Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Inter-kingdom conservation of mechanism of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay

2008; Springer Nature; Volume: 27; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/emboj.2008.88

ISSN

1460-2075

Autores

Zoltán Kerényi, Zsuzsanna Mérai, László Hiripi, Anna Hangyáné Benkovics, Péter Gyula, Christophe Lacomme, Endre Barta, Ferenc Nagy, Dániel Silhavy,

Tópico(s)

Viral Infections and Immunology Research

Resumo

Article1 May 2008free access Inter-kingdom conservation of mechanism of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay Zoltán Kerényi Zoltán Kerényi Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Zsuzsanna Mérai Zsuzsanna Mérai Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author László Hiripi László Hiripi Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Anna Benkovics Anna Benkovics Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Péter Gyula Péter Gyula Institute of Plant Biology, Biological Research Centre of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Szeged, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Christophe Lacomme Christophe Lacomme SCRI, Invergowrie, Dundee, UK Institute of Molecular Plant Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK Search for more papers by this author Endre Barta Endre Barta Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Ferenc Nagy Ferenc Nagy Institute of Plant Biology, Biological Research Centre of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Szeged, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Dániel Silhavy Corresponding Author Dániel Silhavy Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Zoltán Kerényi Zoltán Kerényi Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Zsuzsanna Mérai Zsuzsanna Mérai Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author László Hiripi László Hiripi Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Anna Benkovics Anna Benkovics Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Péter Gyula Péter Gyula Institute of Plant Biology, Biological Research Centre of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Szeged, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Christophe Lacomme Christophe Lacomme SCRI, Invergowrie, Dundee, UK Institute of Molecular Plant Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK Search for more papers by this author Endre Barta Endre Barta Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Ferenc Nagy Ferenc Nagy Institute of Plant Biology, Biological Research Centre of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Szeged, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Dániel Silhavy Corresponding Author Dániel Silhavy Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary Search for more papers by this author Author Information Zoltán Kerényi1,‡, Zsuzsanna Mérai1,‡, László Hiripi1, Anna Benkovics1, Péter Gyula2, Christophe Lacomme3,4, Endre Barta1, Ferenc Nagy2 and Dániel Silhavy 1 1Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Gödöllő, Hungary 2Institute of Plant Biology, Biological Research Centre of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Szeged, Hungary 3SCRI, Invergowrie, Dundee, UK 4Institute of Molecular Plant Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK ‡These authors contributed equally to this work *Corresponding author. RNA biology, Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Szent-Györgyi Albert 4, Gödöllő 2100, Hungary. Tel.: +36 28 526 194; Fax: +36 28 526 145; E-mail: [email protected] The EMBO Journal (2008)27:1585-1595https://doi.org/10.1038/emboj.2008.88 PDFDownload PDF of article text and main figures. ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyWechatReddit Figures & Info Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a quality control system that degrades mRNAs containing premature termination codons. Although NMD is well characterized in yeast and mammals, plant NMD is poorly understood. We have undertaken the functional dissection of NMD pathways in plants. Using an approach that allows rapid identification of plant NMD trans factors, we demonstrated that two plant NMD pathways coexist, one eliminates mRNAs with long 3′UTRs, whereas a distinct pathway degrades mRNAs harbouring 3′UTR-located introns. We showed that UPF1, UPF2 and SMG-7 are involved in both plant NMD pathways, whereas Mago and Y14 are required only for intron-based NMD. The molecular mechanism of long 3′UTR-based plant NMD resembled yeast NMD, whereas the intron-based NMD was similar to mammalian NMD, suggesting that both pathways are evolutionarily conserved. Interestingly, the SMG-7 NMD component is targeted by NMD, suggesting that plant NMD is autoregulated. We propose that a complex, autoregulated NMD mechanism operated in stem eukaryotes, and that despite aspect of the mechanism being simplified in different lineages, feedback regulation was retained in all kingdoms. Introduction Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a eukaryotic quality control system that degrades mRNAs containing premature termination codons (PTC), thereby preventing the accumulation of potentially harmful truncated proteins. NMD also regulates the expression of many wild-type genes (Rehwinkel et al, 2006). NMD discriminates between PTC and authentic stop codons during translation. A stop codon is identified as a PTC if NMD cis elements are present downstream. This triggers the formation of a functional NMD complex on these mRNAs, which in turn target these transcripts for rapid degradation. In yeast and invertebrates, unusually long 3′UTRs can act as NMD cis elements (Gatfield et al, 2003; Amrani et al, 2004; Longman et al, 2007), whereas in mammals, 3′UTR-located introns are the predominant NMD cis elements (Nagy and Maquat, 1998). UPF1, UPF2 and UPF3 are the core components of the functional NMD complex in yeast as well as animals. However, additional factors including SMG-1, SMG-5, SMG-6 and SMG-7 are also required for NMD in animals. Moreover, in mammals (but not invertebrates), specific components of the exon junction complex (EJC) also have a role in NMD. Two non-mutually exclusive NMD models are suggested. The faux UTR model proposes that the NMD complex is formed and the mRNA is quickly degraded if translation termination is aberrant. It suggests that translation termination of PTC-containing mRNAs is aberrant because their 3′UTR factors, which are required for efficient termination, are not properly positioned. Poly(A) binding protein (PABP) might be the most relevant 3′UTR factor, as its interaction with the terminating ribosome is important for normal translation termination (Amrani et al, 2004). If a long 3′UTR inhibits this interaction, the translation termination will be aberrant. In line with this model, PTC-containing yeast or Drosophila mRNAs are protected from NMD if PABP is tethered downstream of the PTC (Amrani et al, 2004; Behm-Ansmant et al, 2007). However, yeast NMD also targets PTC-containing non-polyadenylated mRNAs, suggesting that other 3′UTR factors also have a role in PTC definition (Meaux et al, 2008). The second model explains intron-based NMD. When an intron is spliced, an EJC is deposited on the mRNA 20–25 nt upstream of the exon–exon junction (Le Hir et al, 2000). The mammalian EJC consists of four core (Y14, Mago, MLN51/BTZ and eIF4AIII) and many peripheral proteins including UPF3 and UPF2. During translation, the ribosomes displace EJC–UPF3–UPF2 complexes from the mRNA unless they reside downstream of the stop codon (Chang et al, 2007). During the termination of translation, a complex consisting of SMG-1, UPF1 and eukaryotic releasing factors (the SURF complex) binds to the ribosome. If an EJC–UPF2–UPF3 complex is associated with the 3′UTR, the UPF1 component of SURF binds UPF2 and SMG-1 phosphorylates UPF1 (Kashima et al, 2006). Phosphorylated UPF1 might recruit mRNA decay systems to the PTC-containing mRNA. Finally, three related proteins, SMG-5, SMG-6 and SMG-7, recruit a PP2A phosphatase to dephosphorylate UPF1 (Yamashita et al, 2005). As ribosomes also remove EJCs that are located downstream but in close proximity to a stop codon, mammalian transcripts are targeted for NMD only if a stop codon is situated >50 nt upstream of an exon–exon junction (Nagy and Maquat, 1998). In yeast and humans, NMD complex formation results in decapping and deadenylation of mRNA harbouring a PTC, whereas in Drosophila it leads to the cleavage of aberrant mRNAs. Decapped and/or deadenylated mRNAs are degraded in the cytoplasm and/or in the P-bodies (Isken and Maquat, 2007). Although little is known about plant NMD, it appears that plant NMD is more complex than the mammalian or the yeast NMD systems. Interestingly, in plants, both long 3′UTRs and 3′UTR-located introns could act as efficient NMD cis factors (Kertesz et al, 2006; Schwartz et al, 2006; Hori and Watanabe, 2007). In addition, the effect of long 3′UTRs is graded, with longer 3′UTRs triggering more efficient NMD. Intron-based plant NMD, like mammalian NMD, acts in a position-dependent manner. An intron located 28 nt downstream of a stop codon fails to destabilize the mRNA, whereas the same intron located 99 nt downstream of the stop codon elicits NMD (Kertesz et al, 2006). So far, only the core NMD trans factors (UPF1, UPF2 and UPF3) have been identified in plants. Mutants in the Arabidopsis UPF3 gene show a strong phenotype (Hori and Watanabe, 2005), whereas null mutants in UPF1 are lethal (Arciga-Reyes et al, 2006; Yoine et al, 2006). PTC-containing mRNAs were found to accumulate to high levels in both mutants. Recently, virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) was used to characterize UPF2 in Nicotiana attenuata (Wu et al, 2007). To better understand plant NMD, we identified and characterized novel NMD trans factors with respect to their involvement in long 3′UTR- and intron-based NMD pathways. To achieve these aims, we combined VIGS, a well-documented gene silencing approach in plants (Ratcliff et al, 2001; Valentine et al, 2004), with an agroinfiltration-based transient NMD assay (VIGS-NMD system). Using this system, we have shown that UPF1, UPF2 and SMG-7 are involved in both long 3′UTR-based NMD and intron-based NMD, whereas Mago and Y14 have a role only in intron-based NMD. This demonstrates that the two NMD pathways, despite having some degree of overlap, rely on pathway-specific regulatory genes. We also provide evidence that the mechanisms underlying eukaryotic NMD pathways are evolutionarily conserved. Finally, we demonstrate that plant NMD is feedback controlled, as expression of SMG-7, an NMD trans factor, is regulated by NMD. Results Roles of UPF1, UPF2 and UPF3 in plant NMD Previously, we described a GFP-based transient NMD assay (Kertesz et al, 2006). Here we have developed an approach (VIGS-NMD system) that allows rapid identification and characterization of NMD trans factors by combining our transient NMD assay with Tobacco rattle virus (TRV)-mediated VIGS (Ratcliff et al, 2001; Liu et al, 2002; Valentine et al, 2004). Following VIGS-mediated knockdown of putative plant NMD factors, NMD activity in silenced plants is assessed by transient expression of GFP-based NMD reporter constructs (Figure 1B). Transient NMD assay is based on agroinfiltration (Supplementary Figure 1) (Kertesz et al, 2006). Infiltration of Nicotiana benthamiana leaves with Agrobacteria expressing GFP leads to abundant GFP mRNA accumulation and strong green fluorescence. In contrast, agroinfiltration with NMD reporter constructs such as those encoding a GFP mRNA with an unusually long 3′UTR (G-L construct) or a GFP mRNA with an intron in the 3′UTR (Gc-I) leads to a weak green fluorescence and low mRNA levels because both G-L and Gc-I transcripts are targeted by NMD. Indeed, upon inhibition of NMD, infiltration of G-L or Gc-I leads to strong fluorescence and abundant transcript levels (Supplementary Figure 1). G-L differs from GFP by harbouring a 600 nt stuffer sequence in the 3′UTR region; thus, G-L transcripts are targeted by long 3′UTR-based NMD (Figure 1A). Gc-I, the reporter construct used to induce intron-based NMD, is also a GFP derivative, but this time containing an intron in the 3′UTR. This intron is separated from the stop codon by a 200 nt stuffer sequence. Gc-I is weakly targeted by the long 3′UTR-based NMD (due to the presence of 200 nt stuffer in the 3′UTR) and strongly targeted by the intron-based NMD. To separate the effect of the two NMD pathways on Gc-I, an intronless construct (Gc), derived from Gc-I, was engineered (Figure 1A). Importantly, although the processed mRNAs transcribed from Gc and Gc-I are identical, Gc-I-derived transcripts accumulate to much lower levels because, although both Gc and Gc-I are weak targets of long 3′UTR-based NMD, intron-based