Most Upf1-associated mRNAs have short poly(A) tails, lack a premature termination codon and are targeted by NMD
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Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a conserved eukaryotic surveillance pathway known to degrade mRNAs containing premature termination codons (PTCs). A distance long enough between the stop codon and the poly(A)-binding protein (Pab1) is required for mRNA recognition by the NMD factors Upf1, Upf2 and Upf3. Using Nanopore direct RNA sequencing, we show that PTC-containing NMD targets account for only 6% of Upf1-associated RNA and have long poly(A) tails, indicating that Upf1-binding occurs prior to RNA deadenylation. Conversely, most Upf1-associated mRNAs have short poly(A) tails, lack a PTC and correspond to highly expressed genes. A short poly(A) tail is thus an important feature of NMD targets, redefining the scope of this RNA degradation pathway. We propose a model in which loss of Pab1-binding to short poly(A)-tailed mRNAs impairs translation termination and dictates the recruitment of the NMD machinery, uncovering a hitherto unknown role of NMD in the degradation of these transcripts.