The mechanisms of selective mRNA turnover are relatively poorly understood and only a handful of genes are known to be required for degradation of specific mRNAs. In eukaryotic cells mRNAs that contain in-frame premature termination codons are unstable. This phenomenon is termed nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) and is a model system for the study of targeted mRNA turnover. Functions of the seven C. elegans smg genes are required for NMD. To understand the mechanisms of NMD we are characterising the smg genes and their products.
smg-5 encodes a novel protein of 549 amino acids.
smg-7 encodes a protein of 458 amino acids that contains an acidic carboxy terminus of 75 amino acids and three tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) domains, a motif involved in mediating protein:protein interactions. We have prepared affinity-purified polyclonal antibodies against both SMG-5 and SMG-7. Immunoprecipitations using anti-SMG-5 and anti-SMG-7 antibodies demonstrate that SMG-5 and SMG-7 physically interact. Both proteins co-precipitate from wild-type extracts when either antibody is used. This binding is specific and stable in high (500mM) salt concentrations. Neither protein precipitates from either
smg-5 or
smg-7 mutant extracts. We conclude that SMG-5 and SMG-7 are part of a protein complex needed for nonsense-mediated mRNA decay. Although SMG-7 is present in
smg-5 mutant extracts, SMG-5 is absent from
smg-7 mutant extracts. The effect of
smg-7 mutations on expression of SMG-5 is post-transcriptional since
smg-5 mRNA is present in
smg-7 mutants, but SMG-5 protein is not. We conclude that, in addition to binding SMG-5, SMG-7 is needed either to translate
smg-5 mRNA or to protect SMG-5 protein from rapid turnover. We are presently investigating whether SMG-5 and SMG-7 interact directly or indirectly and whether additional proteins form part of the complex.