mRNA decay rates often increase when translation is terminated prematurely due to a frameshift or nonsense mutation. We have identified a yeast gene, UPF1, that codes for a trans-acting factor whose function is necessary for enhanced turnover of mRNAs containing a premature stop codon. In the absence of UPF1 function, frameshift or nonsense mutations in the HIS4 or LEU2 genes that normally cause rapid mRNA decay fail to have this effect. Instead, the mRNAs decay at rates similar to the corresponding wild-type mRNAs. The stabilization of frameshift or nonsense mRNAs observed in upfl-strains does not appear to result from enhanced readthrough of the termination signal. Loss of UPF1 function has no effect on the accumulation or stability of HIS4 + or LEU2 + mRNA, suggesting that the UPF1 product functions only in response to a premature termination signal. When we examined the accumulation and stability of other wild-type mRNAs in the presence or absence of UPF1, including MAT~I, STE3, ACT1, PGK1, PAB1, and URA3 mRNAs, only the URA3 transcript was affected. On the basis of these and other results, the UPF1 product appears to participate in a previously uncharacterized pathway leading to the degradation of a limited class of yeast transcripts. Nonsense mutations that generate a premature translational termination signal often reduce the steady-state accumulation of the corresponding mRNA (Brown 1989;Peltz et al. 1990). In a study of the yeast URA3 gene, it was shown that the extent of reduced mRNA accumulation depends on the position of the nonsense mutation (Losson and Lacroute 1979). Mutations near the 5' end of the transcript were shown to have a greater destabilizing effect than mutations near the 3' end. Furthermore, introduction of an amber tRNA suppressor restabilized ura3 nonsense mRNA, indicating that the turnover rate is determined in part by the relative efficiencies of termination versus readthrough of the stop codon. These studies suggested that the turnover rate of nonsense mRNA is probably related to some aspect of its translation rather than to a potential change in mRNA structure that might result from the presence of a nonsense mutation.Similar studies in higher eukaryotes have proven more difficult to interpret. In some cases, the introduction of a premature stop codon into a gene has been linked to 3Corresponding author. increased cytoplasmic turnover (Maquat et al. 1981;Barker and Beemon 1991). However, other studies suggest that nonsense mutations may cause changes in nuclear processing and/or transport, and these changes, rather than cytoplasmic mRNA degradation, may be primarily responsible for decreased steady-state mRNA levels (Humphries et al. 1984;Takeshita et al. 1984;Urlaub et al. 1989;Cheng et al. 1990).Here, we report the characterization of mutations in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae that specifically stabilize mRNAs containing a premature translational termination signal. The mutations arose in a strain containing his4-38, a + 1 frameshift mutation near the 5' end of the HIS4 tr...
We showed previously that the increased rate of mRNA turnover associated with premature translational termination in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae requires a functional UPF1 gene product. In this study, we show that the UPFI gene codes for a 109-kDa primary translation product whose function is not essential for growth. The protein contains a potential zinc-dependent nucleic acid-binding domain and a nucleoside triphosphate-binding domain. A 300-amino-acid segment of the UPF1 protein is 36% identical to a segment of the yeast SEN1 protein, which is required for endonucleolytic processing of intron-containing pre-tRNAs. The same region is 32% identical to a segment of Mov-10, a mouse protein of unknown function. Dominant-negative upfl mutations were isolated following in vitro mutagenesis of a plasmid containing the UPF1 gene. They mapped exclusively at conserved positions within the sequence element common to all three proteins, whereas the recessive upfl-2 mutation maps outside this region. The clustering of dominant-negative mutations suggests the presence of a functional domain in UPF1 that may be shared by all three proteins. We also identified upf mutations in three other genes designated UPF2, UPF3, and UPF4. When alleles of each gene were screened for effects on mRNA accumulation, we found that the recessive mutation upJ3-1 causes increased accumulation of mRNA containing a premature stop codon. When mRNA half-lives were measured, we found that excess mRNA accumulation was due to mRNA stabilization. On the basis of these results, we suggest that the products of at least two genes, UPF1 and UPF3, are responsible for the accelerated rate of mRNA decay associated with premature translational termination.In a wide variety of organisms, mRNAs transcribed from genes containing nonsense or frameshift mutations accumulate to a much lesser extent than do the corresponding wild-type mRNAs. