The nucleolus is an essential subnuclear organelle that performs central regulatory roles in cellular metabolism, epigenetic programming, and stress signaling. In mammals, nucleoli are disassembled and rebuilt de novo with each cell division, through an elaborate assembly mechanism that has long eluded molecular characterization. This assembly process is spatiotemporally controlled by a long noncoding RNA termed the 47S pre-ribosomal RNA (47S pre-rRNA), which initiates nucleolar assembly at the site of its transcription, and for which continued expression is required to maintain nucleolar integrity. Yet, while the 47S’ roles in nucleating and scaffolding nucleolar architecture are well established cytologically (they were first observed nearly a century ago), the structural elements on the 47S that enable these architectural functions remain unknown. I hypothesize that an RNA domain within the 47S, termed the 5´–External Transcribed Spacer (5´–ETS), harbors the long-sought structural scaffolds of the nucleolus. To test this, I am implementing a live-cell reporter assay that will monitor, in real time, if transcripts derived from the 5´–ETS drive nucleolar localization and architecture. My approach leverages recent advancements in artificial gene synthesis and live-cell RNA imaging. A novel drug-inducible promoter will enable me to temporally control expression of 5´–ETS sequence variants in live cells. I will monitor the kinetics and efficiency with which these transcripts localize into the nucleolus by two-color live cell imaging, using the newly discovered fluorescent RNA aptamer RhoBAST, and a fluorescently tagged nucleolar marker protein. To design our negative controls, I implemented a bioinformatic pipeline that generates scrambles of long, low-complexity RNA sequences—ablating primary structure but preserving dinucleotide content. This allows us to investigate whether nucleotide composition or sequence affects nucleolar formation. We anticipate that this powerful system will set the stage for detailed molecular characterization studies, revealing the long-elusive molecular interactions that control nucleolar architecture in health and disease.