DNA template dependent accuracy variation of nucleotide selection in transcription.

It has been commonly assumed that the effect of erroneous transcription of DNA genes into messenger RNAs on peptide sequence errors are masked by much more frequent errors of mRNA translation to protein. We present a theoretical model of transcriptional accuracy. It uses experimentally estimated sta...

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Main Authors: Harriet Mellenius, Måns Ehrenberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119588
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spelling doaj-0f11a4e045a34baf99cbbf8a51092f982021-03-03T20:07:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01103e011958810.1371/journal.pone.0119588DNA template dependent accuracy variation of nucleotide selection in transcription.Harriet MelleniusMåns EhrenbergIt has been commonly assumed that the effect of erroneous transcription of DNA genes into messenger RNAs on peptide sequence errors are masked by much more frequent errors of mRNA translation to protein. We present a theoretical model of transcriptional accuracy. It uses experimentally estimated standard free energies of double-stranded DNA and RNA/DNA hybrids and predicts a DNA template dependent transcriptional accuracy variation spanning several orders of magnitude. The model also identifies high-error as well a high-accuracy transcription motifs. The source of the large accuracy span is the context dependent variation of the stacking free energy of pairs of correct and incorrect base pairs in the ever moving transcription bubble. Our model predictions have direct experimental support from recent single molecule based identifications of transcriptional errors in the C. elegans transcriptome. Our conclusions challenge the general view that amino acid substitution errors in proteins are mainly caused by translational errors. It suggests instead that transcriptional error hotspots are the dominating source of peptide sequence errors in some DNA template contexts, while mRNA translation is the major cause of protein errors in other contexts.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119588
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Harriet Mellenius
Måns Ehrenberg
spellingShingle Harriet Mellenius
Måns Ehrenberg
DNA template dependent accuracy variation of nucleotide selection in transcription.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Harriet Mellenius
Måns Ehrenberg
author_sort Harriet Mellenius
title DNA template dependent accuracy variation of nucleotide selection in transcription.
title_short DNA template dependent accuracy variation of nucleotide selection in transcription.
title_full DNA template dependent accuracy variation of nucleotide selection in transcription.
title_fullStr DNA template dependent accuracy variation of nucleotide selection in transcription.
title_full_unstemmed DNA template dependent accuracy variation of nucleotide selection in transcription.
title_sort dna template dependent accuracy variation of nucleotide selection in transcription.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description It has been commonly assumed that the effect of erroneous transcription of DNA genes into messenger RNAs on peptide sequence errors are masked by much more frequent errors of mRNA translation to protein. We present a theoretical model of transcriptional accuracy. It uses experimentally estimated standard free energies of double-stranded DNA and RNA/DNA hybrids and predicts a DNA template dependent transcriptional accuracy variation spanning several orders of magnitude. The model also identifies high-error as well a high-accuracy transcription motifs. The source of the large accuracy span is the context dependent variation of the stacking free energy of pairs of correct and incorrect base pairs in the ever moving transcription bubble. Our model predictions have direct experimental support from recent single molecule based identifications of transcriptional errors in the C. elegans transcriptome. Our conclusions challenge the general view that amino acid substitution errors in proteins are mainly caused by translational errors. It suggests instead that transcriptional error hotspots are the dominating source of peptide sequence errors in some DNA template contexts, while mRNA translation is the major cause of protein errors in other contexts.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119588
work_keys_str_mv AT harrietmellenius dnatemplatedependentaccuracyvariationofnucleotideselectionintranscription
AT mansehrenberg dnatemplatedependentaccuracyvariationofnucleotideselectionintranscription
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