Upf1 phosphorylation triggers translational repression during nonsense-mediated mRNA decay

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In mammalian cells, nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) generally requires that translation terminates sufficiently upstream of a post-splicing exon junction complex (EJC) during a pioneer round of translation. The subsequent binding of Upf1 to the EJC triggers Upf1 phosphorylation. We provide evidence that phospho-Upf1 functions after nonsense codon recognition during steps that involve the translation initiation factor eIF3 and mRNA decay factors. Phospho-Upf1 interacts directly with eIF3 and inhibits the eIF3-dependent conversion of 40S/Met-tRNAi(Met)/mRNA to translationally competent 80S/Met-tRNAi(Met)/mRNA initiation complexes to repress continued translation initiation. Consistent with phospho-Upf1 impairing eIF3 function, NMD fails to detectably target nonsense-containing transcripts that initiate translation independently of eIF3 from the CrPV IRES. There is growing evidence that translational repression is a key transition that precedes mRNA delivery to the degradation machinery. Our results uncover a critical step during NMD that converts a pioneer translation initiation complex to a translationally compromised mRNP.
Publisher
CELL PRESS
Issue Date
2008-04
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

CELL, v.133, no.2, pp.314 - 327

ISSN
0092-8674
DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2008.02.030
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/297750
Appears in Collection
BS-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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