Molecular and Cellular Biology, October 1998, p. 6152-6163, Vol. 18, No. 10
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.

Department of Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Received 28 May 1998/Returned for modification 30 June 1998/Accepted 17 July 1998
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ABSTRACT |
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The translation of specific maternal mRNAs is regulated during early development. For some mRNAs, an increase in translational activity is correlated with cytoplasmic extension of their poly(A) tails; for others, translational inactivation is correlated with removal of their poly(A) tails. Recent results in several systems suggest that events at the 3' end of the mRNA can affect the state of the 5' cap structure, m7G(5')ppp(5')G. We focus here on the potential role of cap modifications on translation during early development and on the question of whether any such modifications are dependent on cytoplasmic poly(A) addition or removal. To do so, we injected synthetic RNAs into Xenopus oocytes and examined their cap structures and translational activities during meiotic maturation. We draw four main conclusions. First, the activity of a cytoplasmic guanine-7-methyltransferase increases during oocyte maturation and stimulates translation of an injected mRNA bearing a nonmethylated GpppG cap. The importance of the cap for translation in oocytes is corroborated by the sensitivity of protein synthesis to cap analogs and by the inefficient translation of mRNAs bearing nonphysiologically capped 5' termini. Second, deadenylation during oocyte maturation does not cause decapping, in contrast to deadenylation-triggered decapping in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Third, the poly(A) tail and the N-7 methyl group of the cap stimulate translation synergistically during oocyte maturation. Fourth, cap ribose methylation of certain mRNAs is very inefficient and is not required for their translational recruitment by poly(A). These results demonstrate that polyadenylation can cause translational recruitment independent of ribose methylation. We propose that polyadenylation enhances translation through at least two mechanisms that are distinguished by their dependence on ribose modification.
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INTRODUCTION |
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The 7-methyl guanosine cap and the poly(A) tail of mRNAs both can stimulate translation. Translation initiation of most mRNAs occurs via recognition of the 5' cap by initiation factor eIF-4E (reviewed in reference 36), which forms part of the eIF-4F complex (reviewed in reference 58). Yet poly(A), located at the opposite end of the mRNA, also facilitates translational initiation (reviewed in references 18, 23, 46, and 47). Poly(A)'s effects on translation are particularly striking during early development. Elongation of the poly(A) tail of certain maternal mRNAs is correlated with their translational activation, while removal of the tail from others results in their translational inactivation (see, e.g., references 3, 21, 35, 48, 49, 51, and 63). In some cases, the changes in poly(A) tail length are required for the changes in translational activity; exceptions exist, however, and translational repression can be a cause, rather than an effect, of deadenylation (reviewed in reference 18).
The 5' cap stimulates translation by facilitating recruitment of the 40S ribosomal subunit (reviewed in reference 36). The N-7 methyl group of the cap largely determines translational efficiency in vitro (see, e.g., references 6, 7, and 32), presumably because it enhances the binding of eIF-4E (56, 57). The functional significance of ribose methylation is less clear. Ribose methylation of the first or penultimate nucleotides is common among mRNAs in metazoans, though its abundance varies among species (4). Early experiments suggested that ribose methylation, in contrast to N-7 methylation, confers little if any translational advantage (40, 41). However more recently, ribose methylation of a specific histone-related RNA, B4 (55), was detected during Xenopus oocyte maturation and was suggested to underlie the polyadenylation-dependent increase in that mRNA's translation (28).
Although the stimulatory effect of poly(A) on translation during early development is striking, the underlying mechanism is not clear. Polyadenylated mRNAs are translated more efficiently than nonadenylated mRNAs when injected into Xenopus laevis oocytes (see, e.g., references 12 and 14), and kinetic studies suggest that poly(A) may facilitate translational reinitiation (14). In Xenopus oocytes, mRNAs compete for translational machinery (31, 45), perhaps accentuating the advantage of a poly(A) tail.
