RNA interference (RNAi) is an evolutionarily conserved eukaryotic
adaptive response that leads to the specific degradation of
target mRNA species in response to cellular exposure to homologous
double-stranded RNA molecules. Here, we have analyzed the
subcellular location at which RNA degradation occurs in human
cells exposed to double-stranded short interfering RNAs. To
unequivocally determine whether a given mRNA is subject to
degradation in the cytoplasm, the nucleus, or both, we have
used the retroviral Rev/RRE system to control whether target
mRNAs remain sequestered in the nucleus or are exported to the
cytoplasm. In the absence of export, we found that the nuclear
level of the RRE-containing target mRNA was not affected by
activation of RNAi. In contrast, when nuclear export was induced
by expression of Rev, cytoplasmic target mRNAs were effectively
and specifically degraded by RNAi. Curiously, when the target
mRNA molecule was undergoing active export from the nucleus,
induction of RNAi also resulted in a reproducible approximately
twofold drop in the level of target mRNA present in the nuclear
RNA fraction. As this same mRNA was entirely resistant to RNAi
when sequestered in the nucleus, this result suggests that RNAi
is able to induce degradation of target mRNAs not only in the
cytoplasm but also during the process of nuclear mRNA export.
Truly nucleoplasmic mRNAs or pre-mRNAs are, in contrast, resistant
to RNAi.