Physical evidence for cotranslational regulation of beta-tubulin mRNA degradation.
Open Access
- 1 February 1992
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 12 (2) , 791-799
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.12.2.791
Abstract
Tubulin synthesis is controlled by an autoregulatory mechanism through which an increase in the intracellular concentration of tubulin subunits leads to specific degradation of tubulin mRNAs. The sequence necessary and sufficient for the selective degradation of a beta-tubulin mRNA in response to changes in the level of free tubulin subunits resides within the first 13 translated nucleotides that encode the amino-terminal sequence of beta-tubulin, Met-Arg-Glu-Ile (MREI). Previous results have suggested that the sequence responsible for autoregulation resides in the nascent peptide rather than in the mRNA per se, raising the possibility that the regulation of the stability of tubulin mRNA is mediated through binding of tubulin or some other cellular factor to the nascent amino-terminal tubulin peptide. We now show that this putative cotranslational interaction is not mediated by tubulin alone, as no meaningful binding is detectable between tubulin subunits and the amino-terminal beta-tubulin polypeptide. However, microinjection of a monoclonal antibody that binds to the beta-tubulin nascent peptide selectively disrupts the regulation of beta-tubulin, but not alpha-tubulin, synthesis. This finding provides direct evidence for cotranslational degradation of beta-tubulin mRNA mediated through binding of one or more cellular factors to the beta-tubulin nascent peptide.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- The half-life of immunoglobulin mRNA increases during B-cell differentiation: a possible role for targeting to membrane-bound polysomes.Genes & Development, 1988
- In vivo microtubules are copolymers of available beta-tubulin isotypes: localization of each of six vertebrate beta-tubulin isotypes using polyclonal antibodies elicited by synthetic peptide antigens.The Journal of cell biology, 1987
- Translation is required for regulation of histone mRNA degradationCell, 1987
- Retention of autoregulatory control of tubulin synthesis in cytoplasts: demonstration of a cytoplasmic mechanism that regulates the level of tubulin expression.The Journal of cell biology, 1985
- 10-nm filaments are induced to collapse in living cells microinjected with monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies against tubulin.The Journal of cell biology, 1984
- Elevation of tubulin levels by microinjection suppresses new tubulin synthesisNature, 1983
- Is apparent autoregulatory control of tubulin synthesis nontranscriptionally regulated?The Journal of cell biology, 1983
- Identification with cellular microtubules of one of the co-assembling microtubule-associated proteinsCell, 1979
- Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4Nature, 1970
- Measurement of protein-binding phenomena by gel filtrationBiochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1962