Communication occurs between the cap structure and the poly(A) tail. For example, deadenylation-dependent decapping precedes exonucleolytic degradation of mRNAs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (5). Information can also flow from the 5' to the 3' end: translational repression through binding of a protein to the 5' untranslated region (5'UTR) can cause deadenylation in somatic cells (39). Communication between the two ends of the mRNA may be mediated, at least in yeast, by a tripartite complex between a protein bound to the poly(A) tail, poly(A) binding protein, and the initiation factors eIF-4G and eIF-4E (60, 61). Thus, poly(A) or PAB may facilitate an interaction between the 5' and 3' ends of mRNAs, perhaps resulting in effects on both translation and stability.
Modifications of the 5' cap structure may regulate translation during
early development. For example, in Manduca sexta, N-7 methylation of mRNAs with a GpppG cap occurs following
fertilization and may stimulate their translation (24, 25).
In the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, N-7 and
ribose methylation occurs following fertilization but prior to the
two-cell stage. N-7 methylation may be important for the
translational activation of histone mRNAs in this species
(8). However, translational recruitment of histone
mRNAs in the closely related species Lytechinus pictus appears to be independent of cap methylation (53). In
somatic cells, translation of insulin mRNA in a pancreatic
-cell
tumor may also be controlled by covalent modification of its cap:
treatment of rat insulin 2 mRNA with guanylyltransferase and N7
methylase activities specifically increased its translation in vitro
(10).
The particularly large stimulatory effect of poly(A) on translation in oocytes and embryos could be explained if translation were relatively insensitive to the 5' cap structure and entirely dependent on the presence of a long poly(A) tail. In Xenopus oocytes, mRNAs with a cap are translated more efficiently than those without a cap (12), yet translation initiation appears to be insensitive to injection of cap analogs (2) that inhibit translation in vitro (see, e.g., references 1, 17, and 65). Moreover, proteolytic cleavage of eIF-4G, a factor required for cap-dependent initiation, inhibits translation of an injected capped mRNA completely but only modestly decreases translation of endogenous mRNAs. These results suggest that translation of most endogenous mRNAs in oocytes may occur through an eIF-4G- or cap-independent mechanism (26).
In this study, we investigated the role of the cap and poly(A) tail on translation in Xenopus oocytes by injecting synthetic RNAs. By radiolabeling a single phosphate in the cap, we specifically detected cap modifications and assessed their impact on translation. We observed efficient N-7 methylation of an RNA with a GpppG cap during oocyte maturation and demonstrated that this methylation event, in conjunction with polyadenylation, dramatically enhances translation. These findings are consistent with the nearly complete inhibition of translation of an exogenous mRNA by the cap analog m7GpppG. In contrast, ribose methylation of a reporter mRNA bearing a cyclin B1 3'UTR is not required for poly(A)'s stimulation of that mRNA's translation. We detected neither polyadenylation-dependent modifications of the cap nor deadenylation-dependent decapping. Our findings suggest that the effects on translation of cap modification and cytoplasmic changes in poly(A) length are mechanistically independent.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plasmid construction. All plasmids were named for the sequences that they contain and were created as follows.
(i) Luciferase-cyclin B1 mRNAs. Those with and without a point mutation in AAUAAA (AAgAAA) were synthesized as previously described (52).
(ii) Luciferase X114 mRNA. The plasmid pT7-Luc (BglII at stop codon) (15) was cut with BglII and BamHI and religated to produce the plasmid pLUCX114. To generate LUCX114 mRNA, the template was cut with PvuII and transcribed with T7 RNA polymerase (Epicentre Technologies). LUCX114 mRNA contains 1,680 nucleotides of the luciferase gene followed by 114 nucleotides of pBluescript vector (pBSII KS+; Stratagene). The vector sequence does not contain the hexanucleotide AAUAAA.
