학술논문

Maintenance and Regulation of mRNA Stability of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae OLE1 Gene Requires Multiple Elements within the Transcript That Act through Translation-independent Mechanisms.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Biological Chemistry. 11/14/2003, Vol. 278 Issue 46, p45269-45279. 11p. 9 Diagrams, 2 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*SACCHAROMYCES cerevisiae
*MESSENGER RNA
*UNSATURATED fatty acids
Language
ISSN
0021-9258
Abstract
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae OLE1 gene encodes a membrane-bound Δ-9 fatty acid desaturase, whose expression is regulated by unsaturated fatty acids through both transcriptional and mRNA stability controls. In fatty acid-free medium, the mRNA has a half-life of 10 ± 1.5 min (basal stability) that drops to 2 ± 1.5 min when cells are exposed to unsaturated fatty acids (regulated stability). A deletion analysis of elements within the transcript revealed that the sequences within the protein-coding region that encode transmembrane sequences and a part of the cytochrome b[sub 5] domain are essential for the basal stability of the transcript. Deletion of any of the three essential elements produced unstable transcripts and loss of regulated instability. By contrast, substitution of the 3'-untranslated region with that of the stable PGK1 gene did not affect the basal stability of the transcript and did not block regulated decay. Given that Ole1p is a membrane-bound protein whose activities are a major determinant of membrane fluidity, we asked whether membrane-associated translation of the protein was essential for basal and regulated stability. Insertion of stop codons within the transcript that blocked either translation of the entire protein or parts of the protein required for co-translation insertion of Ole1p had no effect. We conclude that the basal and regulated stability of the OLE1 transcript is resistant to the nonsense-mediated decay pathway and that the essential protein-encoding elements for basal stability act cooperatively as stabilizing sequences through RNA-protein interactions via a translation-independent mechanism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]