RNA export from the nucleus is thought to be linked
to proper processing and packaging into ribonucleoprotein
protein complexes. A system to observe mRNA nuclear export
in living yeast cells was developed by fusing the U1A RNA-binding
protein to the green fluorescent protein to follow specific
mRNAs with U1A hairpins engineered into them. RNAs encoding
Rpl25, Pgk1, and Ssa4 were examined for the effects of
3′ UTRs, introns, RNA processing factors, nucleoporins,
and transport factors on their export. All accumulated
in the nucleus in mutants affecting components of the nuclear
export machinery and certain nucleoporins. However, under
conditions of stress, PGK1 and RPL25
transcripts accumulate in the nucleus whereas SSA4
RNA is exported. Moreover, when export is blocked, only
RNAs containing the ASH1 3′ UTR accumulated
in the nucleolus. Mutations in the splicing machinery selectively
blocked export of only intron-containing RNAs. Mutations
in RNA14, RNA15, and PAP1, which
encode factors important for 3′ processing, also
blocked export of all RNAs, including SSA4, thereby
linking export to the process of polyadenlyation. Taken
together, these data graphically display the connections
between mRNA processing and nuclear export.