A novel translational control mechanism involving RNA structures within coding sequences
- Jennifer Jungfleisch1,
- Danny D. Nedialkova2,
- Ivan Dotu3,
- Katherine E. Sloan4,
- Neus Martinez-Bosch3,
- Lukas Brüning4,
- Emanuele Raineri5,
- Pilar Navarro3,
- Markus T. Bohnsack4,
- Sebastian A. Leidel2 and
- Juana Diez1,6
- 1 University Pompeu Fabra;
- 2 Max Planck Insitute for Molecular Biomedicine;
- 3 Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute;
- 4 Goettingen University;
- 5 Centro Nacional de Analisis Genomica
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: juana.diez{at}upf.edu
Abstract
The impact of RNA structures in coding sequences (CDS) within mRNAs is poorly understood. Here we identify a novel and highly conserved mechanism of translational control involving RNA structures within coding sequences and the DEAD-box helicase Dhh1. Using yeast genetics and genome-wide ribosome profiling analyses we show that this mechanism, initially derived from studies of the Brome Mosaic virus RNA genome, extends to yeast and human mRNAs highly enriched in membrane and secreted proteins. All Dhh1-dependent mRNAs, viral and cellular, share key common features. First, they contain long and highly structured CDSs, including a region located around nucleotide 70 after the translation initiation site, second, they are directly bound by Dhh1 with a specific binding distribution and third, complementary experimental approaches suggest that they are activated by Dhh1 at the translation initiation step. Our results show that ribosome translocation is not the only unwinding force of CDS and uncover a novel layer of translational control that involves RNA helicases and RNA folding within CDS providing novel opportunities for regulation of membrane and secretome proteins.
- Received April 26, 2016.
- Accepted November 3, 2016.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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