(iii) Luciferase A100 mRNA. A BglII-EcoRI fragment containing a 100-nucleotide tract of adenosine residues was isolated from the plasmid pSD5 (16). The isolated fragment was further digested with Sau3AI and cloned into the BglII site of pT7-Luc (BglII at stop codon) (15) to generate the plasmid pLUCA100. To generate LUCA100 mRNA, the plasmid was cut with BglII and transcribed with T7 RNA polymerase. LUCA100 mRNA contains 1,680 nucleotides of the luciferase gene followed by a 100-nucleotide poly(A) tract. The BglII site is immediately adjacent to the poly(A) tract.
Preparation of RNA substrates.
RNAs were prepared in vitro
with either T7 or SP6 RNA polymerase (200 U/µl; Epicentre
Technologies) and under the suggested reaction conditions
(19), including 5 U of inorganic pyrophosphatase (Sigma) per
ml (11). Uniformly radiolabeled RNAs (specific activity of
approximately 3.8 × 103 dpm/fmol) were prepared in a
20-µl reaction mixture containing the cleaved DNA template, 20 to 80 µCi of [
-32P]UTP (800 Ci/mmol; DuPont), 10 mM cap analog (ApppG, GpppG, or m7GpppG; New England
Biolabs), and 250 µM UTP. Transcripts of the appropriate length
were eluted from polyacrylamide urea gel slices as previously described
(33). The eluate was phenol-chloroform extracted, the
resulting aqueous layer was precipitated with ethanol, and the pelleted
RNA was washed with 70% ethanol. RNA was redissolved in water and
precipitated twice more. The final precipitate was resuspended in water
at a concentration of approximately 40 fmol/µl.
Preparation of cap-labeled RNA substrates.
RNAs with a
radiolabeled cap, G*pppG or m7G*pppG (where "*p"
indicates the radiolabeled phosphate), were prepared as previously described (37, 38) with the following modifications. In
vitro transcribed RNAs lacking a cap were first incubated at 65°C for 10 min and chilled on ice. Each 20-µl reaction mixture contained the
following: RNA (approximately 5 pmol of 5' triphosphate termini), 1×
reaction buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.8], 1.25 mM
MgCl2, 0.2 mM EDTA, and 6 mM KCl), 2.5 mM
dithiothreitol (DTT), 1 µg of bovine serum albumin, 1 µl
of RNasin (40 U/µl; Promega), 0.2 U of inorganic pyrophosphatase (Sigma), 100 µCi of [
-32P]GTP (800 Ci/mmol; DuPont), and approximately 4 U of vaccinia virus
guanylyltransferase (GIBCO BRL). RNAs were radiolabeled to a specific
activity of approximately 1.8 × 103 dpm/fmol. The
reaction contained up to 50 µM S-adenosylmethionine (SAM)
when production of a methylated cap structure was desired. Reactions
were incubated at 37°C for 1 h. To improve the efficiency of
capping, 2 U of guanylyltransferase, 20 U of RNasin, and 0.1 U
of pyrophosphatase were added, and the reaction mixture was incubated
for an additional hour at 37°C. The reaction was terminated by
increasing the volume with water and extracting with
phenol-chloroform. The aqueous phase was precipitated in the
presence of one-half volume of 7.5 M ammonium acetate and 2 volumes of
ethanol to remove unincorporated nucleotides. The pellet was
resuspended in water, precipitated with 0.3 M sodium acetate (pH 5.2)
and ethanol, washed with 70% ethanol, and resuspended in water at
approximately 100 fmol/µl.
Oocyte injections. Oocyte microinjection and micromanipulation were performed essentially as previously described (66). Briefly, adult females of X. laevis were primed with 50 U of pregnant mare serum (Sigma) 2 to 3 days prior to oocyte isolation. Stage VI oocytes were manually dissected from excised portions of ovary and incubated at 18 to 22°C in Marc's Modified Ringer's solution (MMR) (100 mM NaCl, 2 mM KCl, 2 mM CaCl2, 1 mM MgCl2, 5 mM HEPES [pH 7.4], and 1 mg of penicillin and streptomycin per ml). Maturation was induced by incubating oocytes in MMR containing 10 µg of progesterone (Sigma) per ml and scored by the appearance of a white spot on the animal pole. Approximately 50 nl of a solution containing 2 to 2.5 fmol of RNA was microinjected into the oocyte cytoplasm on the animal pole side of the midline. In experiments in which cap analogs were injected, the analog was coinjected with the mRNA. Analogs were injected at a concentration of 5 mM to achieve a final in vivo concentration of 250 µM.
