termination codon
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Biomedicines ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 141
Author(s):  
Fabrice Lejeune

Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is both a mechanism for rapidly eliminating mRNAs carrying a premature termination codon and a pathway that regulates many genes. This implies that NMD must be subject to regulation in order to allow, under certain physiological conditions, the expression of genes that are normally repressed by NMD. Therapeutically, it might be interesting to express certain NMD-repressed genes or to allow the synthesis of functional truncated proteins. Developing such approaches will require a good understanding of NMD regulation. This review describes the different levels of this regulation in human cells.


2022 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 656
Author(s):  
Marta Vallverdú-Prats ◽  
Ramon Brugada ◽  
Mireia Alcalde

Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy is a heritable heart disease associated with desmosomal mutations, especially premature termination codon (PTC) variants. It is known that PTC triggers the nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) mechanism. It is also accepted that PTC in the last exon escapes NMD; however, the mechanisms involving NMD escaping in 5′-PTC, such as reinitiation of translation, are less known. The main objective of the present study is to evaluate the likelihood that desmosomal genes carrying 5′-PTC will trigger reinitiation. HL1 cell lines were edited by CRISPR/Cas9 to generate isogenic clones carrying 5′-PTC for each of the five desmosomal genes. The genomic context of the ATG in-frame in the 5′ region of desmosomal genes was evaluated by in silico predictions. The expression levels of the edited genes were assessed by Western blot and real-time PCR. Our results indicate that the 5′-PTC in PKP2, DSG2 and DSC2 acts as a null allele with no expression, whereas in the DSP and JUP gene, N-truncated protein is expressed. In concordance with this, the genomic context of the 5′-region of DSP and JUP presents an ATG in-frame with an optimal context for the reinitiation of translation. Thus, 5′-PTC triggers NMD in the PKP2, DSG2* and DSC2 genes, whereas it may escape NMD through the reinitiation of the translation in DSP and JUP genes, with no major effects on ACM-related gene expression.


2022 ◽  
pp. 101546
Author(s):  
Alireza Baradaran-Heravi ◽  
Claudia C. Bauer ◽  
Isabelle B. Pickles ◽  
Sara Hosseini-Farahabadi ◽  
Aruna D. Balgi ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maya Hiltpold ◽  
Fredi Janett ◽  
Xena Marie Mapel ◽  
Naveen Kumar Kadri ◽  
Zih-Hua Fang ◽  
...  

Background: Semen quality and male fertility are monitored in artificial insemination bulls to ensure high insemination success rates. Only ejaculates that fulfill minimum quality requirements are processed and eventually used for artificial inseminations. We examined 70,990 ejaculates from 1343 Brown Swiss bulls to identify bulls from which all ejaculates were rejected due to low semen quality. This procedure identified a bull that produced twelve ejaculates with an aberrantly low number of sperm (0.2±0.2 x 109 sperm per ml) which were mostly immotile due to multiple morphological abnormalities. Results: The genome of the bull was sequenced at 12-fold coverage to investigate a suspected genetic cause. Comparing the sequence variant genotypes of the bull with those from 397 fertile bulls revealed a 1-bp deletion in the coding sequence of QRICH2 encoding glutamine rich 2 as a compelling candidate causal variant. The 1-bp deletion causes a frameshift in translation and induces a premature termination codon (ENSBTAP00000018337.1:p.Cys1644AlafsTer52). The analysis of testis transcriptomes from 76 bulls showed that the transcript with the premature termination codon is subjected to nonsense-mediated mRNA decay. The 1-bp deletion resides on a 675 kb haplotype spanning 181 SNPs from the Illumina BovineHD Bead chip. The haplotype segregates at a frequency of 5% in the Brown Swiss cattle population. This analysis also identified another bull that carried the 1-bp deletion in the homozygous state. Semen analyses from the second bull confirmed low sperm concentration and immotile sperm with multiple morphological abnormalities primarily affecting the sperm flagellum and, to a lesser extent, the sperm head. Conclusions: A recessive loss-of-function allele of bovine QRICH2 likely causes low sperm concentration and immotile sperm with multiple morphological abnormalities. Routine sperm analyses unambiguously identify homozygous bulls. A direct gene test can be implemented to monitor the frequency of the undesired allele in cattle populations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (21) ◽  
pp. 11933
Author(s):  
Ivana Pibiri

Nonsense mutations are the result of single nucleotide substitutions in the DNA that change a sense codon (coding for an amino acid) to a nonsense or premature termination codon (PTC) within the coding region of the mRNA [...]


