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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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Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is an mRNA surveillance mechanism that plays integral roles in eliminating mRNAs with premature termination codons to prevent the synthesis of truncated proteins that could be pathogenic. One response to the accumulation of detrimental proteins is apoptosis, which involves the activation of enzymatic pathways leading to protein and nucleic acid cleavage and culminating in cell death. It is not clear whether NMD is required to ensure the accurate expression of apoptosis genes or is no longer necessary since cytotoxic proteins are not an issue during cell death. The present study shows that caspases cleave the two NMD factors UPF1 and UPF2 during apoptosis impairing NMD. Our results demonstrate a new regulatory pathway for NMD that occurs during apoptosis and provide evidence for role of the UPF cleaved fragments in apoptosis and NMD inhibition.Cell death is a natural process that occurs throughout development and the life of a multicellular organism removing cells that are no longer needed or have become pathogenic, thereby organizing tissues and participating in their homeostasis. There are many pathways leading to cell death that are activated by numerous external and/or internal stimuli.1 Cell death can occur via programed processes such as apoptosis, autophagy, necrosis (a more passive process) or necroptosis (a type of programed necrosis).2During apoptosis, specific gene networks and protein-cleavage programs are activated sending the cells on a death spiral3, 4, 5 through a family of cysteine-aspartate proteases (caspases).6 Caspases are classified by their role in the apoptotic pathway, into (i) initiator caspases (such as caspases2, 8, 9 and 10) or (ii) effector caspases (such as caspases3, 6 or 7).7 Initiator caspases cleave the inactive precursor of the effector caspases (pro-caspases) into their active forms. Effector caspases are then responsible for cleaving protein targets to interfere with cellular processes, and in particular, with the activation of some endonucleases that degrade genomic DNA.Throughout the process of mRNA maturation, numerous quality control mechanisms verify the integrity of the information carried by mRNAs. One of these, nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD), leads to the rapid decay of mRNAs harboring a premature termination codon (PTC) to prevent the synthesis of non-functional and/or potentially detrimental truncated proteins.8, 9, 10 In addition to its role in quality control, NMD also regulates gene expression of so-called natural substrates of NMD.11, 12, 13, 14, 15 Proteins that have a central role in NMD, such as UPF1, UPF2, UPF3/UPF3a and UPF3X/UPF3b are highly conserved from yeast to human. The requirement for these UPF proteins in NMD is illustrated by the fact that the downregulation of any one of them results in an inhibition of NMD.16, 17 NMD is a necessary component in the development and maintenance of healthy cells and organisms. For example, UPF1 is an essential gene since the inactivation of UPF1 protein leads to an early embryonic death in mouse,18 thus implicating NMD as a critical proofreading and/or regulatory component in early organismal development. However, the question of whether NMD is required after cells have committed to proceed along a pathway that culminates in cell death has not been investigated. To address this question, NMD efficiency was studied during apoptosis. The studies presented here show that NMD factors UPF1 and UPF2 are cleaved by caspases 3 and 7 during apoptosis. The functional consequences of these cleavages are a general shutdown of NMD activity leading to stabilization of both PTC-containing mRNAs and natural substrates of NMD, and also the production of caspase-cleaved UPF fragments that induce apoptosis and inhibit NMD.  相似文献   

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SMG-1, a member of the PIKK (phosphoinositide 3-kinase related kinases) family, plays a critical role in the mRNA quality control system termed nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). NMD protects the cells from the accumulation of aberrant mRNAs with premature termination codons (PTCs) that encode nonfunctional or potentially harmful truncated proteins. SMG-1 directly phosphorylates Upf1, another key component of NMD, and this phosphorylation occurs upon recognition of PTC on post-spliced mRNA during the initial round of translation. At present, a variety of tools are available that can specifically suppress NMD, and it is possible to examine the contribution of NMD in a variety of physiological and pathological conditions.  相似文献   

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Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a quality control system that degrades mRNAs containing premature termination codons. Although NMD is well characterized in yeast and mammals, plant NMD is poorly understood. We have undertaken the functional dissection of NMD pathways in plants. Using an approach that allows rapid identification of plant NMD trans factors, we demonstrated that two plant NMD pathways coexist, one eliminates mRNAs with long 3'UTRs, whereas a distinct pathway degrades mRNAs harbouring 3'UTR-located introns. We showed that UPF1, UPF2 and SMG-7 are involved in both plant NMD pathways, whereas Mago and Y14 are required only for intron-based NMD. The molecular mechanism of long 3'UTR-based plant NMD resembled yeast NMD, whereas the intron-based NMD was similar to mammalian NMD, suggesting that both pathways are evolutionarily conserved. Interestingly, the SMG-7 NMD component is targeted by NMD, suggesting that plant NMD is autoregulated. We propose that a complex, autoregulated NMD mechanism operated in stem eukaryotes, and that despite aspect of the mechanism being simplified in different lineages, feedback regulation was retained in all kingdoms.  相似文献   

