We identified a temperature-sensitive allele of small
bristles (sbr), the Drosophila ortholog
of human TAP/NXF-1 and yeast Mex67, in a screen for
mutants defective in mRNA export. We show that sbr
is essential for the nuclear export of all mRNAs tested in a
wide range of tissues and times in development. High resolution
and sensitive in situ hybridization detect the rapid accumulation
of individual mRNA species in sbr mutant nuclei in
particles that are distinct from nascent transcript foci and
resemble wild-type export intermediates. The particles become
more numerous and intense with increasing time at the restrictive
temperature and are exported very rapidly after shifting back
to the permissive temperature. The mRNA export block is not
due indirectly to a defect in splicing, nuclear protein import,
or aberrant nuclear ultrastructure, suggesting that in sbr
mutants, mRNA is competent for export but fails to dock or
translocate through NPCs. We conclude that NXF-1 is an essential
ubiquitous export factor for all mRNAs throughout development
in higher eukaryotes.