NMD targets only Gc-I (Figure 1F, compare lane 2 with 1; Supplementary Figure 1B) (Kertesz et al, 2006). Thus, the effect of intron-based NMD can be estimated by comparing Gc and Gc-I expression. To compare the expression of different constructs, each construct was co-infiltrated with Agrobacteria expressing P14 and then P14 mRNAs were used as normalization controls (see Figure 1C legend and Materials and methods) (Kertesz et al, 2006). Figure 1.Roles of UPFs in plant NMD. (A) Schematic representation of NMD constructs. G-L contains a 600 nt stuffer sequence cloned between the stop and the 35S terminator (35sT). Gc contains a 200 nt stuffer region. Gc-I is the same as Gc but contains an intron (I) between the c-stuffer and the terminator. (B) VIGS-NMD system. N. benthamiana plants are infected with TRV-P or a modified TRV-P harbouring a sequence from a candidate NMD trans factor (TRV-P-candidate). NMD activity of the silenced leaves is tested by agroinfiltration with control (con) and NMD test constructs. (C–E) Long 3′UTR-based NMD is inhibited in UPF-silenced plants. Leaves of P-silenced control (P) or U1-, U2- and U3-silenced test plants (U1, U2, U3) were infiltrated with G-L NMD test constructs (test constructs are shown as bold letters) or with GFP (as a control to show that agroinfiltration worked well in silenced plants). P14 was co-infiltrated with each construct. RNAs isolated at 3 d.p.i. were analysed in gel blot assays using P14 and GFP probes. GFP or G-L transcript levels were normalized to the corresponding P14 mRNA levels. Mean values were calculated from three independent experiments, and then these mean transcript levels were compared and graphically presented. (D, E) Mean values of GFP (D) or G-L mRNA levels (E) of P control leaves are taken as 1 and the corresponding transcript levels of U1-, U2- and U3-silenced leaves are shown relative to it. At NMD test constructs, numbers >1 indicate that the NMD is inhibited. s.d. is indicated by error bar. (F–H) Intron-based NMD activity in UPF-silenced plants. Leaves of silenced plants were infiltrated with Gc control or with Gc-I (bold letters) intron-based NMD test constructs. As processed Gc and Gc-I mRNAs are identical, they run to the same position on RNA gel blot. Gc and Gc-I mRNA levels were normalized and the mean values were calculated as described above. (G, H) Graphical representation of Gc or Gc-I expression in UPF-silenced plants relative to P-silenced control. Note that Gc and Gc-I expressions are similarly increased in U3-silenced leaves relative to P-silenced control, whereas in U1- or U2-silenced leaves Gc-I transcript levels are much more increased than Gc levels. Download figure Download PowerPoint VIGS-mediated gene inactivation is based on the observation that viral infection triggers RNA silencing (RNAi) in plants. For instance, upon systemic infection of N. benthamiana by a TRV-VIGS vector harbouring a sequence from the phytoene desaturase (PDS) gene (TRV-P vector), silencing of the endogenous PDS mRNAs occurs, resulting in a characteristic leaf bleaching phenotype. To examine the role of UPF proteins in plant NMD, we silenced N. benthamiana UPF1, UPF2 and UPF3 by TRV-VIGS. Sequences from the putative N. benthamiana UPF1, UPF2 and UPF3 were cloned into the TRV-P vector. Plants were infected with TRV-P as a control, or with the modified TRV-P vectors containing sequences from UPF1, UPF2 or UPF3 (infected plants are referred to as P-, U1-, U2- and U3-silenced plants, respectively). In U1-silenced plants, both PDS and UPF1 will be knocked down, whereas in P-silenced control plants only PDS will be inactivated. Spread of the VIGS response can be visualized because PDS silencing leads to bleaching. In each silenced plant, leaf bleaching started at 7 days post inoculation (d.p.i.). RT–PCR confirmed that by 8 d.p.i. target mRNA levels were significantly reduced in the leaves of all silenced plants (data not shown). The long 3′UTR-based NMD activity of U1-, U2-, U3- and P-silenced plants was tested at 8 d.p.i. by infiltrating G-L NMD construct into the leaves. Infiltration of G-L into P-silenced leaves led to weak fluorescence, suggesting that long 3′UTR-based NMD operated efficiently in virus-infected plants (Figure 2A). If UPF1, UPF2 and UPF3 