Abstract

In human cells, a critical pathway in gene regulation subjects mRNAs with AU-rich elements (AREs) to rapid decay by a poorly understood process. AREs have been shown to directly activate deadenylation, decapping, or 3′-to-5′ exonucleolytic decay. We demonstrate that enzymes involved in all three of these mRNA decay processes, as well as 5′-to-3′ exonucleolytic decay, associate with the protein tristetraprolin (TTP) and its homolog BRF-1, which bind AREs and activate mRNA decay. TTP and BRF-1 each contain two activation domains that can activate mRNA decay after fusion to a heterologous RNA-binding protein, and inhibit ARE-mediated mRNA decay when overexpressed. Both activation domains employ trans -acting factors to trigger mRNA decay, and the N-terminal activation domain functions as a binding platform for mRNA decay enzymes. Our data suggest that the TTP protein family functions as a molecular link between ARE-containing mRNAs and the mRNA decay machinery by recruitment of mRNA decay enzymes, and help explain how deadenylation, decapping, and exonucleolytic decay can all be independently activated on ARE-containing mRNAs. This describes a potentially regulated step in activation of mRNA decay.

Keywords

Nonsense-mediated decayMessenger RNABiologyP-bodiesCell biologyTristetraprolinRNA-binding proteinTranslation (biology)Molecular biologyRNABiochemistryGene

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2005
Type
article
Volume
19
Issue
3
Pages
351-361
Citations
472
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

472
OpenAlex

Cite This

Jens Lykke‐Andersen, Eileen Wagner (2005). Recruitment and activation of mRNA decay enzymes by two ARE-mediated decay activation domains in the proteins TTP and BRF-1. Genes & Development , 19 (3) , 351-361. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.1282305

Identifiers

DOI
10.1101/gad.1282305