Extraction and analysis of RNA. Five to 10 oocytes were pooled in each sample to decrease any effects due to variation between oocytes. Each sample was homogenized in 400 µl of homogenization buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.9], 5 mM EDTA, 2% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 300 mM NaCl, and 250 µg of proteinase K per ml). The homogenate was extracted with phenol-chloroform, and the aqueous phase was re-extracted prior to precipitation with ethanol and a 70% ethanol wash. When required, extracted RNA was selected by binding to oligo(dT) cellulose (Type-7; Pharmacia) essentially as described previously (50). One-half oocyte equivalent of RNA from each sample was analyzed by electrophoresis through an agarose formaldehyde gel (0.8 to 2%) (50). Radioactivity was detected by autoradiography. Quantitative comparisons were made with a Molecular Dynamics PhosphorImager (ImageQuant Software Version 3.3).
Sucrose gradient analysis.
Oocytes were incubated in MMR
containing progesterone for 40 min following GVBD50 (the
time at which half the cells in a sample were mature) and for an
additional 20 min in MMR containing both progesterone and cycloheximide
(20 µg/ml). Each 20-oocyte sample was homogenized in 700 µl of
ice-cold gradient homogenization buffer (250 mM KCl, 2 mM
MgCl2, 20 mM HEPES [pH 7.4], 0.5% Nonidet P-40, 2.5 mM
DTT, 100 U of InhibitAce [5 Prime
3 Prime, Inc.] per ml, and
150 µg of cycloheximide per ml) and incubated on ice for 5 min.
Samples were centrifuged for 10 min at 11,750×
g, and 500 µl of the clarified cytosol was removed and
loaded onto an 11-ml linear sucrose gradient (10 to 50%) containing
250 mM KCl, 2 mM MgCl2, 20 mM HEPES [pH 7.4], 0.5%
Nonidet P-40, 2.5 mM DTT, and 0.5 µg of heparin per ml. Gradients
were centrifuged at 4°C in a Beckman SW41 rotor at 39,000 rpm for 135 min. Following centrifugation, 11 fractions of approximately 900 µl
each were collected from the bottom of the gradient with a Pharmacia
P-1 peristaltic pump and a Pharmacia RediFrac fraction collector.
Absorption traces were recorded with a Pharmacia UV HR-10 flow cell
with an A254 filter. Fifty microliters of each
fraction was counted by the Cerenkov method in a Beckman LS 3801 scintillation counter. Fractions numbered 1 to 6 and 7 to 12 were
pooled, and RNA was extracted with phenol-chloroform. RNAs were
precipitated with 0.3 M sodium acetate and ethanol and were analyzed by
nuclease P1 digestion and two-dimensional thin-layer chromatography (2D
TLC) as described below, as well as by agarose formaldehyde gel
electrophoresis (50).
Analysis of the 5' terminal cap structure of RNAs. Nuclease P1 (1 mg/ml; Boehringer Mannheim) was diluted 1:100 in 30 mM ammonium acetate (pH 5.3). The 2.5-µl reaction mixture contained 1 µl of diluted nuclease P1, 0.4 mM zinc sulfate, 30 mM ammonium acetate (pH 5.3), 1 µg of yeast total RNA, and one-half oocyte equivalent of RNA and was incubated at 37°C for 1 h. Cleavage of the cap dinucleotide with tobacco acid pyrophosphatase (Epicentre Technologies) was performed as specified by the manufacturer.