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the introduction of a premature stop codon into a transcript causes a reduction in mRNA half-life that leads to a decrease in steady-state mRNA accumulation (29,34,48). The introduction of an efficient tRNA nonsense suppressor, which promotes read-through and restores translation of the mRNA, prevents the decline in stability and accumulation caused by premature translational termination (34). These results suggest the existence of a mechanism that serves to adjust the intrinsic rate of mRNA decay according to the ability of the mRNA to be translated. The underlying molecular basis for such a mechanism has not yet been established.To further study how mRNA turnover is related to premature translational termination, we took advantage of a selection scheme capable of yielding mutations that uncouple the two processes. The mutations were obtained in a strain containing his4-38, a + 1 frameshift near the 5' end of the HIS4 transcript that causes translational termination at an adjacent downstream stop codon (7, 13). The his4-38 mutation results in a four-to fivefold decrease in mRNA stability (29)...
The half-life of c-myc mRNA is regulated when cells change their growth rates or differentiate. Two regions within c-myc mRNA determine its short half-life. One is in the 3′-untranslated region, the other is in the coding region. A cytoplasmic protein, the coding region determinant-binding protein (CRD-BP), binds in vitro to the c-myc coding region instability determinant. We have proposed that the CRD-BP, when bound to the mRNA, shields the mRNA from endonucleolytic attack and thereby prolongs the mRNA half-life. Here we report the cloning and further characterization of the mouse CRD-BP, a 577 amino acid protein containing four hnRNP K-homology domains, two RNP domains, an RGG RNA-binding domain and nuclear import and export signals. The CRD-BP is closely related to the chicken β-actin zipcode-binding protein and is similar to three other proteins, one of which is overexpressed in some human cancers. Recombinant mouse CRD-BP binds specifically to c-myc CRD RNA in vitro and reacts with antibody against human CRD-BP. Most of the CRD-BP in the cell is cytoplasmic and co-sediments with ribosomal subunits.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae the UPF1 protein is required for nonsense-mediated mRNA decay, the accelerated turnover of mRNAs containing a nonsense mutation. Several lines of evidence suggest that translation plays an important role in the mechanism of nonsense mRNA decay, including a previous report that nonsense mRNAs assemble in polyribosomes. In this study we show that UPF1 and ribosomal protein L1 co-localize in the cytoplasm and that UPF1 co-sediments with polyribosomes. To detect UPF1, three copies of the influenza hemagglutinin epitope were placed at the C-terminus. The tagged protein, UPF1-3EP, retains 86% (+/- 5%) of function. Using immunological detection, we found that UPF1-3EP is primarily cytoplasmic and was not detected either in the nucleus or in the mitochondrion. UPF1-3EP and L1 co-distributed with polyribosomes fractionated in a 7-47% sucrose gradient. The sucrose sedimentation profiles for UPF1-3EP and L1 exhibited similar changes using three different sets of conditions that altered the polyribosome profile. When polyribosomes were disaggregated, UPF1-3EP and L1 accumulated in fractions coincident with 80S ribosomal particles. These results suggest that UPF1-3EP associates with polyribosomes. L3 and S3 mRNAs, which code for ribosomal proteins of the 60S and 40S ribosomal subunits, respectively, were on average about 100-fold more abundant than UPF1 mRNA. Assuming that translation rates for L3, S3, and UPF1 mRNA are similar, this result suggests that there are far fewer UPF1 molecules than ribosomes per cell. Constraints imposed by the low UPF1 abundance on the functional relationships between UPF1, polyribosomes, and nonsense mRNA turnover are discussed.
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