Abstract

In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the mRNA export receptor Mex67 is recruited to mature nuclear transcripts to mediate mRNA export through the nuclear pore complex (NPC) to the cytoplasm. Mex67 binds transcripts through adaptor proteins such as the poly(A) binding protein Nab2. When a transcript reaches the cytoplasmic face of the NPC, the DEAD-box protein Dbp5 acts to induce a local structural change to release Nab2 and Mex67 in an essential process termed mRNP remodeling. It is unknown how certain proteins (Nab2, Mex67) are released during Dbp5-mediated mRNP remodeling, whereas others remain associated. Here, we demonstrate that Dbp5 associates in close proximity with Mex67 and Nab2 in a cellular complex. Further, fusion of Dbp5 to Nup159 anchors Dbp5 at the cytoplasmic face of the NPC and is sufficient for cell viability. Thus, we speculate that the essential role of Dbp5 in remodeling exporting mRNPs requires its localization to the NPC and is separable from other subcellular functions of Dbp5. This work supports a model where the diverse nuclear, cytoplasmic and NPC functions of Dbp5 in the mRNA lifecycle are not interdependent and that Dbp5 is locally recruited through complex protein-protein interactions to select regions of transcripts for specific removal of transport proteins at the NPC.

Highlights

  • The nuclear envelope (NE) barrier of a eukaryotic cell separates the two major phases of messenger (m)RNA biogenesis and translation in the gene expression pathway, ensuring that only properly processed messages reach the cytoplasm for translation

  • The most well understood of these functions is during mRNA export, where Dbp5 releases the transport proteins that mediate export through the nuclear pore complex (NPC)

  • Several other general mRNA binding proteins are loaded onto mRNA in the nucleus but are not removed during Dbp5-mediated mRNA-protein particle (mRNP) remodeling at the NPC

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Summary

Introduction

The nuclear envelope (NE) barrier of a eukaryotic cell separates the two major phases of messenger (m)RNA biogenesis and translation in the gene expression pathway, ensuring that only properly processed messages reach the cytoplasm for translation. Dbp localization is enriched at the cytoplasmic face of the NPC through interaction with the amino (N)-terminal beta propeller of Nup159 [12,13,14], providing directionality to mRNA export and enabling recycling of the Mex67-Mtr receptor for additional export rounds. It is unknown how Mex67-Mtr is targeted for release by Dbp while some other mRNP components remain associated for function in the cytoplasm

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