Products of each reaction were separated by 2D TLC on cellulose thin layer plates (Kodak) with a mixture of isobutyric acid, water, and ammonium hydroxide (66:33:1) in the first dimension (bottom to top) (54) and with a mixture of isopropanol, saturated ammonium sulfate, and 1 M sodium acetate (pH 7.0) (2:80:18) in the second dimension (27).Measurement of luciferase activity. Protocols and reagents for cell homogenization and initiation of luminescence were obtained from Promega (Madison, Wis.). Luminescence was measured with a Monolight 2010 Luminometer (Analytical Luminescence Laboratories). In each experiment, five oocytes were homogenized for each sample. Luciferase activity was determined by dividing the absolute value for luciferase activity for each sample (relative light units) by the amount of RNA in each sample (determined by quantitating the total radioactivity in each sample). This calculation was used to make comparisons between samples.
Measurement of histone H1 kinase activity.
H1 kinase
activity was measured as described previously (42). Briefly,
groups of five oocytes were homogenized in 100 µl of buffer A (80 mM
-glycerophosphate, 20 mM EGTA, 15 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM
sodium vanadate, and 10 µg each of chymostatin, leupeptin, and
pepstatin [Sigma] per ml). Ten microliters of the homogenate was
added to 10 µl of ice cold buffer A and centrifuged at 10,000 × g for 8 min at 4°C. Histone H1 kinase activity was
measured in 12 µl of buffer B containing 8 µl of clarified
cytosolic extract, 2 µg of histone H1 (Sigma), 300 µM ATP, and
1.5 × 106 cpm of [
-32P]ATP per µl.
The reaction mixture was incubated for 15 min at room temperature, and
the reaction was stopped by adding 12 µl of 2× sample buffer
containing 2.4 µl of
-mercaptoethanol. Samples were analyzed by
sodium dodecyl sulfate-10% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
(30) and autoradiography.
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RESULTS |
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Cytoplasmic cap methylation is independent of
polyadenylation.
To examine modifications of the 5' terminal
cap structure of RNAs, we used the assay depicted in Fig.
1. To generate RNA molecules with a single 32P residue in the triphosphate linkage of
the cap, unlabeled RNAs prepared in vitro were treated with vaccinia
virus guanylyltransferase and [
-32P]GTP (Fig. 1A).
Inclusion of SAM with the guanylyltransferase yields
m7GpppG due to the methylase activity of that enzyme.
Further incubation with the vaccinia virus nucleoside
2'-O-methyltransferase yields m7GpppGm. After incubation with RNase P1, which
cleaves after any nucleotide to leave a 3' hydroxyl, dinucleotides
containing the cap structure were analyzed by 2D TLC and
autoradioagraphy (Fig. 1B). For example, after P1 cleavage, cyclin B1
RNA that had been incubated with the guanylyltransferase and
32P-GTP yielded a spot corresponding to GpppG (Fig.
1B, part 1). The inclusion of SAM in the capping reaction mixture
yields a spot corresponding to m7GpppG (Fig.
1B, part 2), while inclusion of SAM plus the
2'-O-methyltransferase yields
m7GpppGm (Fig. 1B, part 3). The identities of
the different cap species were verified by comigration with chemically
prepared GpppG, m7GpppG, and
m7GpppGm.
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N-7 methylation is independent of polyadenylation and increases at nuclear breakdown. We next determined whether base methylation of the cap was regulated during oocyte maturation. To do so, we injected cap-labeled luciferase mRNA containing a portion of the cyclin B1 3'UTR with and without a point mutation in AAUAAA (LUC/B1mut and LUC/B1wt, respectively). Progesterone was added to induce maturation, and the extent of base methylation was monitored at various times thereafter. Histone H1 kinase activity was monitored to determine when maturation promoting factor was activated. Ribose methylation was too inefficient to be reliably quantitated.
N7-methylation of G*pppG was detectable in the absence of progesterone but was dramatically enhanced during maturation (Fig. 3A). As noted in Fig. 2, its efficiency was unaffected by polyadenylation. Cap guanine 7-methylation activity increased dramatically concomitant with nuclear breakdown and activation of histone H1 kinase (Fig. 3A, bottom). Following maturation, 80% of the cap structures present were N7-methylated; only 12% were methylated in oocytes incubated without progesterone. The injected RNAs are intact after incubation in the oocyte, and LUC/B1wt RNA is polyadenylated during maturation (Fig. 3B). We conclude that cap guanine N-7 methylation activity is regulated during maturation such that it increases dramatically as the nucleus breaks down. Cytoplasmic polyadenylation affects neither its extent nor its timing.
