The canonical UPF1-dependent nonsense-mediated mRNA decay is inhibited in transcripts carrying a short open reading frame independent of sequence context

Ana Luísa Silva(National Institute of Health Dr. Ricardo Jorge), Francisco J.C. Pereira(National Institute of Health Dr. Ricardo Jorge), Ana Morgado(National Institute of Health Dr. Ricardo Jorge), Jian Kong(University of Pennsylvania), Rute Martins(National Institute of Health Dr. Ricardo Jorge), Paula Faustino(National Institute of Health Dr. Ricardo Jorge), Stephen A. Liebhaber(University of Pennsylvania), Luı́sa Romão(National Institute of Health Dr. Ricardo Jorge)
RNA
October 31, 2006
Cited by 47Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a surveillance mechanism that degrades mRNAs carrying premature translation termination codons. Generally, NMD is elicited if translation terminates >50-54 nucleotides (nt) upstream of an exon-exon junction. We have previously reported that human beta-globin mRNAs carrying 5'-proximal nonsense mutations (e.g., beta15) accumulate to normal levels, suggesting an exception to the "50-54-nt boundary rule." In the present report, we demonstrate that the strength of the UPF1-dependent NMD of mutant beta-globin mRNAs is specifically determined by the proximity of the nonsense codon to the initiation AUG. This conclusion is supported by a parallel effect of the short ORF size on NMD of nonsense-containing alpha-globin mRNAs. To determine whether the short-ORF effect on NMD response is conserved in heterologous transcripts, we assessed its effects on a set of beta-globin/triosephosphate isomerase (TPI) hybrid mRNAs and on the TPI mRNA. Our data support the conclusion that nonsense mutations resulting in a short ORF are able to circumvent the full activity of the canonical UPF1-dependent NMD pathway.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis