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Mistranslating tRNA identifies a deleterious S213P mutation in theSaccharomyces cerevisiaeeco1-1allele
Author(s) -
Yanrui Zhu,
Matthew D. Berg,
Phoebe Yang,
Raphaël LollKrippleber,
Grant W. Brown,
Christopher J. Brandl
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
biochemistry and cell biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.843
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1208-6002
pISSN - 0829-8211
DOI - 10.1139/bcb-2020-0151
Subject(s) - genetics , biology , serine , transfer rna , amino acid , genetic code , saccharomyces cerevisiae , allele , mutation , translation (biology) , acetyltransferase , gene , acetylation , messenger rna , rna , phosphorylation
Mistranslation occurs when an amino acid not specified by the standard genetic code is incorporated during translation. Since the ribosome does not read the amino acid, tRNA variants aminoacylated with a non-cognate amino acid or containing a non-cognate anticodon dramatically increase the frequency of mistranslation. In a systematic genetic analysis, we identified a suppression interaction between tRNA Ser UGG, G26A , which mistranslates proline codons by inserting serine, and eco1-1 , a temperature sensitive allele of the gene encoding an acetyltransferase required for sister chromatid cohesion. The suppression was partial, with a tRNA that inserts alanine at proline codons and not apparent for a tRNA that inserts serine at arginine codons. Sequencing of the eco1-1 allele revealed a mutation that would convert the highly conserved serine 213 within β7 of the GCN5-related N -acetyltransferase core to proline. Mutation of P213 in eco1-1 back to the wild-type serine restored the function of the enzyme at elevated temperatures. Our results indicate the utility of mistranslating tRNA variants to identify functionally relevant mutations and identify eco1 as a reporter for mistranslation. We propose that mistranslation could be used as a tool to treat genetic disease.

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