Preventing dangerous nonsense: selection for robustness to transcriptional error in human genes.

Nonsense Mediated Decay (NMD) degrades transcripts that contain a premature STOP codon resulting from mistranscription or missplicing. However NMD's surveillance of gene expression varies in efficiency both among and within human genes. Previous work has shown that the intron content of human g...

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Main Authors: Brian P Cusack, Peter F Arndt, Laurent Duret, Hugues Roest Crollius
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-10-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3192821?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-fc8186032ae14e66aeecc45d891cd4a72020-11-25T02:30:16ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042011-10-01710e100227610.1371/journal.pgen.1002276Preventing dangerous nonsense: selection for robustness to transcriptional error in human genes.Brian P CusackPeter F ArndtLaurent DuretHugues Roest CrolliusNonsense Mediated Decay (NMD) degrades transcripts that contain a premature STOP codon resulting from mistranscription or missplicing. However NMD's surveillance of gene expression varies in efficiency both among and within human genes. Previous work has shown that the intron content of human genes is influenced by missplicing events invisible to NMD. Given the high rate of transcriptional errors in eukaryotes, we hypothesized that natural selection has promoted a dual strategy of "prevention and cure" to alleviate the problem of nonsense transcriptional errors. A prediction of this hypothesis is that NMD's inefficiency should leave a signature of "transcriptional robustness" in human gene sequences that reduces the frequency of nonsense transcriptional errors. For human genes we determined the usage of "fragile" codons, prone to mistranscription into STOP codons, relative to the usage of "robust" codons that do not generate nonsense errors. We observe that single-exon genes have evolved to become robust to mistranscription, because they show a significant tendency to avoid fragile codons relative to robust codons when compared to multi-exon genes. A similar depletion is evident in last exons of multi-exon genes. Histone genes are particularly depleted of fragile codons and thus highly robust to transcriptional errors. Finally, the protein products of single-exon genes show a strong tendency to avoid those amino acids that can only be encoded using fragile codons. Each of these observations can be attributed to NMD deficiency. Thus, in the human genome, wherever the "cure" for nonsense (i.e. NMD) is inefficient, there is increased reliance on the strategy of nonsense "prevention" (i.e. transcriptional robustness). This study shows that human genes are exposed to the deleterious influence of transcriptional errors. Moreover, it suggests that gene expression errors are an underestimated phenomenon, in molecular evolution in general and in selection for genomic robustness in particular.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3192821?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brian P Cusack
Peter F Arndt
Laurent Duret
Hugues Roest Crollius
spellingShingle Brian P Cusack
Peter F Arndt
Laurent Duret
Hugues Roest Crollius
Preventing dangerous nonsense: selection for robustness to transcriptional error in human genes.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Brian P Cusack
Peter F Arndt
Laurent Duret
Hugues Roest Crollius
author_sort Brian P Cusack
title Preventing dangerous nonsense: selection for robustness to transcriptional error in human genes.
title_short Preventing dangerous nonsense: selection for robustness to transcriptional error in human genes.
title_full Preventing dangerous nonsense: selection for robustness to transcriptional error in human genes.
title_fullStr Preventing dangerous nonsense: selection for robustness to transcriptional error in human genes.
title_full_unstemmed Preventing dangerous nonsense: selection for robustness to transcriptional error in human genes.
title_sort preventing dangerous nonsense: selection for robustness to transcriptional error in human genes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2011-10-01
description Nonsense Mediated Decay (NMD) degrades transcripts that contain a premature STOP codon resulting from mistranscription or missplicing. However NMD's surveillance of gene expression varies in efficiency both among and within human genes. Previous work has shown that the intron content of human genes is influenced by missplicing events invisible to NMD. Given the high rate of transcriptional errors in eukaryotes, we hypothesized that natural selection has promoted a dual strategy of "prevention and cure" to alleviate the problem of nonsense transcriptional errors. A prediction of this hypothesis is that NMD's inefficiency should leave a signature of "transcriptional robustness" in human gene sequences that reduces the frequency of nonsense transcriptional errors. For human genes we determined the usage of "fragile" codons, prone to mistranscription into STOP codons, relative to the usage of "robust" codons that do not generate nonsense errors. We observe that single-exon genes have evolved to become robust to mistranscription, because they show a significant tendency to avoid fragile codons relative to robust codons when compared to multi-exon genes. A similar depletion is evident in last exons of multi-exon genes. Histone genes are particularly depleted of fragile codons and thus highly robust to transcriptional errors. Finally, the protein products of single-exon genes show a strong tendency to avoid those amino acids that can only be encoded using fragile codons. Each of these observations can be attributed to NMD deficiency. Thus, in the human genome, wherever the "cure" for nonsense (i.e. NMD) is inefficient, there is increased reliance on the strategy of nonsense "prevention" (i.e. transcriptional robustness). This study shows that human genes are exposed to the deleterious influence of transcriptional errors. Moreover, it suggests that gene expression errors are an underestimated phenomenon, in molecular evolution in general and in selection for genomic robustness in particular.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3192821?pdf=render
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