2021 ◽  
Vol 141 (10) ◽  
pp. S177
Author(s):  
J. Peh ◽  
T. Miyauchi ◽  
M. Takeda ◽  
S. Suzuki ◽  
H. Ujiie ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Vincent Chu ◽  
Qing Feng ◽  
Yang Lim ◽  
Sichen Shao

The translation of mRNAs that contain a premature termination codon (PTC) generates truncated proteins that may have toxic dominant negative effects. Nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) is an mRNA surveillance pathway that degrades PTC-containing mRNAs to limit the production of truncated proteins. NMD activation requires a ribosome terminating translation at a PTC, but what happens to the polypeptides synthesized during the translation cycle needed to activate NMD is incompletely understood. Here, by establishing reporter systems that encode the same polypeptide sequence before a normal or premature termination codon, we show that termination of protein synthesis at a PTC is sufficient to selectively destabilize polypeptides in mammalian cells. Proteasome inhibition specifically rescues the levels of nascent polypeptides produced from PTC-containing mRNAs within an hour, but also disrupts mRNA homeostasis within a few hours. PTC-terminated polypeptide destabilization is also alleviated by depleting the central NMD factor UPF1 or SMG1, the kinase that phosphorylates UPF1 to activate NMD, but not by inhibiting SMG1 kinase activity. Our results suggest that polypeptide degradation is linked to PTC recognition in mammalian cells and clarify a framework to investigate these mechanisms.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karole N D'Orazio ◽  
Laura N. Lessen ◽  
Anthony J. Veltri ◽  
Zachary Neiman ◽  
Miguel E. Pacheco ◽  
...  

The decay of messenger RNA with a premature termination codon (PTC) by nonsense mediated decay (NMD) is an important regulatory pathway for eukaryotes and an essential pathway in mammals. NMD is typically triggered by the ribosome terminating at a stop codon that is aberrantly distant from the poly-A tail. Here, we use a fluorescence screen to identify factors involved in NMD in S. cerevisiae . In addition to the known NMD factors, including the entire UPF family (UPF1, UPF2 and UPF3), as well as NMD4 and EBS1 , we identify factors known to function in post-termination recycling and characterize their contribution to NMD. We then use a series of modified reporter constructs that block both elongating and scanning ribosomes downstream of stop codons and demonstrate that a deficiency in recycling of 80S ribosomes or 40S subunits stabilizes NMD substrates. These observations in S. cerevisiae expand on recently reported data in mammals indicating that the 60S recycling factor ABCE1 is important for NMD (1,2) by showing that increased activities of both elongating and scanning ribosomes (80S or 40S) in the 3’UTR correlate with a loss of NMD.


Biomolecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 1006
Author(s):  
Mirco Schilff ◽  
Yelena Sargsyan ◽  
Julia Hofhuis ◽  
Sven Thoms

Premature termination codon (PTC) mutations account for approximately 10% of pathogenic variants in monogenic diseases. Stimulation of translational readthrough, also known as stop codon suppression, using translational readthrough-inducing drugs (TRIDs) may serve as a possible therapeutic strategy for the treatment of genetic PTC diseases. One important parameter governing readthrough is the stop codon context (SCC) – the stop codon itself and the nucleotides in the vicinity of the stop codon on the mRNA. However, the quantitative influence of the SCC on treatment outcome and on appropriate drug concentrations are largely unknown. Here, we analyze the readthrough-stimulatory effect of various readthrough-inducing drugs on the SCCs of five common premature termination codon mutations of PEX5 in a sensitive dual reporter system. Mutations in PEX5, encoding the peroxisomal targeting signal 1 receptor, can cause peroxisomal biogenesis disorders of the Zellweger spectrum. We show that the stop context has a strong influence on the levels of readthrough stimulation and impacts the choice of the most effective drug and its concentration. These results highlight potential advantages and the personalized medicine nature of an SCC-based strategy in the therapy of rare diseases.


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