[PDF][PDF] Y14 and hUpf3b form an NMD-activating complex

NH Gehring, G Neu-Yilik, T Schell, MW Hentze… - Molecular cell, 2003 - cell.com
NH Gehring, G Neu-Yilik, T Schell, MW Hentze, AE Kulozik
Molecular cell, 2003cell.com
Messenger RNAs with premature translation termination codons (PTCs) are degraded by
nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). In mammals, PTCs are discriminated from
physiological stop codons by a process thought to involve the splicing-dependent deposition
of an exon junction complex (EJC), EJC-mediated recruitment of Upf3, and Upf2 binding to
the N terminus of Upf3. Here, we identify a conserved domain of hUpf3b that mediates an
interaction with the EJC protein Y14. Tethered function analysis shows that the Y14/hUpf3b …
Abstract
Messenger RNAs with premature translation termination codons (PTCs) are degraded by nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). In mammals, PTCs are discriminated from physiological stop codons by a process thought to involve the splicing-dependent deposition of an exon junction complex (EJC), EJC-mediated recruitment of Upf3, and Upf2 binding to the N terminus of Upf3. Here, we identify a conserved domain of hUpf3b that mediates an interaction with the EJC protein Y14. Tethered function analysis shows that the Y14/hUpf3b interaction is essential for NMD, while surprisingly the interaction between hUpf3b and hUpf2 is not. Nonetheless, hUpf2 is necessary for NMD mediated by tethered Y14. RNAi-induced knockdown and Y14 repletion of siRNA-treated cells implicates Y14 in the degradation of β-globin NS39 mRNA and demonstrates that Y14 is required for NMD induced by tethered hUpf3b. These results uncover a direct role of Y14 in NMD and suggest an unexpected hierarchy in the assembly of NMD complexes.
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