The p53-induced mouse zinc finger protein wig-1 binds double-stranded RNA with high affinity

C Méndez-Vidal, MT Wilhelm, F Hellborg… - Nucleic acids …, 2002 - academic.oup.com
C Méndez-Vidal, MT Wilhelm, F Hellborg, W Qian, KG Wiman
Nucleic acids research, 2002academic.oup.com
The p53-induced mouse wig-1 gene encodes a Cys2His2-type zinc finger protein of
unknown function. The zinc fingers in wig-1 are connected by long (56–75) amino acid
linkers. This distribution of zinc finger domains resembles that of the previously described
double-stranded (ds) RNA-binding proteins dsRBP-ZFa and JAZ. Ectopically expressed
FLAG-tagged mouse wig-1 protein localized to nuclei and in some cells to nucleoli, whereas
GFP-tagged mouse wig-1 localized primarily to nucleoli. Electrophoretic mobility shift assay …
Abstract
The p53-induced mouse wig-1 gene encodes a Cys2His2-type zinc finger protein of unknown function. The zinc fingers in wig-1 are connected by long (56–75) amino acid linkers. This distribution of zinc finger domains resembles that of the previously described double-stranded (ds)RNA-binding proteins dsRBP-ZFa and JAZ. Ectopically expressed FLAG-tagged mouse wig-1 protein localized to nuclei and in some cells to nucleoli, whereas GFP-tagged mouse wig-1 localized primarily to nucleoli. Electrophoretic mobility shift assay using a recombinant GST–wig-1 fusion protein showed that wig-1 preferentially binds dsRNA rather than single-stranded RNA or dsDNA. A set of deletion/truncation mutants of wig-1 was tested to determine the dsRNA-binding domain(s) or region(s) in wig-1 that is involved in the stabilization of wig-1–dsRNA complexes in vitro. This revealed that the first zinc finger in wig-1 is essential for binding to dsRNA, whereas zinc fingers 2 and 3 are dispensable. wig-1 protein expressed in mammalian cells also showed a high affinity for dsRNA. wig-1 represents the first confirmed p53-induced gene that encodes a dsRNA-binding protein. This suggests that dsRNA binding plays a role in the p53-dependent stress response.
Oxford University Press