4.8 Article

Mutational analysis of a Dcp2-binding element reveals general enhancement of decapping by 5′-end stem-loop structures

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 37, Issue 7, Pages 2227-2237

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkp087

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [NSF DGE 0333196]
  2. NIH [GM57286, GM67005]

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mRNA decapping is a critical step in the control of mRNA stability and gene expression and is carried out by the Dcp2 protein. Dcp2 is an RNA-binding protein that must bind the RNA in order to recognize the cap for hydrolysis. We previously demonstrated that a 60 nucleotide (nt) element at the 5 end of the mRNA encoding Rrp41 is preferentially bound and decapped by Dcp2. Here, we demonstrate that enhanced decapping of this element is dependent on the structural integrity of its first 33 nt and not its primary sequence. The structure consists of a stem-loop positioned 10 nt from the 5 end of the mRNA. The generality of a stem-loop structure in enhanced Dcp2-mediated decapping was underscored by the identification of additional potential Dcp2 substrate mRNAs by a global analysis of human mRNAs containing a similar predicted stem-loop structure at their respective 5 end. These studies suggest a general role for 5 stem-loops in enhancing decapping activity and the utilization of this structure as a predictive tool for Dcp2 target substrates. These studies also demonstrate that Dcp2 alone in the absence of additional proteins can preferentially associate with and modulate mRNA decapping.

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