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The 5' cap is not removed following RNA deadenylation in
oocytes.
During frog oocyte maturation, specific mRNAs are
translationally inactivated due to the removal of their poly(A) tails
(18, 62). In yeast, deadenylation of specific mRNAs
leads to the removal of their 5' cap and their subsequent decay
(5). Thus, a simple explanation of deadenylation-dependent
translational repression observed in oocytes would be that
deadenylation causes decapping without triggering mRNA decay. To
specifically test the hypothesis that deadenylation results in
decapping in oocytes, we prepared RNA containing 3'UTR
sequences from the ribosomal protein L1 mRNA followed
by a 30-nucleotide poly(A) tail (L1-A30). This
RNA lacks sequences required to receive poly(A) during maturation (i.e., a cytoplasmic polyadenylation element [CPE]) and so is deadenylated instead, as is endogenous L1 mRNA (62, 64).
RNAs were either uniformly radiolabeled by transcription in the
presence of [
-32P]UTP or were cap labeled as shown in
Fig. 1. Following injection of RNAs into oocyte cytoplasm, progesterone
was added to initiate maturation. RNAs were extracted and analyzed by
gel electrophoresis (Fig. 4).
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Translation in oocytes is sensitive to the N-7 methyl group of the 5' cap structure. Recent experiments suggest two possible classes of mRNA in oocytes, distinguished by the extent to which their translation is cap dependent (26). To begin to examine the mechanism of cap-dependent translation in oocytes, we first tested whether the N-7 methyl group of the cap was required for translation of an injected mRNA. A set of luciferase mRNAs carrying 5' termini of ApppG, GpppG, or m7GpppG (Fig. 5A) were injected into oocytes, and translation was assayed by measuring luciferase activity at various times thereafter.
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Polyadenylation and cap methylation by endogenous activities stimulate translation synergistically. The cap and poly(A) tail interact synergistically to stimulate translation in several systems (15, 47), implying communication between the two ends of the mRNA. To test whether such synergy occurs in oocytes, we relied on endogenous activities to both polyadenylate and methylate RNAs. RNAs were synthesized in vitro with either a GpppG or an m7GpppG cap and with or without a functional AAUAAA polyadenylation signal (Fig. 7A).
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P]
quantifies the fold increase in translation during oocyte maturation).
The translational activity of a nonadenylatable mRNA with the cap
m7GpppG did not change in the presence and absence of
maturation (Fig. 7B, compare lanes 1 and 2). When the initial cap
structure was GpppG, such that the cap became N-7 methylated during
maturation by the endogenous methylation activity, translation was
stimulated twofold (Fig. 7B, compare lanes 3 and 4). Polyadenylation
alone stimulated translation 11-fold (Fig. 7B, compare lanes 5 and 6). Interestingly, N-7 methylation and polyadenylation by endogenous activities together stimulated translation over 100-fold (Fig. 7B,
compare lanes 7 and 8). In this experiment, GpppG-capped
luciferase-cyclin B1 mRNA was somewhat less stable after maturation
yet exhibited the largest increase in translational activity (Fig. 7C,
compare lanes 8 and 9 to lanes 11 and 12); thus, the level of synergy is a minimum estimate.
