-factors modulate PRF, I will leverage cutting-edge ensemble and single-molecule techniques to monitor the ribosome as it moves along the mRNA codon per codon. In addition, I will assess mRNA interactions with PRF factors during this process. Using a PRF-RNA-interactome capture assay that we have recently developed, I will search for new trans- factors in human cells. Finally, I will study the translation of T cells and HIV-1 on a global level during infection to understand the full scope and dynamic nature of PRF in this model system.
To summarize, T-FRAME will advance our understanding of how RNA structure and trans-factors shape translation regimes in higher eukaryotes and how deviations from the standard decoding path impact infection and innate immunity. I envision harnessing these findings to develop novel tools for synthetic biology and new design principles for RNA-centric antiviral and immune therapies.
Champ scientifique
- natural sciencesbiological sciencesbiochemistrybiomoleculesproteinsproteomics
- natural sciencesbiological sciencessynthetic biology
- natural sciencesbiological sciencesmicrobiologyvirology
- medical and health scienceshealth sciencesinfectious diseasesRNA virusesHIV
- natural sciencesbiological sciencesgeneticsnucleotides
Programme(s)
Thème(s)
Régime de financement
ERC-STG - Starting GrantInstitution d’accueil
93053 Regensburg
Allemagne