Abstract

Many long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are unstable and rapidly degraded in the nucleus by the nuclear exosome. An exosome adaptor complex called NEXT (nuclear exosome targeting) functions to facilitate turnover of some of these lncRNAs. Here we show that knockdown of one NEXT subunit, Mtr4, but neither of the other two subunits, resulted in accumulation of two types of lncRNAs: prematurely terminated RNAs (ptRNAs) and upstream antisense RNAs (uaRNAs). This suggested a NEXT-independent Mtr4 function, and, consistent with this, we isolated a distinct complex containing Mtr4 and the zinc finger protein ZFC3H1. Strikingly, knockdown of either protein not only increased pt/uaRNA levels but also led to their accumulation in the cytoplasm. Furthermore, all pt/uaRNAs examined associated with active ribosomes, but, paradoxically, this correlated with a global reduction in heavy polysomes and overall repression of translation. Our findings highlight a critical role for Mtr4/ZFC3H1 in nuclear surveillance of naturally unstable lncRNAs to prevent their accumulation, transport to the cytoplasm, and resultant disruption of protein synthesis.

Keywords

BiologyBiological sciencesLibrary scienceRna processingBasic researchComputational biologyGeneticsRNAGeneComputer science

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2017
Type
article
Volume
31
Issue
12
Pages
1257-1271
Citations
139
Access
Closed

External Links

Citation Metrics

139
OpenAlex

Cite This

Koichi Ogami, P. Richard, Yaqiong Chen et al. (2017). An Mtr4/ZFC3H1 complex facilitates turnover of unstable nuclear RNAs to prevent their cytoplasmic transport and global translational repression. Genes & Development , 31 (12) , 1257-1271. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.302604.117

Identifiers

DOI
10.1101/gad.302604.117