1. Academic Validation
  2. Communication of the position of exon-exon junctions to the mRNA surveillance machinery by the protein RNPS1

Communication of the position of exon-exon junctions to the mRNA surveillance machinery by the protein RNPS1

  • Science. 2001 Sep 7;293(5536):1836-9. doi: 10.1126/science.1062786.
J Lykke-Andersen 1 M D Shu J A Steitz
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Molecular Biochemistry and Biophysics, Yale University School of Medicine, 295 Congress Avenue, New Haven, CT 06536, USA.
Abstract

In mammalian cells, splice junctions play a dual role in mRNA quality control: They mediate selective nuclear export of mature mRNA and they serve as a mark for mRNA surveillance, which subjects aberrant mRNAs with premature termination codons to nonsense-mediated decay (NMD). Here, we demonstrate that the protein RNPS1, a component of the postsplicing complex that is deposited 5' to exon-exon junctions, interacts with the evolutionarily conserved human Upf complex, a central component of NMD. Significantly, RNPS1 triggers NMD when tethered to the 3' untranslated region of beta-globin mRNA, demonstrating its role as a subunit of the postsplicing complex directly involved in mRNA surveillance.

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