GNN Codon Adjacency Tunes Protein Translation

Author:

Sun Joyce1,Hwang Pete1ORCID,Sakkas Eric D.1ORCID,Zhou Yancheng1,Perez Luis1,Dave Ishani1,Kwon Jack B.1ORCID,McMahon Audrey E.1,Wichman Mia1,Raval Mitsu1,Scopino Kristen1ORCID,Krizanc Daniel23,Thayer Kelly M.234ORCID,Weir Michael P.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT 06459, USA

2. Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT 06459, USA

3. College of Integrative Sciences, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT 06459, USA

4. Department of Chemistry, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT 06459, USA

Abstract

The central dogma treats the ribosome as a molecular machine that reads one mRNA codon at a time as it adds each amino acid to its growing peptide chain. However, this and previous studies suggest that ribosomes actually perceive pairs of adjacent codons as they take three-nucleotide steps along the mRNA. We examined GNN codons, which we find are surprisingly overrepresented in eukaryote protein-coding open reading frames (ORFs), especially immediately after NNU codons. Ribosome profiling experiments in yeast revealed that ribosomes with NNU at their aminoacyl (A) site have particularly elevated densities when NNU is immediately followed (3′) by a GNN codon, indicating slower mRNA threading of the NNU codon from the ribosome’s A to peptidyl (P) sites. Moreover, if the assessment was limited to ribosomes that have only recently arrived at the next codon, by examining 21-nucleotide ribosome footprints (21-nt RFPs), elevated densities were observed for multiple codon classes when followed by GNN. This striking translation slowdown at adjacent 5′-NNN GNN codon pairs is likely mediated, in part, by the ribosome’s CAR surface, which acts as an extension of the A-site tRNA anticodon during ribosome translocation and interacts through hydrogen bonding and pi stacking with the GNN codon. The functional consequences of 5′-NNN GNN codon adjacency are expected to influence the evolution of protein coding sequences.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

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