Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721,1 and
2. Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts 016552
Abstract
ABSTRACT
One of two general pathways of mRNA decay in the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
occurs by deadenylation followed by 3′-to-5′ degradation of the mRNA body. Previous results have shown that this degradation requires components of the exosome and the Ski2p, Ski3p, and Ski8p proteins, which were originally identified due to their superkiller phenotype. In this work, we demonstrate that deletion of the
SKI7
gene, which encodes a putative GTPase, also causes a defect in 3′-to-5′ degradation of mRNA. Deletion of
SKI7
, like deletion of
SKI2
,
SKI3
, or
SKI8
, does not affect various RNA-processing reactions of the exosome. In addition, we show that a mutation in the
SKI4
gene also causes a defect in 3′-to-5′ mRNA degradation. We show that the
SKI4
gene is identical to the
CSL4
gene, which encodes a core component of the exosome. Interestingly, the
ski4-1
allele contains a point mutation resulting in a mutation in the putative RNA binding domain of the Csl4p protein. This point mutation strongly affects mRNA degradation without affecting exosome function in rRNA or snRNA processing, 5′ externally transcribed spacer (ETS) degradation, or viability. In contrast, the
csl4-1
allele of the same gene affects rRNA processing but not 3′-to-5′ mRNA degradation. We identify
csl4-1
as resulting from a partial-loss-of-function mutation in the promoter of the
CSL4
gene. These data indicate that the distinct functions of the exosome can be separated genetically and suggest that the RNA binding domain of Csl4p may have a specific function in mRNA degradation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
159 articles.
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