are involved in long 3′UTR-based NMD, this NMD pathway would be inhibited in U1-, U2- and U3-silenced plants and therefore G-L long 3′UTR-based NMD test construct would express to enhanced levels in these plants relative to the P-silenced controls. Enhanced G-L expression manifests in stronger fluorescence and in increased G-L mRNA levels. We found that infiltration of G-L resulted in dramatically enhanced fluorescence in U1- and U2-silenced leaves and in moderately enhanced fluorescence in U3-silenced leaves relative to the P-silenced control plants (Figure 2A). Moreover, G-L mRNAs accumulated to significantly higher levels in U1-, U2- and U3-silenced leaves relative to P-silenced leaves (Figure 1C, compare lanes 4, 6 and 8 with lane 2, and Figure 1E). In U1-, U2- and U3-silenced leaves, G-L mRNA levels were dramatically enhanced in U1- and U2-silenced leaves (12- and 9-fold), but only moderately in U3-silenced leaves (3-fold) compared with P-silenced plants (Figure 1E). These results are in line with previous findings that an endogenous PTC-containing mRNA (trypsin proteinase inhibitor), which is likely targeted by long 3′UTR-based NMD, overaccumulated markedly in U1- and U2-silenced N. attenuata plants but only slightly in U3-silenced plants (Wu et al, 2007). Our data suggest that all UPFs are required for long 3′UTR-based NMD in plants, and that UPF1 and UPF2 have a major role in this plant NMD pathway. However, we do not know whether UPF3 has only a minor role in long 3′UTR-based NMD or that plant NMD can still operate with reduced UPF3 levels (the role of UPF3 in plant NMD is discussed in Supplementary Text 1C). In a separate set of experiments, we studied the role of UPF proteins in intron-based NMD by infiltrating Gc control and Gc-I test constructs into the leaves of silenced plants. Consistent with our previous finding that all three UPFs are required for long 3′UTR-based NMD, we found that Gc, a weak target of long 3′UTR-induced NMD, was expressed to higher levels in U1-, U2- and U3-silenced leaves than in P-silenced plants (Figure 1F, compare lanes 3, 5 and 7 with lane 1, and Figure 1G). Importantly, infiltration of the Gc-I intron-based NMD reporter construct led to a very strong increase in fluorescence (Figure 2A) and Gc-I transcript levels in U1- and U2-silenced leaves (5.5- and 5-fold) relative to P-silenced control leaves (Figure 1F, compare lanes 4 and 6 with lane 2, and Figure 1H). These results suggest that UPF1 and UPF2 are also required for intron-based NMD. In contrast, it appears that intron-based NMD is not affected in U3-silenced leaves. A slight increase in Gc-I mRNA levels was found in U3-silenced leaves relative to P-silenced controls (Figure 1F, compare lane 8 with 2, and Figure 1H). Gc-I is targeted by both long 3′UTR-based NMD and intron-based NMD. As long 3′UTR-based NMD is less efficient in U3-silenced plants than in control leaves (Figure 1G), we conclude that the slight increase in Gc-I expression in U3-silenced leaves is due to the less efficient long 3′UTR-based NMD rather than reduced intron-based NMD activity. These data suggest that UPF3 is not required for intron-based NMD. However, as VIGS-mediated knockdown is not complete, we cannot exclude that UPF3 also has a role in intron-based NMD (see Discussion in Supplementary Text 1C). Figure 2.UPF1, UPF2, UPF3, SMG-7 and Y14 are required for plant NMD. (A) Leaves of silenced control (P) and U1-, U2-, U3-, SMG-7- and Y14-silenced test plants (U1, U2, U3, SMG-7 and Y14) were infiltrated with GFP and Gc control constructs or were infiltrated with G-L or Gc-I NMD test constructs. UV pictures were taken at 3 d.p.i. Fluorescence of the infiltrated silenced plant should be compared with the corresponding patch on P control. Enhanced fluorescence indicates that the silenced gene is required for that type of NMD. (B) Complementation of SMG-7-silenced plants. Leaves of SMG-7-silenced plants were infiltrated with Gc-I or were co-infiltrated with Gc-I and with FLAG-tagged Arabidopsis SMG-7 (SMG-7). Complementation restores NMD activity leading to reduced Gc-I accumulation, which manifests in lowered fluorescence. (C) Y14 complementation. Y14-silenced leaves were infiltrated with Gc-I or were co-infiltrated with Gc-I and with either Arabidopsis (AtY14) or N. benthamiana Y14 (NbY14). Note that only NbY14 complemented the NMD deficiency of Y14-silenced leaf. (D) Position of poly(A) tail has a role in PTC definition. G-L control and PABP localization test constructs (G-203A-L, G-81A-L) were infiltrated or co-infiltrated with a dominant-negative UPF1 (U1DN) construct into N. benthamiana leaves. Download figure Download PowerPoint A frequent concern is that VIGS might suppress off-target genes, thus leading to phenotypes that are not solely due to the inactivation of the target gene. To prove that altered NMD in U1- and U2-silenced leaves was a consequence of the specific silencing of the targeted UPF gene, we performed a complementation assay (for details, see Supplementary Text 1D). Leaves of U1- and U2-silenced plants were co-infiltrated with the Gc-I NMD reporter construct and a construct expressing Arabidopsis UPF1 or UPF2. It was found that expression of Arabidopsis UPF1 (but not UPF2) restored NMD activity in U1-silenced plants, whereas U2-silenced plants were complemented only by transiently expressed Arabidopsis UPF2 (Supplementary Figure 2). These data confirm that our VIGS-mediated knockdowns were gene specific. Role of plant SMG-7 in NMD Phosphoregulation of UPF1 has a key role in animal NMD. SMG-1 phosphorylates UPF1, whereas three related proteins (SMG-5, SMG-6 and SMG-7) regulate UPF1 dephosphorylation. An SMG-1 orthologue was not found in Arabidopsis. However, Arabidopsis At5g19400 encodes a 14-3-3-like protein that is similar to SMG-5, SMG-6 and SMG-7 (Fukuhara et al, 2005). In animals, SMG-5 and SMG-6 contain a PIN domain, which is not found in SMG-7 (Glavan et al, 2006). As the predicted At5g19400 product does not have a PIN domain and because it is most similar to SMG-7 (Supplementary Figure 7), we refer to At5g19400 as SMG-7. To test whether SMG-7 is involved in plant NMD, SMG-7-silenced plants were established by infecting N. benthamiana plants with a modified TRV-P VIGS vector containing a segment of N. benthamiana SMG-7 cDNA, and NMD activity in SMG-7-silenced and control plants was tested as described. In SMG-7-silenced leaves, infiltration of both G-L and Gc-I led to strong GFP fluorescence (Figure 2A). Consistent with this, G-L (Figure 3A, compare lane 4 with 2, and Figure 3C) and Gc-I (Figure 3D, compare lane 4 with 2, and Figure 3F) transcripts were significantly increased in SMG-7-silenced plants relative to P-silenced control plants. Thus, we conclude that both long 3′UTR-based NMD and intron-based NMD are inhibited in SMG-7-silenced plants. A complementation assay confirmed that the observed NMD deficiency in SMG-7-silenced leaves was solely due to the inactivation of SMG-7 (Figure 2B; Supplementary Figure 3A–C). Figure 3.SMG-7 is required for both types of NMD. (A–C) Effect of SMG-7 silencing on long 3′UTR-based NMD. Silenced control (P) and SMG-7-silenced test plants (SMG-7) were infiltrated with GFP control and G-L NMD test constructs. (D–F) The effect of SMG-7 silencing on intron-based NMD. P- and SMG-7-silenced plants were infiltrated with Gc control or Gc-I NMD test constructs. Panels B, C, E and F are the graphical representations of these experiments. Expression of each construct in SMG-7-silenced plant is shown relative to P-silenced control. Download figure Download PowerPoint Mago and Y14 are required only for intron-based NMD Intron-based mammalian NMD is mediated by the EJC. We hypothesized that intron-based plant NMD is also mediated by the EJC. However, only indirect evidence supports the existence of the EJC in plants. Homology searches found orthologues of Y14, Mago and eIF4AIII as putative EJC core components in Arabidopsis, but failed to identify orthologues of MLN51 (Pendle et al, 2005). We postulated that if the EJC has a role in plant NMD, Y14 and Mago would be required. To test this, NMD activity was tested in Mago- and Y14-silenced plants as described. As G-L mRNA levels did not increase in either Mago- or Y14-silenced leaves relative to controls (Figure 4A–F), we concluded that Mago and Y14 are not required for long 3′UTR-based NMD. In contrast, Gc-I mRNAs were more abundant in both Mago-silenced (Figure 4G, compare lane 5 with 2, and Figure 4I, compare column B with A) and Y14-silenced (Figures 2A and 4J, compare