A nascent polypeptide domain that can regulate translation elongation
- *Department of Environmental and Biomolecular Systems, OGI School of Science & Engineering, Oregon Health & Science University, Beaverton, OR 97006-8921; and ‡Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239-3098
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Communicated by Charles Yanofsky, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, January 23, 2004 (received for review December 16, 2003)
Abstract
The evolutionarily conserved fungal arginine attenuator peptide (AAP), as a nascent peptide, stalls the translating ribosome in response to the presence of a high concentration of the amino acid arginine. Here we examine whether the AAP maintains regulatory function in fungal, plant, and animal cell-free translation systems when placed as a domain near the N terminus or internally within a large polypeptide. Pulse–chase analyses of the radiolabeled polypeptides synthesized in these systems indicated that wild-type AAP functions at either position to stall polypeptide synthesis in response to arginine. Toeprint analyses performed to map the positions of stalled ribosomes on transcripts introduced into the fungal system revealed that ribosome stalling required translation of the AAP coding sequence. The positions of the stalled ribosomes were consistent with the sizes of the radiolabeled polypeptide intermediates. These findings demonstrate that an internal polypeptide domain in a nascent chain can regulate eukaryotic translational elongation in response to a small molecule. Apparently the peptide-sensing features are conserved in fungal, plant, and animal ribosomes. These data provide precedents for translational strategies that would allow domains within nascent polypeptide chains to modulate gene expression.
Footnotes
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↵ § To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: msachs{at}ebs.ogi.edu.
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↵ † Present address: Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239-3098.
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Abbreviations: uORF, upstream ORF; AAP, Arg attenuator peptide; LUC, luciferase; CTAB, cetyltrimethylammonium bromide.
- Copyright © 2004, The National Academy of Sciences










