Citation

Mazzola MC, Zhao T, Kiem A, Kristiansen TA, Gustafsson K, Wong LP, Scott-Solomon E, Fahlberg MD, Mayerhofer C, Mayerhofer E, Forward S, Assita ER, Schiroli G, Handley M, Kfoury Y, Fukushima T, Li D, Keyes S, Sharda A, Milosevic J, Kato H, Ivanov P, Sykes DB, Kwok SJJ, Sadreyev RI, Sankaran VG, Hsu YC, Scadden DT. 2026. Shifting IRES versus Cap-initiated translation during homeostatic stem cell differentiation and stress. Science advances. 12(21):eadz7896. Pubmed: 42172329 DOI:10.1126/sciadv.adz7896

Abstract

Cell stress can increase the use of methylated guanosine (mG) cap-independent, internal ribosome entry site (IRES)-mediated translation initiation relative to cap-dependent translation (IRES/Cap). Reporters that quantify IRES/Cap have demonstrated differential activity across cultured cell types and stress conditions. By generating an IRES/Cap reporter mouse, we were able to systematically evaluate IRES/Cap across distinct tissues and cell types during physiological stresses and lineage commitment. Caloric stress invoked the expected boost in IRES/Cap translation regardless of differentiation state, but unexpectedly, IRES/Cap progressively increased during hematopoietic and epithelial (hair follicle) differentiation under normal, homeostatic conditions. This was independent of total protein output or cell cycle. Even within cells of a given differentiation state, cells with lower relative IRES utilization had markedly higher multipotent capability in vivo. The RNA processing protein PTBP1 is a mediator of this translation initiation preference. Therefore, low IRES/Cap is a signature of high stemness and suggests that modulation of translation initiation participates in cell differentiation state.

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David Scadden’s laboratory is dedicated to discovering the principles governing blood cell production, with the ultimate goal of guiding the development of therapies for blood disorders and cancer.

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