Abstract

There is increasing evidence that some mRNAs are localised in eukaryotic somatic cells, but it is unclear what proportion of mRNAs are localised and whether this sorting involves 3′-untranslated sequences. The presence of a localisation signal within the 3′-untranslated region of vimentin mRNA was investigated by studying mRNA distribution in fibroblasts transfected with β-globin and hybrid globin-vimentin gene constructs. In cells transfected with constructs containing either a fragment of the rabbit β-globin gene containing both coding sequences and 3′-untranslated region or the β-globin coding sequences alone in situ hybridisation showed that β-globin mRNA was distributed throughout the cytoplasm without any evident localisation. In contrast, in cells transfected with globin coding sequences linked to the vimentin 3′-untranslated region there was a strong perinuclear localisation of the hybrid mRNA. The results show that loss of its endogenous 3′-untranslated region does not affect distribution of β-globin mRNA whereas the vimentin 3′-untranslated region causes an altered localisation of β-globin mRNA. We conclude that the vimentin 3′-untranslated region contains a localisation signal which can direct reporter sequences to the perinuclear cytoplasm.

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