Splice-Site Mutations Cause Rrp6-Mediated Nuclear Retention of the Unspliced RNAs and Transcriptional Down-Regulation of the Splicing-Defective Genes
نویسندگان
چکیده
BACKGROUND Eukaryotic cells have developed surveillance mechanisms to prevent the expression of aberrant transcripts. An early surveillance checkpoint acts at the transcription site and prevents the release of mRNAs that carry processing defects. The exosome subunit Rrp6 is required for this checkpoint in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, but it is not known whether Rrp6 also plays a role in mRNA surveillance in higher eukaryotes. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS We have developed an in vivo system to study nuclear mRNA surveillance in Drosophila melanogaster. We have produced S2 cells that express a human beta-globin gene with mutated splice sites in intron 2 (mut beta-globin). The transcripts encoded by the mut beta-globin gene are normally spliced at intron 1 but retain intron 2. The levels of the mut beta-globin transcripts are much lower than those of wild type (wt) ss-globin mRNAs transcribed from the same promoter. We have compared the expression of the mut and wt beta-globin genes to investigate the mechanisms that down-regulate the production of defective mRNAs. Both wt and mut beta-globin transcripts are processed at the 3', but the mut beta-globin transcripts are less efficiently cleaved than the wt transcripts. Moreover, the mut beta-globin transcripts are less efficiently released from the transcription site, as shown by FISH, and this defect is restored by depletion of Rrp6 by RNAi. Furthermore, transcription of the mut beta-globin gene is significantly impaired as revealed by ChIP experiments that measure the association of the RNA polymerase II with the transcribed genes. We have also shown that the mut beta-globin gene shows reduced levels of H3K4me3. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE Our results show that there are at least two surveillance responses that operate cotranscriptionally in insect cells and probably in all metazoans. One response requires Rrp6 and results in the inefficient release of defective mRNAs from the transcription site. The other response acts at the transcription level and reduces the synthesis of the defective transcripts through a mechanism that involves histone modifications.
منابع مشابه
Nuclear Retention of Unspliced mRNAs in Yeast Is Mediated by Perinuclear Mlp1
The molecular mechanism underlying the retention of intron-containing mRNAs in the nucleus is not understood. Here, we show that retention of intron-containing mRNAs in yeast is mediated by perinuclearly located Mlp1. Deletion of MLP1 impairs retention while having no effect on mRNA splicing. The Mlp1-dependent leakage of intron-containing RNAs is increased in presence of ts-prp18 delta, a spli...
متن کاملAn Rrp6-like protein positively regulates noncoding RNA levels and DNA methylation in Arabidopsis.
Rrp6-mediated nuclear RNA surveillance tunes eukaryotic transcriptomes through noncoding RNA degradation and mRNA quality control, including exosomal RNA decay and transcript retention triggered by defective RNA processing. It is unclear whether Rrp6 can positively regulate noncoding RNAs and whether RNA retention occurs in normal cells. Here we report that AtRRP6L1, an Arabidopsis Rrp6-like pr...
متن کاملTranscription-coupled RNA surveillance in human genetic diseases caused by splice site mutations.
Current estimates indicate that approximately one-third of all disease-causing mutations are expected to disrupt splicing. Abnormal splicing often leads to disruption of the reading frame with introduction of a premature termination codon (PTC) that targets the mRNA for degradation in the cytoplasm by nonsense mediated decay (NMD). In addition to NMD there are RNA surveillance mechanisms that a...
متن کاملLocalization of HIV-1 RNA in mammalian nuclei
The Rev protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) facilitates the nuclear export of unspliced and partially spliced viral RNAs. In the absence of Rev, these intron-containing HIV-1 RNAs are retained in the nucleus. The basis for nuclear retention is unclear and is an important aspect of Rev regulation. Here we use in situ hybridization and digital imaging microscopy to examine the ...
متن کاملThe sequence and context of the 5' splice site govern the nuclear stability of polyoma virus late RNAs.
We have examined the influence of splicing signals on the stability of polyoma virus late RNAs in the nucleus. Late primary transcripts contain a single 5' splice site and three alternative 3' splice sites. In earlier work we showed that the presence of introns was not required for late RNA accumulation, however, the 5' splice site was essential, as removal of only the 5' splice site was suffic...
متن کامل