Background: Eukaryotic cells have developed surveillance mechanisms to prevent the expression of aberrant transcripts. An
early surveillance checkpoint acts at the transcription site and prevents the release of mRNAs that carry processing defects.
The exosome subunit Rrp6 is required for this checkpoint in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, but it is not known whether Rrp6 also
plays a role in mRNA surveillance in higher eukaryotes.
Methodology/Principal Findings: We have developed an in vivo system to study nuclear mRNA surveillance in Drosophila
melanogaster. We have produced S2 cells that express a human b-globin gene with mutated splice sites in intron 2 (mut bglobin).
The transcripts encoded by the mut b-globin gene are normally spliced at intron 1 but retain intron 2. The levels of
the mut b-globin transcripts are much lower than those of wild type (wt) ß-globin mRNAs transcribed from the same
promoter. We have compared the expression of the mut and wt b-globin genes to investigate the mechanisms that downregulate
the production of defective mRNAs. Both wt and mut b-globin transcripts are processed at the 39, but the mut bglobin
transcripts are less efficiently cleaved than the wt transcripts. Moreover, the mut b-globin transcripts are less
efficiently released from the transcription site, as shown by FISH, and this defect is restored by depletion of Rrp6 by RNAi.
Furthermore, transcription of the mut b-globin gene is significantly impaired as revealed by ChIP experiments that measure
the association of the RNA polymerase II with the transcribed genes. We have also shown that the mut b-globin gene shows
reduced levels of H3K4me3.
Conclusions/Significance: Our results show that there are at least two surveillance responses that operate
cotranscriptionally in insect cells and probably in all metazoans. One response requires Rrp6 and results in the inefficient
release of defective mRNAs from the transcription site. The other response acts at the transcription level and reduces the
synthesis of the defective transcripts through a mechanism that involves histone modifications