Human Upf1 protein (p), a group 1 RNA helicase, has
recently been shown to function in nonsense-mediated mRNA
decay (NMD) in mammalian cells. Here, we demonstrate that
the estimated 3 × 106 copies of hUpf1p per
exponentially growing HeLa cell are essentially equally
distributed among polysomal, subpolysomal, and ribosome-free
fractions. We also demonstrate that hUpf1p binds RNA and is a
phosphoprotein harboring phosphoserine and phosphothreonine. hUpf1p
is phosphorylated to the highest extent when polysome-associated
and to the lowest extent when ribosome free. We find that
serum-induced phosphorylation of hUpf1p is inhibited by
wortmannin at a concentration that selectively inhibits
PI 3-kinase related kinases and, to a lesser extent, by
rapamycin. These and other data suggest that phosphorylation
is mediated by a wortmannin-sensitive and rapamycin-sensitive
PI 3-kinase-related kinase signaling pathway. Comparisons are
made of hUpf1p to Upf1p and SMG-2, which are the orthologs
to hUpf1p in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Caenorhabditis
elegans, respectively.