“…The nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) pathway is a cellular quality control mechanism that degrades aberrant mRNAs harboring premature termination codons (Losson & Lacroute, 1979;Gozalbo & Hohmann, 1990;Maquat, 1995;Caponigro & Parker, 1996;Jacobson & Peltz, 1996;Ruiz-Echevarria et al+, 1996;Weng et al+, 1997)+ This mRNA surveillance pathway functions in all eukaryotic systems examined and appears to have evolved to recognize premature termination events during the protein synthesis process (Pulak & Anderson, 1993;Weng et al+, 1996aWeng et al+, , 1996bWeng et al+, , 1998Czaplinski et al+, 1998Czaplinski et al+, , 1999+ Several genes required for NMD have been identified in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae+ Mutations in the UPF1, UPF2, UPF3, MOF2/SUI1, MOF5, MOF8, and HRPI genes were shown to selectively stabilize mRNAs containing early nonsense mutations without affecting the decay rates of most wild-type mRNAs (Leeds et al+, 1991(Leeds et al+, , 1992Cui et al+, 1995Cui et al+, , 1999He & Jacobson, 1995;Lee & Culbertson, 1995;Gonzalez et al+, 2000)+ Subsequently, Upf1p, Upf2p, and Upf3p were shown to form a complex (He & Jacobson, 1995;Weng et al+, 1996b;He et al+, 1997)+ In other studies using Caenorhabditis elegans, Smg genes were identified whose products were shown to be involved in NMD and a subset of those are homologous to the yeast UPF genes (Pulak & Anderson, 1993;Cali & Anderson, 1998)+…”