| Literature DB >> 24452287 |
Alexandra Hackmann1, Haijia Wu1, Ulla-Maria Schneider1, Katja Meyer2, Klaus Jung3, Heike Krebber1.
Abstract
Eukaryotic cells have to prevent the export of unspliced pre-mRNAs until intron removal is completed to avoid the expression of aberrant and potentially harmful proteins. Only mature mRNAs associate with the export receptor Mex67/TAP and enter the cytoplasm. Here we show that the two shuttling serine/arginine (SR)-proteins Gbp2 and Hrb1 are key surveillance factors for the selective export of spliced mRNAs in yeast. Their absence leads to the significant leakage of unspliced pre-mRNAs into the cytoplasm. They bind to pre-mRNAs and the spliceosome during splicing, where they are necessary for the surveillance of splicing and the stable binding of the TRAMP complex to spliceosome-bound transcripts. Faulty transcripts are marked for their degradation at the nuclear exosome. On correct mRNAs the SR proteins recruit Mex67 upon completion of splicing to allow a quality controlled nuclear export. Altogether, these data identify a role for shuttling SR proteins in mRNA surveillance and nuclear mRNA quality control.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24452287 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms4123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919