Publication

Aberrant termination triggers nonsense-mediated mRNA decay

Amrani, Nadia
Dong, Shuyun
He, Feng
Ganesan, Robin
Ghosh, Shubhendu
Kervestin, Stephanie
Li, Chunfang
Mangus, David A.
Spatrick, Phyllis
Jacobson, Allan
Embargo Expiration Date
Abstract

NMD (nonsense-mediated mRNA decay) is a cellular quality-control mechanism in which an otherwise stable mRNA is destabilized by the presence of a premature termination codon. We have defined the set of endogenous NMD substrates, demonstrated that they are available for NMD at every round of translation, and showed that premature termination and normal termination are not equivalent biochemical events. Premature termination is aberrant, and its NMD-stimulating defects can be reversed by the presence of tethered poly(A)-binding protein (Pab1p) or tethered eRF3 (eukaryotic release factor 3) (Sup35p). Thus NMD appears to be triggered by a ribosome's failure to terminate adjacent to a properly configured 3'-UTR (untranslated region), an event that may promote binding of the UPF/NMD factors to stimulate mRNA decapping.

Source

Biochem Soc Trans. 2006 Feb;34(Pt 1):39-42. Link to article on publisher's site

Year of Medical School at Time of Visit
Sponsors
Dates of Travel
DOI
10.1042/BST20060039
PubMed ID
16246174
Other Identifiers
Notes
Funding and Acknowledgements
Corresponding Author
Related Resources
Related Resources
Repository Citation
Rights
Distribution License