Positive and negativecis-regulatory elements directing postfertilization maternal mRNA translational control in mouse embryos

Author:

Potireddy Santhi1,Midic Uros2,Liang Cheng-Guang1,Obradovic Zoran2,Latham Keith E.13

Affiliation:

1. Fels Institute for Cancer Research and Molecular Biology,

2. Department of Computer and Information Sciences, College of Science and Technology, Information Science and Technology Center, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

3. Department of Biochemistry, School of Medicine, and

Abstract

Mechanisms providing for temporally complex patterns of maternal mRNA translation after fertilization are poorly understood. We employed bioinformatics analysis to compare populations of mRNAs enriched specifically on polysomes at the metaphase II (MII) stage oocyte and late one-cell stages and a detailed deletion/truncation series to identify elements that regulate translation. We used the Bag4 3′ untranslated region (UTR) as a model. Bioinformatics analysis revealed one conserved motif, subsequently confirmed by functional studies to be a key translation repressor element. The deletion/truncation studies revealed additional regulatory motifs, most notably a strong translation activator element of <30 nt. Analysis of mRNA secondary structure suggests that secondary structure plays a key role in translation repression. Additional bioinformatics analysis of the regulated mRNA population revealed a diverse collection of regulatory motifs found in small numbers of mRNAs, highlighting a high degree of sequence diversity and combinatorial complexity in the overall control of the maternal mRNA population. We conclude that translational control after fertilization is driven primarily by negative regulatory mechanisms opposing strong translational activators, with stage-specific release of the inhibitory influences to permit recruitment. The combination of bioinformatics analysis and deletion/truncation studies provides the necessary approach for dissecting postfertilization translation regulatory mechanisms.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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