Abstract
The mRNAs for the heavy and light subunits of the iron-storage protein ferritin occur in cells largely as inactive ribonucleoprotein particles, which are recruited for translation when iron enters the cell. Cytoplasmic extracts from rat tissues and hepatoma cells were shown by an electrophoretic separation procedure to form RNA-protein complexes involving a highly conserved sequence in the 5' untranslated region of both ferritin heavy- and light-subunit mRNAs. The pattern of complex formation was affected by pretreatment of rats or cells with iron. Crosslinking by UV irradiation showed that the complexes contained an 87-kDa protein interacting with the conserved sequence of the ferritin mRNA. We propose that intracellular iron levels regulate ferritin synthesis by causing changes in specific protein binding to the conserved sequence in the ferritin heavy- and light-subunit mRNAs.