- Le Thomas, Adrien;
- Ferri, Elena;
- Marsters, Scot;
- Harnoss, Jonathan M;
- Lawrence, David A;
- Zuazo-Gaztelu, Iratxe;
- Modrusan, Zora;
- Chan, Sara;
- Solon, Margaret;
- Chalouni, Cécile;
- Li, Weihan;
- Koeppen, Hartmut;
- Rudolph, Joachim;
- Wang, Weiru;
- Wu, Thomas D;
- Walter, Peter;
- Ashkenazi, Avi
Inositol requiring enzyme 1 (IRE1) mitigates endoplasmic-reticulum (ER) stress by orchestrating the unfolded-protein response (UPR). IRE1 spans the ER membrane, and signals through a cytosolic kinase-endoribonuclease module. The endoribonuclease generates the transcription factor XBP1s by intron excision between similar RNA stem-loop endomotifs, and depletes select cellular mRNAs through regulated IRE1-dependent decay (RIDD). Paradoxically, in mammals RIDD seems to target only mRNAs with XBP1-like endomotifs, while in flies RIDD exhibits little sequence restriction. By comparing nascent and total IRE1α-controlled mRNAs in human cells, we identify not only canonical endomotif-containing RIDD substrates, but also targets without such motifs-degraded by a process we coin RIDDLE, for RIDD lacking endomotif. IRE1α displays two basic endoribonuclease modalities: highly specific, endomotif-directed cleavage, minimally requiring dimers; and more promiscuous, endomotif-independent processing, requiring phospho-oligomers. An oligomer-deficient IRE1α mutant fails to support RIDDLE in vitro and in cells. Our results advance current mechanistic understanding of the UPR.