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Gene Expression

Mutational Analysis of an RNA Recognition Element That Mediates Localization of bicoid mRNA

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Pages 3788-3795 | Received 04 Feb 1998, Accepted 03 Apr 1998, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

ABSTRACT

Localization signals are RNA regulatory elements that direct the localization of mRNAs to subcellular sites. Localization signals presumably function by mediating RNA recognition events through which the mRNA becomes associated with the localization machinery. At present little is known about individual RNA recognition events, which in turn has limited progress in identifying the trans-acting binding factors involved in these events. Here we describe a detailed characterization of the RNA elements required for the RNA recognition event, event A, that initiates localization of bicoid mRNA in the Drosophila ovary. One element is a helix in which nucleotide identities are not important, suggesting that it plays a primarily structural role. Immediately adjacent to the helix is a recognition domain in which the identities of some, but not all, nucleotides are important for function. Comparison of two related but different RNAs that both support recognition event A further defines the important features of the recognition domain.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was supported by NIH grant GM42612.

We thank Eric Arn and Ricardo Mancebo for comments on the manuscript and members of the Macdonald lab for discussions.

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