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It has been reported that eukaryotic organisms have a nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) system to exclude aberrant mRNAs that produce truncated proteins. NMD is an RNA surveillance pathway that degrades mRNAs possessing premature translation termination codons (PTCs), thus avoiding production of possibly toxic truncated proteins. Three interacting proteins, UPF1, UPF2 and UPF3, are required for NMD in mammals and yeasts, and their amino acid sequences are well conserved among most eukaryotes, including plants. In this study, 'The Arabidopsis Information Resource' database was searched for mRNAs with premature termination codons. We selected five of these mRNAs and checked for the presence of PTCs in these mRNAs when translated in vivo. As a result we identified aberrant mRNAs produced by alternative splicing for each gene. These genes produced at least one alternative splicing variant including a PTC (PTC+) and another variant without a PTC (PTC-). We analyzed their PTC+/PTC- ratios in wild-type Arabidopsis and upf3 mutant plants and showed that the PTC+/PTC- ratios were higher in atupf3 mutant plants than wild-type plants and that the atupf3 mutant was less able to degrade mRNAs with premature termination codons than wild-type plants. This indicated that the AtUPF3 gene is required by the plant NMD system to obviate aberrantly spliced mRNA.  相似文献   

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Nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) is a eukaryotic cellular RNA surveillance and quality-control mechanism that degrades mRNA containing premature stop codons (nonsense mutations) that otherwise may exert a deleterious effect by the production of dysfunctional truncated proteins. Collagen X (COL10A1) nonsense mutations in Schmid-type metaphyseal chondrodysplasia are localized in a region toward the 3' end of the last exon (exon 3) and result in mRNA decay, in contrast to most other genes in which terminal-exon nonsense mutations are resistant to NMD. We introduce nonsense mutations into the mouse Col10a1 gene and express these in a hypertrophic-chondrocyte cell line to explore the mechanism of last-exon mRNA decay of Col10a1 and demonstrate that mRNA decay is spatially restricted to mutations occurring in a 3' region of the exon 3 coding sequence; this region corresponds to where human mutations have been described. This localization of mRNA-decay competency suggested that a downstream region, such as the 3' UTR, may play a role in specifying decay of mutant Col10a1 mRNA containing nonsense mutations. We found that deleting any of the three conserved sequence regions within the 3' UTR (region I, 23 bp; region II, 170 bp; and region III, 76 bp) prevented mutant mRNA decay, but a smaller 13 bp deletion within region III was permissive for decay. These data suggest that the 3' UTR participates in collagen X last-exon mRNA decay and that overall 3' UTR configuration, rather than specific linear-sequence motifs, may be important in specifying decay of Col10a1 mRNA containing nonsense mutations.  相似文献   

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Nonsense‐mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a cellular surveillance pathway that recognizes and degrades mRNAs with premature termination codons (PTCs). The mechanisms underlying translation termination are key to the understanding of RNA surveillance mechanisms such as NMD and crucial for the development of therapeutic strategies for NMD‐related diseases. Here, we have used a fully reconstituted in vitro translation system to probe the NMD proteins for interaction with the termination apparatus. We discovered that UPF3B (i) interacts with the release factors, (ii) delays translation termination and (iii) dissociates post‐termination ribosomal complexes that are devoid of the nascent peptide. Furthermore, we identified UPF1 and ribosomes as new interaction partners of UPF3B. These previously unknown functions of UPF3B during the early and late phases of translation termination suggest that UPF3B is involved in the crosstalk between the NMD machinery and the PTC‐bound ribosome, a central mechanistic step of RNA surveillance.  相似文献   

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Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a eukaryotic quality-control mechanism that recognizes and degrades mRNAs with premature termination codons (PTCs). In yeast, PTC-containing mRNAs are targeted to processing bodies (P-bodies), and yeast strains expressing an ATPase defective Upf1p mutant accumulate P-bodies. Here we show that in human cells, an ATPase-deficient UPF1 mutant and a fraction of UPF2 and UPF3b accumulate in cytoplasmic foci that co-localize with P-bodies. Depletion of the P-body component Ge-1, which prevents formation of microscopically detectable P-bodies, also impairs the localization of mutant UPF1, UPF2, and UPF3b in cytoplasmic foci. However, the accumulation of the ATPase-deficient UPF1 mutant in P-bodies is independent of UPF2, UPF3b, or SMG1, and the ATPase-deficient UPF1 mutant can localize into the P-bodies independent of its phosphorylation status. Most importantly, disruption of P-bodies by depletion of Ge-1 affects neither the mRNA levels of PTC-containing reporter genes nor endogenous NMD substrates. Consistent with the recently reported decapping-independent SMG6-mediated endonucleolytic decay of human nonsense mRNAs, our results imply that microscopically detectable P-bodies are not required for mammalian NMD.  相似文献   

