Background: Messenger
RNA (mRNA) is transcribed and processed in the nucleus of eucaryotic
cells and then exported to the cytoplasm through nuclear pores. It
is not known whether the movement of mRNA from its site of synthesis
to the nuclear pore is directed or random. Directed movement would
suggest that there is an energy-requiring step in addition to the
step required for active transport through the pore, whereas random
movement would indicate that mRNAs can make their way to the nuclear
envelope by diffusion.
Results: We devised
a method to visualize movement of endogenous polymerase II transcripts
in the nuclei of living cells. Oligo(dT) labeled with chemically masked
(caged) fluorescein was allowed to penetrate cells and hybridize to
nuclear poly(A) RNA. Laser spot photolysis then uncaged the oligo(dT)
at a given intranuclear site and the resultant fluorescent, hybridized
oligo(dT) was tracked using high-speed imaging microscopy. Poly(A)
RNA moved away from the uncaging spot in all directions with a mean
square displacement that varied linearly with time, and the same apparent
diffusion coefficient was measured for the movement at both 37°C
and 23°C. These properties are characteristic of a random diffusive
process. High resolution three-dimensional imaging of live cells containing
both Hoechst-labeled chromosomes and uncaged oligo(dT) showed that,
excluding nucleoli, the poly(A) RNA could access most, if not all,
of the non-chromosomal space in the nucleus.
Conclusions:
Poly(A) RNA can move freely throughout the interchromatin space of
the nucleus with properties characteristic of diffusion.