N 6-Methyladenosines in mRNAs reduce the accuracy of codon reading by transfer RNAs and peptide release factors

Author:

Ieong Ka-Weng1ORCID,Indrisiunaite Gabriele1,Prabhakar Arjun23,Puglisi Joseph D2ORCID,Ehrenberg Måns1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Biomedical Center, Box 596, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

2. Department of Structural Biology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305-5126, USA

3. Program in Biophysics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA

Abstract

Abstract We used quench flow to study how N6-methylated adenosines (m6A) affect the accuracy ratio between kcat/Km (i.e. association rate constant (ka) times probability (Pp) of product formation after enzyme-substrate complex formation) for cognate and near-cognate substrate for mRNA reading by tRNAs and peptide release factors 1 and 2 (RFs) during translation with purified Escherichia coli components. We estimated kcat/Km for Glu-tRNAGlu, EF-Tu and GTP forming ternary complex (T3) reading cognate (GAA and Gm6AA) or near-cognate (GAU and Gm6AU) codons. ka decreased 10-fold by m6A introduction in cognate and near-cognate cases alike, while Pp for peptidyl transfer remained unaltered in cognate but increased 10-fold in near-cognate case leading to 10-fold amino acid substitution error increase. We estimated kcat/Km for ester bond hydrolysis of P-site bound peptidyl-tRNA by RF2 reading cognate (UAA and Um6AA) and near-cognate (UAG and Um6AG) stop codons to decrease 6-fold or 3-fold by m6A introduction, respectively. This 6-fold effect on UAA reading was also observed in a single-molecule termination assay. Thus, m6A reduces both sense and stop codon reading accuracy by decreasing cognate significantly more than near-cognate kcat/Km, in contrast to most error inducing agents and mutations, which increase near-cognate at unaltered cognate kcat/Km.

Funder

Swedish Research Council

Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation

NIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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