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Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a highly regulated quality control mechanism through which mRNAs harboring a premature termination codon are degraded. It is also a regulatory pathway for some genes. This mechanism is subject to various levels of regulation, including phosphorylation. To date only one kinase, SMG1, has been described to participate in NMD, by targeting the central NMD factor UPF1. Here, screening of a kinase inhibitor library revealed as putative NMD inhibitors several molecules targeting the protein kinase AKT1. We present evidence demonstrating that AKT1, a central player in the PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling pathway, plays an essential role in NMD, being recruited by the UPF3X protein to phosphorylate UPF1. As AKT1 is often overactivated in cancer cells and as this should result in increased NMD efficiency, the possibility that this increase might affect cancer processes and be targeted in cancer therapy is discussed.  相似文献   

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Background

Inhibition of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) in tumor cells can suppress tumor growth through expressing new antigens whose mRNAs otherwise are degraded by NMD. Thus NMD inhibition is a promising approach for developing cancer therapies. Apparently, the success of this approach relies on the basal NMD activity in cancer cells. If NMD is already strongly inhibited in tumors, the approach would not work. Therefore, it is crucial to assess NMD activity in cancers to forecast the efficacy of NMD-inhibition based therapy.

Methods

Here we develop three metrics using RNA-seq data to measure NMD activity, and apply them to a dataset consisting of 72 lung cancer (adenocarcinoma) patients.

Results

We show that these metrics have good correlations, and that the NMD activities in adenocarcinoma samples vary among patients: some cancerous samples show significantly stronger NMD activities than the normal tissues while some others show the opposite pattern. The variation of NMD activities among these samples may be partly explained by the varying expression of NMD effectors.

Conclusions

In sum, NMD activity varies among lung cancerous samples, which forecasts varying efficacies of NMD-inhibition based therapy. The developed metrics can be further used in other cancer types to assess NMD activity.
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A GFP-based reporter system to monitor nonsense-mediated mRNA decay   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Aberrant mRNAs whose open reading frame (ORF) is truncated by the presence of a premature translation-termination codon (PTC) are recognized and degraded in eukaryotic cells by a process called nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). Here, we report the development of a reporter system that allows monitoring of NMD in mammalian cells by measuring the fluorescence of green fluorescent protein (GFP). The NMD reporter gene consists of a T-cell receptor-β minigene construct, in which the GFP-ORF was inserted such that the stop codon of GFP is recognized as PTC. The reporter mRNA is therefore subjected to NMD, resulting in a low steady-state mRNA level, an accordingly low protein level and hence a very low green fluorescence in normal, NMD-competent cells that express this reporter gene. We show that the inactivation of NMD by RNAi-mediated knockdown of the essential NMD factor hUpf1 or hSmg6 increases the NMD reporter mRNA level, resulting in a proportional increase of the green fluorescence that can be detected by flow cytometry, spectrofluorometry and fluorescence microscopy. With these properties, our GFP-based NMD reporter system could be used for large-scale screenings to identify NMD-inhibiting drugs or NMD-deficient mutant cells.  相似文献   

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Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) generally eliminates messenger RNAs that prematurely terminate translation and occurs in all eukaryotes that have been studied, although with mechanistic variations. In mammals, NMD seems to be restricted to newly synthesized mRNA that is bound by the cap-binding heterodimer CBP80-CBP20 (CBP80/20) and typically has at least one exon junction complex (EJC) situated downstream of the nonsense codon and added post-splicing. However, mammalian NMD can also target spliced mRNA lacking an EJC downstream of the nonsense codon. Here we provide evidence that this additional pathway, known as failsafe NMD, likewise seems to be restricted to CBP80/20-bound mRNA and does not detectably target its subsequently remodeled product, eIF4E-bound mRNA. Our studies, including analyses of factor dependence, reveal important shared features of the two mammalian-cell NMD pathways as well as fundamental differences between NMD in mammals and Saccharomyces cerevisiae.  相似文献   

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In both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, nonsense mutations in a gene can enhance the decay rate or reduce the abundance of the mRNA transcribed from that gene, and we call this process nonsense-mediated mRNA decay. We have been investigating the cis-acting sequences involved in this decay pathway. Previous experiments have demonstrated that, in addition to a nonsense codon, specific sequences 3' of a nonsense mutation, which have been defined as downstream elements, are required for mRNA destabilization. The results presented here identify a sequence motif (TGYYGATGYYYYY, where Y stands for either T or C) that can predict regions in genes that, when positioned 3' of a nonsense codon, promote rapid decay of its mRNA. Sequences harboring two copies of the motif from five regions in the PGK1, ADE3, and HIS4 genes were able to function as downstream elements. In addition, four copies of this motif can function as an independent downstream element. The sequences flanking the motif played a more significant role in modulating its activity when fewer copies of the sequence motif were present. Our results indicate the sequences 5' of the motif can modulate its activity by maintaining a certain distance between the sequence motif and the termination codon. We also suggest that the sequences 3' of the motif modulate the activity of the downstream element by forming RNA secondary structures. Consistent with this view, a stem-loop structure positioned 3' of the sequence motif can enhance the activity of the downstream element. This sequence motif is one of the few elements that have been identified that can predict regions in genes that can be involved in mRNA turnover. The role of these sequences in mRNA decay is discussed.  相似文献   

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