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The nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) system is an RNA surveillance system that degrades mRNAs possessing premature translation termination codons (PTCs). Although NMD factors are well conserved in eukaryotes, it is speculated that the contexts of those termination codons that are subject to NMD are different depending on the organism. Context analysis of termination codons that are recognized by the plant NMD system would clarify NMD target mRNAs in plants, and contribute to our understanding of its biological relevance in plants. In the present study we analyzed the positions of termination codons that were recognized as PTCs using an Agrobacterium transient expression assay, i.e. the accumulation of a series of plant mRNAs with nonsense mutations in different contexts was tested in plants. The results indicated that termination codons that are located distant from the mRNA 3' termini or >50 nucleotides upstream of the 3'-most exon-exon junction are recognized as substrates for NMD.  相似文献   

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A new function for nonsense-mediated mRNA-decay factors   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
mRNAs often contain premature-termination (nonsense) codons as a result of mutations and RNA splicing errors. These nonsense codons cause rapid decay of the mRNAs that contain them, a phenomenon called nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). This response is thought to be a quality-control mechanism that protects cells from truncated dominant-negative proteins. Surprisingly, recent evidence strongly suggests that the NMD factors UPF1, UPF2, UPF3B, RNPS1, Y14 and MAGOH also promote translation of normal mRNAs in mammalian cells. This, along with an earlier discovery that NMD factors appear to dictate efficient translation termination, suggests that NMD factors do not merely function in RNA surveillance. These findings lead to the interesting question of why NMD factors evolved; are they for RNA-quality control or to promote efficient translation initiation and termination?  相似文献   

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Cao D  Parker R 《Cell》2003,113(4):533-545
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Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a surveillance mechanism that degrades mRNAs containing premature translation termination codons. In mammalian cells, a termination codon is ordinarily recognized as "premature" if it is located greater than 50-54 nucleotides 5' to the final exon-exon junction. We have described a set of naturally occurring human beta-globin gene mutations that apparently contradict this rule. The corresponding beta-thalassemia genes contain nonsense mutations within exon 1, and yet their encoded mRNAs accumulate to levels approaching wild-type beta-globin (beta(WT)) mRNA. In the present report we demonstrate that the stabilities of these mRNAs with nonsense mutations in exon 1 are intermediate between beta(WT) mRNA and beta-globin mRNA carrying a prototype NMD-sensitive mutation in exon 2 (codon 39 nonsense; beta 39). Functional analyses of these mRNAs with 5'-proximal nonsense mutations demonstrate that their relative resistance to NMD does not reflect abnormal RNA splicing or translation re-initiation and is independent of promoter identity and erythroid specificity. Instead, the proximity of the nonsense codon to the translation initiation AUG constitutes a major determinant of NMD. Positioning a termination mutation at the 5' terminus of the coding region blunts mRNA destabilization, and this effect is dominant to the "50-54 nt boundary rule." These observations impact on current models of NMD.  相似文献   

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Upf1 is a highly conserved RNA helicase essential for nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD), an mRNA quality-control mechanism that degrades aberrant mRNAs harboring premature termination codons (PTCs). For the activation of NMD, UPF1 interacts first with a translation-terminating ribosome and then with a downstream exon-junction complex (EJC), which is deposited at exon-exon junctions during splicing. Although the helicase activity of Upf1 is indispensable for NMD, its roles and substrates have yet to be fully elucidated. Here we show that stable RNA secondary structures between a PTC and a downstream exon-exon junction increase the levels of potential NMD substrates. We also demonstrate that a stable secondary structure within the 3'-untranslated region (UTR) induces the binding of Upf1 to mRNA in a translation-dependent manner and that the Upf1-related molecules are accumulated at the 5'-side of such a structure. Furthermore, we present evidence that the helicase activity of Upf1 is used to bridge the spatial gap between a translation-termination codon and a downstream exon-exon junction for the activation of NMD. Based on these findings, we propose a model that the Upf1-related molecular motor scans the 3'-UTR in the 5'-to-3' direction for the mRNA-binding factors including EJCs to ensure mRNA integrity.  相似文献   

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Eukaryotic mRNAs containing premature termination codons are subjected to accelerated turnover, known as nonsense-mediated decay (NMD). Recognition of translation termination events as premature requires a surveillance complex, which includes the RNA helicase Upf1p. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, NMD provokes rapid decapping followed by 5'-->3' exonucleolytic decay. Here we report an alternative, decapping-independent NMD pathway involving deadenylation and subsequent 3'-->5' exonucleolytic decay. Accelerated turnover via this pathway required Upf1p and was blocked by the translation inhibitor cycloheximide. Degradation of the deadenylated mRNA required the Rrp4p and Ski7p components of the cytoplasmic exosome complex, as well as the putative RNA helicase Ski2p. We conclude that recognition of NMD substrates by the Upf surveillance complex can target mRNAs to rapid deadenylation and exosome-mediated degradation.  相似文献   

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