Regulation of messenger RNA stability in mouse erythroleukemia cells
- PMID: 3856689
- DOI: 10.1016/0022-2836(85)90087-7
Regulation of messenger RNA stability in mouse erythroleukemia cells
Abstract
The decay rates of several messenger RNA species were determined in mouse erythroleukemia cells. The t1/2 values for the actin and tubulin mRNAs were 16 to 26 hours and about seven hours, respectively. The globin mRNA, and two mRNA species subject to translation repression, the P40 and P21 mRNAs, were about as stable as the ribosomal RNA. A stable tubulin mRNA component also appeared to be present in the cells. Exposure of the cells to dimethylsulfoxide for 48 hours led to considerable increases in the rates of decay of all but the globin mRNA. The induction of erythroid differentiation caused by the drug appears to lead to activation of a mRNA-degradation process that affects individual species to different degrees. The newly synthesized actin and tubulin mRNAs lost their poly(A) rather rapidly. This was accompanied by accumulation of poly(A)-deficient mRNA chains, particularly in the case of actin mRNA. The steady-state distribution of mRNA components, determined by Northern blot analysis, also showed that the actin mRNA and one tubulin mRNA species have a high proportion of poly(A)-deficient molecules. The globin, P40 and P21 mRNAs showed little tendency to lose their poly(A) sequence. The steady-state globin and P40 mRNAs also had a low proportion of chains depleted of poly(A). For all five species, the proportions of poly(A)-deficient chains in newly synthesized mRNA were about the same in uninduced and induced cells, in spite of the large decreases in mRNA stability in the induced cells. The lack of correlation between tendency to lose poly(A) and rate of mRNA decay, and the large accumulation of poly(A)-deficient molecules in the cases of the actin and tubulin mRNAs suggest that the stability of mRNA is not determined solely by the presence of poly(A) on the RNA chains. The behavior of the untranslated species in induced and uninduced cells also fails to support the notion of a relationship between translation and mRNA decay.
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