Abstract
PKR, the interferon (IFN)-inducible protein kinase activated by double-stranded RNA, inhibits translation by phosphorylating the initiation factor eIF2α chain. Uniquely, human IFN-γ mRNA uses local activation of PKR in the cell to control its own translation yield. IFN-γ mRNA activates PKR through a structure in its 5' - region harboring a pseudoknot which is critical for PKR activation. Mutations that impair pseudoknot stability reduce the ability of IFN-γ mRNA to activate PKR and strongly increase its translation efficiency. The cis-acting RNA element in IFN-γ mRNA functions as a biological sensor of intracellular PKR levels. During an immune response, as IFN-γ and other inflammatory cytokines build up in the cell's microenvironment, they act to induce higher levels of PKR in the cell, resulting in a more extensive activation of PKR by IFN-γ mRNA. With the resulting phosphorylation of eIF2α, a negative feedback loop is created and the production of IFN-γ is progressively attenuated. We propose that the therapeutic effect of IFN-β in multiple sclerosis may rest, at least in part, on its exquisite ability to induce high levels of PKR in the cell and thereby to limit IFN-γ mRNA translation through this negative feedback loop, blocking the excessive IFN-γ gene expression that precedes clinical attacks. © 2006 IBCB, SIBS, CAS All rights reserved.
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Kaempfer, R. (2006). Interferon-γ mRNA attenuates its own translation by activating PKR: A molecular basis for the therapeutic effect of interferon-β in multiple sclerosis. In Cell Research (Vol. 16, pp. 148–153). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.cr.7310020
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