lane 5 with 2, and Figure 4L, compare column B with A) leaves than in control leaves. These data suggest that both Y14 and Mago are required for intron-based NMD. Complementation assays showed that transient expression of N. benthamiana Y14 restored the intron-based NMD activity of Y14-silenced leaves (Figures 2C and 4J, compare lane 6 with 5, and Figure 4L, compare column D with B), whereas expression of N. benthamiana Mago complemented the intron-based NMD activity of Mago-silenced leaves (Figure 4G, compare lane 6 with lane 5, and Figure 4I, compare column D with B). Thus, silencing of both Mago and Y14 was specific. Figure 4.Role of Mago and Y14 in plant NMD. (A–F) Mago and Y14 are not involved in long 3′UTR-based NMD. Leaves of P-silenced control (P) and Mago- or Y14-silenced test plants (Mago, Y14) were infiltrated with GFP or G-L long 3′UTR-based NMD test construct. (G–L) Effect of Mago and Y14 VIGS on intron-based NMD. Leaves of silenced plants were infiltrated with Gc control or Gc-I NMD test constructs. Gc expression is not enhanced in Mago- or Y14-silenced leaves (H and K). Gc-I expression is enhanced in both Mago- and Y14-silenced plants relative to the P-silenced control (I and L, compare column B with A). To carry out complementation assay, N. benthamiana Mago or Y14 was co-infiltrated with Gc-I test constructs into Mago- and Y14-silenced leaves (G and J, lanes 6). Complementation led to enhanced NMD activity, which manifested in reduced Gc-I expression (G, J, compare lanes 6 with 5; I, L, compare columns D with B). Download figure Download PowerPoint In animals, Y14–Mago and MLN51–eIF4AIII heterodimers form the tetrameric core of the EJC. Changing two conserved residues in human Y14 (L106E/R108E) leads to a mutant protein that is NMD defective in tethering assays. This mutant binds Mago but fails to incorporate into the EJC core (Fribourg et al, 2003), perhaps this incorporation requires a direct interaction between Y14R108 and eIF4AIII (Bono et al, 2006). Similarly, NMD-defective human Mago mutants were reported to bind Y14 but failed to incorporate into the EJC (Fribourg et al, 2003), likely because the residues affected in the mutants normally interact with MLN51. In plants, as in animals, Y14 and Mago form a strong heterodimer (Park and Muench, 2007). If plant Y14–Mago heterodimers act in NMD as components of a tetrameric EJC, and similar interactions stabilize the EJC in both plants and mammals, overexpression of plant mutants corresponding to those described above could inhibit NMD in a dominant-negative manner by depleting the cognate heterodimer pair. To test this, corresponding mutations were introduced into N. benthamiana Y14 (L125E/R127E) and Mago (KF21-22EA/KN46-47DA) (henceforth referred to as Y14DN and MagoDN, respectively). First, co-immunoprecipitation (co-IP) assays were carried out to test if the mutant proteins retained the ability to form heterodimers with their wild-type partners (Figure 5A). HA-tagged Y14DN (Y14DN–HA) was co-infiltrated with a FLAG-tagged Mago (Mago–FLAG) and with P14 (as a negative control) into N. benthamiana leaves. Interactions were studied by HA co-IP assays. Both Y14DN–HA and Mago–FLAG were easily detected in the HA precipitate, suggesting that Y14DN bound Mago in planta. As P14 was present in the input but could not be detected in the precipitate, we concluded that the IP was specific. Similar co-IP assays showed that MagoDN also retained the ability to form a complex with wild-type Y14 (Figure 5A). Next, we studied the effect of overexpression of the mutant proteins on NMD by co-infiltrating them with G-L and Gc-I NMD test constructs. It was found that expression of MagoDN or Y14DN did not affect long 3′UTR-based NMD (Figure 5B–E). In contrast, expression of either MagoDN or Y14DN inhibited intron-based NMD (Figure 5F and H, compare lane 4 with 1, and Figure 4G and I, compare columns D with A). These data also suggest that Y14 and Mago are required only for intron-based plant NMD. Moreover, these results suggest that both Y14 and Mago operate in plant NMD as components of the EJC and that similar interactions stabilize the EJC core complex in plants and mammals. Figure 5.Overexpression of a mutant Mago or Y14

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