4.8 Article

SMG-6 mRNA cleavage stalls ribosomes near premature stop codons in vivo

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 50, Issue 15, Pages 8852-8866

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkac681

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Funding

  1. NIH Office of Research Infrastructure Programs [P40 OD010440]

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NMD is a mechanism that protects cells from the effects of truncated proteins, and previous studies have identified a novel NMD intermediate where ribosomes stall on cleaved stop codons. Our research shows that this intermediate is the result of mRNA cleavage by the endonuclease SMG-6.
Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) protects cells from the toxic and potentially dominant effects of truncated proteins. Targeting of mRNAs with early stop codons is mediated by the ribosome and spatiotemporally aligned with translation termination. Previously we identified a novel NMD intermediate: ribosomes stalled on cleaved stop codons, raising the possibility that NMD begins even prior to ribosome removal from the stop codon. Here we show that this intermediate is the result of mRNA cleavage by the endonuclease SMG-6. Our work supports a model in which ribosomes stall secondary to SMG-6 mRNA cleavage in Caenorhabditis elegans and humans, i.e. that the novel NMD intermediate occurs after a prior ribosome elicits NMD. Our genetic analysis of C. elegans' SMG-6 supports a central role for SMG-6 in metazoan NMD, and provides a context for evaluating its function in other metazoans.

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