4.4 Article

Ribosome-bound Upf1 forms distinct 80S complexes and conducts mRNA surveillance

Journal

RNA
Volume 28, Issue 12, Pages 1621-1642

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1261/rna.079416.122

Keywords

selective ribosome profiling; Upf proteins; NMD substrates

Funding

  1. U.S. National Institutes of Health [1R35GM122468]
  2. UMass Chan Medical School Molecular Biology Core Labs [RRID: SCR_018263]

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This study reveals that Upf1, Upf2, and Upf3 are essential regulators of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). They exert their NMD functions while bound to elongating ribosomes. The findings also shed light on the timing and specificity of Upf1 association with translating ribosomes, as well as its impact on translation termination and ribosome release.
Upf1, Upf2, and Upf3, the central regulators of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD), appear to exercise their NMD functions while bound to elongating ribosomes, and evidence for this conclusion is particularly compelling for Upf1. Hence, we used selective profiling of yeast Upf1:ribosome association to define that step in greater detail, understand whether the nature of the mRNA being translated influences Upf1:80S interaction, and elucidate the functions of ribosome-associated Upf1. Our approach has allowed us to clarify the timing and specificity of Upf1 association with translating ribosomes, obtain evidence for a Upf1 mRNA surveillance function that precedes the activation of NMD, identify a unique ribosome state that generates 37-43 nt ribosome footprints whose accumulation is dependent on Upf1's ATPase activity, and demonstrate that a mutated form of Upf1 can interfere with normal translation termination and ribosome release. In addition, our results strongly support the existence of at least two distinct functional Upf1 complexes in the NMD pathway.

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