Mistakes in translation: Reflections on mechanism.

Mistakes in translation of messenger RNA into protein are clearly a detriment to the recombinant production of pure proteins for biophysical study or the biopharmaceutical market. However, they may also provide insight into mechanistic details of the translation process. Mistakes often involve the s...

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Main Authors: Yizhou Liu, Joshua S Sharp, Duc H-T Do, Richard A Kahn, Harald Schwalbe, Florian Buhr, James H Prestegard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5491249?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-8f2e89e1696f43e3b12d7cabae643f852020-11-25T02:23:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01126e018056610.1371/journal.pone.0180566Mistakes in translation: Reflections on mechanism.Yizhou LiuJoshua S SharpDuc H-T DoRichard A KahnHarald SchwalbeFlorian BuhrJames H PrestegardMistakes in translation of messenger RNA into protein are clearly a detriment to the recombinant production of pure proteins for biophysical study or the biopharmaceutical market. However, they may also provide insight into mechanistic details of the translation process. Mistakes often involve the substitution of an amino acid having an abundant codon for one having a rare codon, differing by substitution of a G base by an A base, as in the case of substitution of a lysine (AAA) for arginine (AGA). In these cases one expects the substitution frequency to depend on the relative abundances of the respective tRNAs, and thus, one might expect frequencies to be similar for all sites having the same rare codon. Here we demonstrate that, for the ADP-ribosylation factor from yeast expressed in E. coli, lysine for arginine substitutions frequencies are not the same at the 9 sites containing a rare arginine codon; mis-incorporation frequencies instead vary from less than 1 to 16%. We suggest that the context in which the codons occur (clustering of rare sites) may be responsible for the variation. The method employed to determine the frequency of mis-incorporation involves a novel mass spectrometric analysis of the products from the parallel expression of wild type and codon-optimized genes in 15N and 14N enriched media, respectively. The high sensitivity and low material requirements of the method make this a promising technology for the collection of data relevant to other mis-incorporations. The additional data could be of value in refining models for the ribosomal translation elongation process.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5491249?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yizhou Liu
Joshua S Sharp
Duc H-T Do
Richard A Kahn
Harald Schwalbe
Florian Buhr
James H Prestegard
spellingShingle Yizhou Liu
Joshua S Sharp
Duc H-T Do
Richard A Kahn
Harald Schwalbe
Florian Buhr
James H Prestegard
Mistakes in translation: Reflections on mechanism.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Yizhou Liu
Joshua S Sharp
Duc H-T Do
Richard A Kahn
Harald Schwalbe
Florian Buhr
James H Prestegard
author_sort Yizhou Liu
title Mistakes in translation: Reflections on mechanism.
title_short Mistakes in translation: Reflections on mechanism.
title_full Mistakes in translation: Reflections on mechanism.
title_fullStr Mistakes in translation: Reflections on mechanism.
title_full_unstemmed Mistakes in translation: Reflections on mechanism.
title_sort mistakes in translation: reflections on mechanism.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Mistakes in translation of messenger RNA into protein are clearly a detriment to the recombinant production of pure proteins for biophysical study or the biopharmaceutical market. However, they may also provide insight into mechanistic details of the translation process. Mistakes often involve the substitution of an amino acid having an abundant codon for one having a rare codon, differing by substitution of a G base by an A base, as in the case of substitution of a lysine (AAA) for arginine (AGA). In these cases one expects the substitution frequency to depend on the relative abundances of the respective tRNAs, and thus, one might expect frequencies to be similar for all sites having the same rare codon. Here we demonstrate that, for the ADP-ribosylation factor from yeast expressed in E. coli, lysine for arginine substitutions frequencies are not the same at the 9 sites containing a rare arginine codon; mis-incorporation frequencies instead vary from less than 1 to 16%. We suggest that the context in which the codons occur (clustering of rare sites) may be responsible for the variation. The method employed to determine the frequency of mis-incorporation involves a novel mass spectrometric analysis of the products from the parallel expression of wild type and codon-optimized genes in 15N and 14N enriched media, respectively. The high sensitivity and low material requirements of the method make this a promising technology for the collection of data relevant to other mis-incorporations. The additional data could be of value in refining models for the ribosomal translation elongation process.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5491249?pdf=render
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