Translational recruitment of luciferase-cyclin B1 mRNA is enhanced by polyadenylation and N-7 methylation but does not require ribose methylation. Kuge and Richter (28) have proposed that the stimulation of translation by cytoplasmic polyadenylation is due to cap ribose methylation (reviewed in reference 46). The cyclin B1 3'UTR is very inefficiently ribose methylated in vivo (Fig. 2B), implying that translational recruitment via this 3'UTR might be independent of ribose methylation. To test this hypothesis directly, we examined the translational recruitment and modification state of cap-labeled luciferase mRNAs carrying a cyclin B1 3'UTR. mRNAs containing a mixture of G*pppG and m7G*pppG caps were injected into oocytes and subsequently separated across a linear sucrose gradient into polysome-associated or non-polysome-associated fractions. The cap structure of mRNAs that had been recruited onto polysomes by polyadenylation was determined by 2D TLC, as shown in Fig. 1. In parallel, translational stimulation during maturation was quantitated as the ratio of luciferase activity present in mature versus nonmature oocytes.
Luciferase activity increased dramatically during maturation and required polyadenylation (Fig. 8A). Similarly, over 22% of RNAs containing AAUAAA were polysomally associated, while less than 5% of those bearing AAgAAA were loaded onto polysomes (Fig. 8B). Polyadenylation status was confirmed by gel electrophoresis (data not shown). Less than 5% of either RNA was associated with polysomes in the absence of progesterone. Thus, the recruitment of the luciferase-cyclin B1 chimera is both progesterone and polyadenylation dependent, as predicted.
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DISCUSSION |
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In this report, we demonstrate that RNAs bearing a GpppG cap are methylated during oocyte maturation at both the N-7 position of the terminal guanosine and at the 2' position of the ribose moiety of the penultimate nucleoside. Cap guanine N-7-methylase activity increases during meiotic maturation and becomes very efficient; in contrast, ribose methylation of the cap on a cyclin B1 3'UTR is inefficient both before and after maturation. Base methylation is independent of polyadenylation; ribose methylation also occurs in the absence of polyadenylation, though its inefficiency makes the possible effects of polyadenylation difficult to quantify. Polysomal recruitment of a luciferase RNA containing the cyclin B1 3'UTR was dependent on polyadenylation and was stimulated substantially by cap N-7 methylation but did not require ribose methylation.
The N-7 methyl group of the cap influences translational efficiency in Xenopus oocytes. However, previous work suggested that cap analogs that are effective translational inhibitors in vitro in extracts prepared from other cell types (see, e.g., references 1, 17, 59, and 65) are ineffective in Xenopus oocytes (2). Using shorter incubation times, we demonstrated efficient translational inhibition by m7G(5')ppp(5')G in the oocyte. One possible explanation for these observed differences is that injected cap dinucleotides are labile.
Cytoplasmic guanine-7-methyltransferase activity, first detected in meiotically arrested oocytes (13, 43), is regulated during frog oocyte maturation. The increase in methyltransferase activity is concurrent with nuclear breakdown (Fig. 3). In one simple view, release of a nuclear enzyme to its substrate in the cytoplasm is responsible. However, cap N-7 methylation occurs in the cytoplasm of enucleated oocytes incubated with progesterone and, to a lesser extent, in isolated oocyte nuclei incubated with the RNA substrate in vitro (data not shown). Thus the dramatic increase in N-7 methylation during maturation may require both nuclear and cytoplasmic contributions. Additionally, it seems unlikely that base methylation contributes significantly to translational activation prior to nuclear breakdown as it is only upon GVBD (the time at which cells in a sample are mature) that methyltransferase activity increases dramatically.
N-7 methylation of the cap and cytoplasmic polyadenylation stimulate translation synergistically during oocyte maturation (Fig. 7). This finding raises the possibility that regulated base methylation might contribute to the translational activation of certain maternal mRNAs. Evidence that base modifications may be exploited to regulate mRNAs during early development exists but is inconclusive, in part because definitive analysis of cap structures on endogenous mRNAs is technically difficult (see Introduction).
The guanylyltransferase reaction adds an inverted guanosine very soon after transcription initiation, probably as soon as the nascent RNA chain emerges from the RNA polymerase (9, 20, 34, 44). Base methylation is thought to occur in concert with that reaction. The hypothesis that N-7 methylation is used to regulate specific maternal mRNAs requires either that some mRNAs be produced with an unmethylated cap or that the methyl group be specifically removed from certain mRNAs.
