Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts 01655-0122
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The poly(A) tail of an mRNA is believed to influence the initiation of translation, and the rate at which the poly(A) tail is removed is thought to determine how fast an mRNA is degraded. One key factor associated with this 3′-end structure is the poly(A)-binding protein (Pab1p) encoded by the
PAB1
gene in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
. In an effort to learn more about the functional role of this protein, we used a two-hybrid screen to determine the factor(s) with which it interacts. We identified five genes encoding factors that specifically interact with the carboxy terminus of Pab1p. Of a total of 44 specific clones identified,
PBP1
(for Pab1p-binding protein) was isolated 38 times. Of the putative interacting genes examined,
PBP1
promoted the highest level of resistance to 3-aminotriazole (>100 mM) in constructs in which
HIS3
was used as a reporter. We determined that a fraction of Pbp1p cosediments with polysomes in sucrose gradients and that its distribution is very similar to that of Pab1p. Disruption of
PBP1
showed that it is not essential for viability but can suppress the lethality associated with a
PAB1
deletion. The suppression of
pab1
Δ by
pbp1
Δ appears to be different from that mediated by other
pab1
suppressors, since disruption of
PBP1
does not alter translation rates, affect accumulation of ribosomal subunits, change mRNA poly(A) tail lengths, or result in a defect in mRNA decay. Rather, Pbp1p appears to function in the nucleus to promote proper polyadenylation. In the absence of Pbp1p, 3′ termini of pre-mRNAs are properly cleaved but lack full-length poly(A) tails. These effects suggest that Pbp1p may act to repress the ability of Pab1p to negatively regulate polyadenylation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
164 articles.
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