The rules of traffic

A general ‘code’ which is independent of cell type controls how molecules of RNA are shuttled to their final destination.

Molecules of RNA (yellow dots) are sent to specific locations in neurons (purple). Image credit: Goering et al. (CC BY 4.0)

The information required to build a specific protein is encoded into molecules of RNA which are often trafficked to precise locations in a cell. These journeys require a complex molecular machinery to be assembled and set in motion so that the RNA can be transported along dynamic ‘roads’ called microtubules. The details of this mechanism are known only for a handful of RNAs in a few cell types; for example, scientists have uncovered the signals presiding over the shuttling of certain RNAs to the axon, the long and thin projection that a neuron uses to communicate. Yet these RNAs are also present in cells that lack axons. Whether the molecular processes which preside over RNA movement apply across cell types has so far remained unclear.

To investigate this question, Goering et al. tracked the location of RNA molecules in two types of polarized mouse cells: neurons which feature an axon, and ‘epithelial’ cells which line the intestine. The experiments revealed that the signals sending RNAs to the axons also directed the molecules towards the bottom pole of epithelial cells. In both cases, the RNAs travelled towards the extremity of the growing, “plus” end of the microtubules.

Overall, this work suggests that RNA transport mechanisms should not be thought of as leading to a particular location in the cell; instead, they may be following more generalisable instructions. This knowledge could allow scientists to predict where a particular RNA will be sent across cell types based on data from one cell population. It could also aid the development of synthetic RNAs that target specific parts of the cell, offering greater control over their actions.