Small molecule ISRIB suppresses the integrated stress response within a defined window of activation

Publication date

2019-02-05

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Rabouw, Huib HISNI 0000000493294019
Langereis, Martijn AISNI 0000000396288880
Anand, Aditya A
Visser, Linda JISNI 0000000493300036
de Groot, Raoul JISNI 0000000397145355
Walter, Peter
van Kuppeveld, Frank J MISNI 0000000369420196

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Abstract

Activation of the integrated stress response (ISR) by a variety of stresses triggers phosphorylation of the α-subunit of translation initiation factor eIF2. P-eIF2α inhibits eIF2B, the guanine nucleotide exchange factor that recycles inactive eIF2•GDP to active eIF2•GTP. eIF2 phosphorylation thereby represses translation. Persistent activation of the ISR has been linked to the development of several neurological disorders, and modulation of the ISR promises new therapeutic strategies. Recently, a small-molecule ISR inhibitor (ISRIB) was identified that rescues translation in the presence of P-eIF2α by facilitating the assembly of more active eIF2B. ISRIB enhances cognitive memory processes and has therapeutic effects in brain-injured mice without displaying overt side effects. While using ISRIB to investigate the ISR in picornavirus-infected cells, we observed that ISRIB rescued translation early in infection when P-eIF2α levels were low, but not late in infection when P-eIF2α levels were high. By treating cells with varying concentrations of poly(I:C) or arsenite to induce the ISR, we provide additional proof that ISRIB is unable to inhibit the ISR when intracellular P-eIF2α concentrations exceed a critical threshold level. Together, our data demonstrate that the effects of pharmacological activation of eIF2B are tuned by P-eIF2α concentration. Thus, ISRIB can mitigate undesirable outcomes of low-level ISR activation that may manifest neurological disease but leaves the cytoprotective effects of acute ISR activation intact. The insensitivity of cells to ISRIB during acute ISR may explain why ISRIB does not cause overt toxic side effects in vivo.

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Rabouw, H H, Langereis, M A, Anand, A A, Visser, L J, de Groot, R J, Walter, P & van Kuppeveld, F J M 2019, 'Small molecule ISRIB suppresses the integrated stress response within a defined window of activation', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 116, no. 6, pp. 2097-2102. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1815767116