erm-1 mRNA and ERM-1 protein co-translationally localize to the plasma membrane through a microtubule- and BMK-1-dependent pathway
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The Ezrin, Radixin, and Moesin (ERM) family of proteins anchors the actin cytoskeleton to the plasma membrane for the purpose of either stabilizing or altering cell shape. In Caenorhabditis elegans , ERM-1, is essential for cell polarity, signaling, intestine development, and larval viability. Interestingly, ERM-1 proteins are produced by erm-1 mRNA transcripts that concentrate at the plasma membrane in embryos. The localization of erm-1 mRNA to the plasma membrane occurs in a 3’UTR-independent, translation-dependent manner, directed by the PH-subdomain within ERM-1’s N-terminal FERM domain. This has led to the model that erm-1 mRNA, its associated ribosome, and its emerging nascent peptide are all transported together to the plasma membrane as a complex. Here, we characterize the transport mechanism. Using a microscopy approach, we observed that the localizations of erm-1 mRNA and ERM-1 protein to the plasma membrane were disrupted by nocodazole treatment, illustrating a microtubule role. Furthermore, erm-1 mRNA and ERM-1 protein localized to the plasma membrane independently of myosin and dynein motors, but dependent on the kinesin bmk-1 (bmk-1) , a plus-end-directed, Kinesin-5 family motor protein. Loss of bmk-1 did not reduce the total number of erm-1 mRNA molecules in the cell, arguing against a diffusion- and protection-based mechanism of mRNA localization. Together, these findings suggest that erm-1 mRNA is localized via an active transport pathway mediated by a plus-end-directed kinesin adapter. Interestingly, loss of bmk-1 led to diffuse localization of ERM-1 protein along the plasma membrane and reduced ERM-1 protein levels at the site of abscission, the midbody, and the midbody remnant. This suggests that ERM-1 local translation at the plasma membrane is critical for its protein’s ultimate spatial patterning in the cell.