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Conserved non-AUG uORFs revealed by a novel regression analysis of ribosome profiling data
Author(s) -
Pieter Spealman,
Armaghan W. Naik,
Gemma E. May,
Scott Kuersten,
Lindsay Freeberg,
Robert F. Murphy,
C. Joel McManus
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
genome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.556
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1549-5469
pISSN - 1088-9051
DOI - 10.1101/gr.221507.117
Subject(s) - biology , ribosome profiling , start codon , open reading frame , computational biology , five prime untranslated region , genetics , eukaryotic translation , gene , translation (biology) , messenger rna , peptide sequence
Upstream open reading frames (uORFs), located in transcript leaders (5′ UTRs), are potent cis -acting regulators of translation and mRNA turnover. Recent genome-wide ribosome profiling studies suggest that thousands of uORFs initiate with non-AUG start codons. Although intriguing, these non-AUG uORF predictions have been made without statistical control or validation; thus, the importance of these elements remains to be demonstrated. To address this, we took a comparative genomics approach to study AUG and non-AUG uORFs. We mapped transcription leaders in multiple Saccharomyces yeast species and applied a novel machine learning algorithm (uORF-seqr) to ribosome profiling data to identify statistically significant uORFs. We found that AUG and non-AUG uORFs are both frequently found in Saccharomyces yeasts. Although most non-AUG uORFs are found in only one species, hundreds have either conserved sequence or position within Saccharomyces . uORFs initiating with UUG are particularly common and are shared between species at rates similar to that of AUG uORFs. However, non-AUG uORFs are translated less efficiently than AUG-uORFs and are less subject to removal via alternative transcription initiation under normal growth conditions. These results suggest that a subset of non-AUG uORFs may play important roles in regulating gene expression.

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