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Published online 16 April 2001. doi:10.1083/jcb.153.2.307
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© The Rockefeller University Press, 0021-9525/2001/4/307/ $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 153, Number 2, April 16, 2001 307-318


Original Article

An Exclusively Nuclear RNA-binding Protein Affects Asymmetric Localization of ASH1 mRNA and Ash1p in Yeast

Roy M. Longa, Wei Gub, Xiuhua Mengb, Graydon Gonsalveza, Robert H. Singerb, and Pascal Chartrandb
a Medical College of Wisconsin, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53226
b Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and Structural Biology, Bronx, New York 10461

Correspondence to: Roy M. Long, Medical College of Wisconsin, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Milwaukee, WI 53226-0509. Tel:(414) 456-8423 Fax:(414) 456-6535 E-mail:rlong{at}mcw.edu.

The localization of ASH1 mRNA to the distal tip of budding yeast cells is essential for the proper regulation of mating type switching in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A localization element that is predominantly in the 3'-untranslated region (UTR) can direct this mRNA to the bud. Using this element in the three-hybrid in vivo RNA-binding assay, we identified a protein, Loc1p, that binds in vitro directly to the wild-type ASH1 3'-UTR RNA, but not to a mutant RNA incapable of localizing to the bud nor to several other mRNAs. LOC1 codes for a novel protein that recognizes double-stranded RNA structures and is required for efficient localization of ASH1 mRNA. Accordingly, Ash1p gets symmetrically distributed between daughter and mother cells in a loc1 strain. Surprisingly, Loc1p was found to be strictly nuclear, unlike other known RNA-binding proteins involved in mRNA localization which shuttle between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. We propose that efficient cytoplasmic ASH1 mRNA localization requires a previous interaction with specific nuclear factors.

Key Words: ASH1, RNA localization, yeast, nuclear RNA-binding protein, three-hybrid


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