4.4 Article

Comparison of EJC-enhanced and EJC-independent NMD in human cells reveals two partially redundant degradation pathways

Journal

RNA
Volume 19, Issue 10, Pages 1432-1448

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1261/rna.038893.113

Keywords

post-transcriptional gene regulation; mRNA turnover; mRNA surveillance; nonsense-mediated mRNA decay; exon-junction complex; endo- and exonucleolytic mRNA degradation; UPF1; UPF2; UPF3b; SMG1; SMG5; SMG6; SMG7

Funding

  1. European Research Council [StG 207419]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [31003A-127614, 31003A-143717]
  3. canton of Bern
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [31003A_143717, 31003A_127614] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a eukaryotic post-transcriptional gene regulation mechanism that eliminates mRNAs with the termination codon (TC) located in an unfavorable environment for efficient translation termination. The best-studied NMD-targeted mRNAs contain premature termination codons (PTCs); however, NMD regulates even many physiological mRNAs. An exon-junction complex (EJC) located downstream from a TC acts as an NMD-enhancing signal, but is not generally required for NMD. Here, we compared these EJC-enhanced and EJC-independent modes of NMD with regard to their requirement for seven known NMD factors in human cells using two well-characterized NMD reporter genes (immunoglobulin mu and beta-Globin) with or without an intron downstream from the PTC. We show that both NMD modes depend on UPF1 and SMG1, but detected transcript-specific differences with respect to the requirement for UPF2 and UPF3b, consistent with previously reported UPF2- and UPF3-independent branches of NMD. In addition and contrary to expectation, a higher sensitivity of EJC-independent NMD to reduced UPF2 and UPF3b concentrations was observed. Our data further revealed a redundancy of the endo- and exonucleolytic mRNA degradation pathways in both modes of NMD. Moreover, the relative contributions of both decay pathways differed between the reporters, with PTC-containing immunoglobulin mu transcripts being preferentially subjected to SMG6-mediated endonucleolytic cleavage, whereas beta-Globin transcripts were predominantly degraded by the SMG5/SMG7-dependent pathway. Overall, the surprising heterogeneity observed with only two NMD reporter pairs suggests the existence of several mechanistically distinct branches of NMD in human cells.

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