Publication | Closed Access
Functional analysis of the microtubule-interacting transcriptome
74
Citations
56
References
2011
Year
EngineeringRna LocalizationTranscriptomics TechnologyCytoskeletonGene Regulatory NetworkFunctional AnalysisTranscriptional RegulationRna ProcessingCell DivisionRna BiologyGene ExpressionSpindle MicrotubulesFunctional GenomicsCell BiologyTranscription RegulationBiologyGene RegulationSpindle FormationSystems BiologyMedicine
RNA localization is an important mechanism for achieving precise control of posttranscriptional gene expression. Previously, we demonstrated that a subset of cellular mRNAs copurify with mitotic microtubules in egg extracts of Xenopus laevis. Due to limited genomic sequence information available for X. laevis, we used RNA-seq to comprehensively identify the microtubule-interacting transcriptome of the related frog Xenopus tropicalis. We identified ~450 mRNAs that showed significant enrichment on microtubules (MT-RNAs). In addition, we demonstrated that the MT-RNAs incenp, xrhamm, and tpx2 associate with spindle microtubules in vivo. MT-RNAs are enriched with transcripts associated with cell division, spindle formation, and chromosome function, demonstrating an overrepresentation of genes involved in mitotic regulation. To test whether uncharacterized MT-RNAs have a functional role in mitosis, we performed RNA interference and discovered that several MT-RNAs are required for normal spindle pole organization and γ-tubulin distribution. Together, these data demonstrate that microtubule association is one mechanism for compartmentalizing functionally related mRNAs within the nucleocytoplasmic space of mitotic cells and suggest that MT-RNAs are likely to contribute to spindle-localized mitotic translation.
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