Deadenylation-independent stage-specific mRNA degradation in Leishmania

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Abstract

The life cycle of Leishmania alternates between developmental forms residing within the insect vector (e.g. promastigotes) and the mammalian host (amastigotes). In Leishmania nearly all control of gene expression is post-transcriptional and involves sequences in the 3′-untranslated regions (3'UTRs) of mRNAs. Very little is known as to how these cis -elements regulate RNA turnover and translation rates in trypanosomatids and nothing is known about mRNA degradation mechanisms in Leishmania in particular. Here, we use the amastin mRNA-an amastigote-specific transcript-as a model and show that a ∼100 nt U-rich element (URE) within its 3'UTR significantly accounts for developmental regulation. RNase-H-RNA blot analysis revealed that a major part of the rapid promastigote-specific degradation of the amastin mRNA is not initiated by deadenylation. This is in contrast to the amastin mRNA in amastigotes and to reporter RNAs lacking the URE, which, in common with most eukaryotic mRNAs studied to-date, are deadenylated before being degraded. Moreover, our analysis did not reveal a role for decapping in the stage-specific degradation of the amastin mRNA. Overall, these results suggest that degradation of the amastin mRNA of Leishmania is likely to be bi-phasic, the first phase being stage-specific and dependent on an unusual URE-mediated pathway of mRNA degradation. © 2008 The Author(s).

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Haile, S., Dupé, A., & Papadopoulou, B. (2008). Deadenylation-independent stage-specific mRNA degradation in Leishmania. Nucleic Acids Research, 36(5), 1634–1644. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkn019

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