Recent studies have demonstrated that cells have
evolved elaborate mechanisms to rid themselves of aberrant
proteins and transcripts. The nonsense-mediated
mRNA decay pathway (NMD) is an example of a pathway
that eliminates aberrant mRNAs. In yeast, a transcript
is recognized as aberrant and is rapidly degraded if a
specific sequence, called the DSE, is present 3′
of a premature termination codon. Results presented here
show that strains harboring the mof2-1, mof4-1,
mof5-1, and mof8-1 alleles, previously
demonstrated to increase the efficiency of programmed −1
ribosomal frameshifting, decrease the activity of the NMD
pathway. The effect of the mof2-1 allele on NMD
was characterized in more detail. Previous results demonstrated
that the wild-type MOF2 gene is identical to the
SUI1 gene. Studies on the mof2-1 allele
of the SUI1 gene indicate that in addition to
its role in recognition of the AUG codon during translation
initiation and maintenance of the appropriate reading frame
during translation elongation, the Mof2 protein plays a
role in the NMD pathway. The Mof2p/Sui1p is conserved throughout
nature and the human homolog of the Mof2p/Sui1p functions
in yeast cells to activate NMD. These results suggest that
factors involved in NMD are general modulators that act
in several aspects of translation and mRNA turnover.