Masking, unmasking, and regulated polyadenylation cooperate in the translational control of a dormant mRNA in mouse oocytes

  1. André Stutz1,
  2. Béatrice Conne,
  3. Joachim Huarte,
  4. Pascale Gubler,
  5. Valérie Völkel,
  6. Pierre Flandin, and
  7. Jean-Dominique Vassalli
  1. Department of Morphology, University of Geneva Medical School, 1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland

Abstract

The mechanisms responsible for translational silencing of certain mRNAs in growing oocytes, and for their awakening during meiotic maturation, are not completely elucidated. We show that binding of a ∼80-kD protein to a UA-rich element in the 3′ UTR of tissue-type plasminogen activator mRNA, a mouse oocyte mRNA that is translated during meiotic maturation, silences the mRNA in primary oocytes. Translation can be triggered by injecting a competitor transcript that displaces this silencing factor, without elongation of a pre-existing short poly(A) tail, the presence of which is mandatory. During meiotic maturation, cytoplasmic polyadenylation is necessary to maintain a poly(A) tail, but the determining event for translational activation appears to be the modification or displacement of the silencing factor.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • 1 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL Andre.stutz{at}medecine.unige.ch; FAX 41-22 70 25 260.

    • Received December 9, 1997.
    • Accepted May 26, 1998.
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