In yeast, deadenylation triggers decapping and mRNA decay (5). In Xenopus, removal of poly(A) during oocyte maturation causes translational inactivation. However, we demonstrate here that RNAs which are fully deadenylated during oocyte maturation retain their caps and that those caps are not specifically modified. Thus, neither decapping nor cap modification is the explanation for deadenylation-dependent translational repression. We note that the same deadenylated RNAs that are stable and translationally repressed during maturation are rapidly degraded after fertilization in a process that requires recognition of the 5' end of the RNA (unpublished observations). Thus, it is possible that a deadenylation-dependent decapping activity is activated at fertilization and could contribute to translational control in the embryo.
The hypothesis that ribose methylation is a general mechanism by which cytoplasmic polyadenylation enhances translation was prompted by the finding that it appears to be required for poly(A) to stimulate translation of an injected mRNA carrying the B4 3'UTR and occurs only on RNAs that undergo cytoplasmic polyadenylation (28). Moreover, the presence of a 2'-O-methyl group on an injected synthetic mRNA enhances translation in oocytes approximately fourfold (29). Earlier work examining the role of ribose methylation on translation in vitro was inconclusive but suggested only modest effects (40, 41).
The data reported here demonstrate that cytoplasmic polyadenylation can stimulate translation independent of cap methylation. Ribose methylation of the cyclin B1 3'UTR RNA is very inefficient and appears to be independent of polyadenylation (Fig. 2). The translation of chimeric mRNAs bearing the cyclin B1 3'UTR is dramatically enhanced by cytoplasmic polyadenylation, as evidenced both by measurements of luciferase activity and analysis of polysome recruitment. This polyadenylation-dependent translational recruitment occurs despite the lack of detectable ribose methylation, a finding consistent with earlier studies (40, 41). Similarly, the mere presence of a poly(A) tail can enhance translation in a resting oocyte, in which cytoplasmic polyadenylation (and hence any polyadenylation-dependent methylation events) does not occur. In addition, poly(A)-independent N-7 methylation of the cap may by itself be insufficient to fully stimulate the translation of all mRNAs. This is evidenced by the presence of newly N-7-methylated mRNAs in the nonpolysomal fraction (Fig. 8C). Full translational activation may also require an increase in polyadenylation or loss of translational repressors.
Taken together with the findings of others, our data suggest that cytoplasmic polyadenylation can enhance translation during oocyte maturation by at least two mechanisms. One requires ribose methylation and is exemplified by the B4 3'UTR (28). The other is independent of ribose methylation and is exemplified by injected mRNAs bearing the cyclin B1 3'UTR. Perhaps this second mechanism is more analogous to the mechanism by which poly(A) stimulates translation in S. cerevisiae:poly(A) stimulates translation in yeast extracts (22), yet yeast mRNAs are not ribose methylated (4). The existence of two distinct means by which poly(A) can facilitate translation, together with dramatic differences in the efficiencies with which different RNAs are ribose methylated, provides multiple opportunities for complex control during oocyte maturation and early development.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Scott Ballantyne for his helpful comments on the manuscript and other members of the Wickens lab for helpful conversations. Daniel Gallie generously provided the plasmid pT7 LUC (BglII), and Janet Mertz kindly provided the poly(A) tract containing plasmid pSD5. We thank Elsebet Lund and Christian Grimm for their assistance with two-dimensional chromatography. Paul Gershon generously provided the vaccinia virus 2'-O-methyltransferase. We are grateful to Robin Davies, Laura Vander Ploeg, and Adam Steinberg for preparing figures.
This work was supported by an NIH grant to M.W. and a Wellcome International Prize Travelling Research Fellowship to N.K.G.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Biochemistry, 433 Babcock Dr., University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706. Phone: (608) 262-8007. Fax: (608) 262-9108. E-mail: wickens{at}biochem.wisc.edu.
Present address: Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, SE-751 84, Uppsala,
Sweden.
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