The export of messenger RNA (mRNA) from the nucleus to the cytoplasm is a key step in eukaryotic gene expression. mRNAs are transcribed by RNA Polymerase II as pre-mRNAs, which subsequently undergo a series of processing steps such as capping, splicing and poly-adenylation to generate a mature mRNA. Each of these processing steps is accompanied by the deposition of proteins on the mRNA, serving as ‘processing marks’, leading to the establishment of nuclear ribonucleoprotein complexes (mRNPs). To discriminate mature mRNPs form pre-mRNAs and other RNAs in the nucleus these processing marks must be recognized by the mRNA export machinery Despite the fact that key components of mRNA export have been discovered in genetic screen over two decades ago we still lack a mechanistic understanding of this essential process.
piRNAs are 23-30nt short RNAs which are key for the silencing of transposable elements, and thus for the maintenance of genome integrity in the germline. piRNAs are processed from a long precursor transcript in the cytoplasm. Unlike mRNAs, this precursor does not undergo processing in the nucleus and thus lacks key features of mRNPs. However, the precursor has to be exported to the cytoplasm to to evade nuclear degradation and to allow for the generation of piRNAs. Interestingly, previous research had uncovered a piRNA precursor export pathway in the Drosophila germline that hijacks key mRNA export components, namely the THO complex and the DExD ATPase Uap56, and combines them with pathway specific factors, such as Bootlegger and Nxf3, a homolog of the mRNA export factor Nxf1.
Here I aimed at dissecting the export of piRNA precursor transcripts in mechanistic detail. Understanding this specialized pathway held promise to gain new insights into the function of enigmatic mRNA export factors, such as the THO complex and UAP56, thus generating an entry point for the study of mRNA export. This approach turned out to be fruitful and I could uncover a mechanistic model for the nuclear export of messenger RNA, presumably conserved in all eukaryotes from yeast to human.