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Taylor and Francis Group, RNA Biology, 9(11), p. 1122-1136, 2014

DOI: 10.4161/rna.34406

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Proteins involved in the degradation of cytoplasmic mRNA in the major eukaryotic model systems

Journal article published in 2014 by Aleksandra Siwaszek, Marta Ukleja, Andrzej Dziembowski ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The process of mRNA decay and surveillance is considered to be one of the main posttranscriptional gene expression regulation platforms in eukaryotes. The degradation of stable, protein-coding transcripts is normally initiated by removal of the poly(A) tail followed by 5'-cap hydrolysis and degradation of the remaining mRNA body by Xrn1. Alternatively, the exosome complex degrades mRNA in the 3'>5'direction. The newly discovered uridinylation-dependent pathway, which is present in many different organisms, also seems to play a role in bulk mRNA degradation. Simultaneously, to avoid the synthesis of incorrect proteins, special cellular machinery is responsible for the removal of faulty transcripts via nonsense-mediated, no-go, non-stop or non-functional 18S rRNA decay. This review is focused on the major eukaryotic cytoplasmic mRNA degradation pathways showing many similarities and pointing out main differences between the main model-species: yeast, Drosophila, plants and mammals.