The conserved family of NXF proteins has been implicated in
the export of messenger RNAs from the nucleus. In metazoans,
NXFs heterodimerize with p15. The yeast genome encodes a single
NXF protein (Mex67p), but there are multiple nxf genes
in metazoans. Whether metazoan NXFs are functionally redundant,
or their multiplication reflects an adaptation to a greater
substrate complexity or to tissue-specific requirements has
not been established. The Drosophila genome encodes
one p15 homolog and four putative NXF proteins (NXF1 to NXF4).
Here we show that depletion of the endogenous pools of NXF1
or p15 from Drosophila cells inhibits growth and results
in a rapid and robust accumulation of polyadenylated RNAs within
the nucleus. Fluorescence in situ hybridizations show that export
of both heat-shock and non-heat-shock mRNAs, as well as
intron-containing and intronless mRNAs is inhibited. Depleting
endogenous NXF2 or NXF3 has no apparent phenotype. Moreover,
NXF4 is not expressed at detectable levels in cultured
Drosophila cells. We conclude that Dm NXF1/p15
heterodimers only (but not NXF2-NXF4) mediate the export of
the majority of mRNAs in Drosophila cells and that
the other members of the NXF family play more specialized or
different roles.