Efficiencies of translation in three reading frames of unusual non-ORF sequences isolated from phage display

被引:24
作者
Goldman, E
Korus, M
Mandecki, W
机构
[1] Univ Med & Dent New Jersey, New Jersey Med Sch, Dept Microbiol, Newark, NJ 07103 USA
[2] PharmaSeq Inc, Monmouth Junct, NJ 08852 USA
关键词
E. coli protein synthesis; recoding; programmed translational frameshifts; readthrough of UGA codons;
D O I
10.1096/fasebj.14.3.603
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
An unusual nucleotide sequence, called H10, was previously isolated by biopanning with a random peptide Library on filamentous phage. The sequence encoded a peptide that bound to the growth hormone binding protein. Despite the fact that the H10 sequence can be expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion to the gene III minor coat protein of the M13 phage, the sequence contained two TGA stop codons in the zero frame. Several mutant derivatives of the H10 sequence carried not only a stop codon, but also showed frameshifts, either +1 or -1 in individual isolates, between the H10 start and the gene III sequences. In this work, we have subcloned the H10 sequence and three of its derivatives tone requiring a +1 reading frameshift for expression, one requiring a -1 reading frameshift, and one open reading frame) in gene fusions to a reporter beta-galactosidase gene. These sequences have been cloned in all three reading frames relative to the reporter. The non-open reading frame constructs gave (surprisingly) high expression of the reporter (10-40% of control vector expression levels) in two out of the three frames. A site-directed mutant of the TGA stop codon (to TTA) in the +1 shifter greatly reduced the frameshift and gave expression primarily in the zero frame. By contrast, a site-directed mutant of the TGA in the -1 shifter had little effect on the pattern of expression, and alteration of the first TGA (of two) in H10 itself paradoxically reduced expression by half. We believe these phenomena to reflect a translational recoding mechanism in which ribosomes switch reading frames or read past stop codons upon encountering a signal encoded in the nucleotide sequence of the mRNA, because both the open reading frame derivative (which has six nucleotide changes from parental H10) and the site-directed mutant of the +1 shifter, primarily expressed the reporter only in the zero frame.
引用
收藏
页码:603 / 611
页数:9
相关论文
共 39 条
[1]   SCANNING MODEL FOR TRANSLATIONAL REINITIATION IN EUBACTERIA [J].
ADHIN, MR ;
VANDUIN, J .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1990, 213 (04) :811-818
[2]   RIBOSOME GYMNASTICS - DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY 9.5, STYLE 10.0 [J].
ATKINS, JF ;
WEISS, RB ;
GESTELAND, RF .
CELL, 1990, 62 (03) :413-423
[3]  
ATKINS JF, 1991, ANNU REV GENET, V25, P201
[4]   SELENOCYSTEINE - THE 21ST AMINO-ACID [J].
BOCK, A ;
FORCHHAMMER, K ;
HEIDER, J ;
LEINFELDER, W ;
SAWERS, G ;
VEPREK, B ;
ZINONI, F .
MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, 1991, 5 (03) :515-520
[5]   RIBOSOMAL FRAMESHIFTING ON VIRAL RNAS [J].
BRIERLEY, I .
JOURNAL OF GENERAL VIROLOGY, 1995, 76 :1885-1892
[6]   Unexpected frameshifts from gene to expressed protein in a phage-displayed peptide library [J].
Cárcamo, J ;
Ravera, MW ;
Brissette, R ;
Dedova, O ;
Beasley, JR ;
Alam-Moghé, A ;
Wan, CH ;
Blume, A ;
Mandecki, W .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1998, 95 (19) :11146-11151
[7]  
CHEN GFT, 1993, J BIOL CHEM, V268, P23128
[8]   OVERPRODUCTION OF A SELENOCYSTEINE-CONTAINING POLYPEPTIDE IN ESCHERICHIA-COLI - THE FDHF GENE-PRODUCT [J].
CHEN, GT ;
AXLEY, MJ ;
HACIA, J ;
INOUYE, M .
MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, 1992, 6 (06) :781-785
[9]   Rabbit β-globin is extended beyond its UGA stop codon by multiple suppressions and translational reading gaps [J].
Chittum, HS ;
Lane, WS ;
Carlson, BA ;
Roller, PP ;
Lung, FD ;
Lee, BJ ;
Hatfield, DL .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1998, 37 (31) :10866-10870
[10]   BASE SUBSTITUTIONS IN THE TRANSFER-RNA ANTICODON ARM DO NOT DEGRADE THE ACCURACY OF READING FRAME MAINTENANCE [J].
CURRAN, JF ;
YARUS, M .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1986, 83 (17) :6538-6542