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Improved Super-Resolution Ribosome Profiling Reveals Prevalent Translation of Upstream ORFs and Small ORFs in Arabidopsis.

Hsin-Yen Larry WuQiaoyun AiRita Teresa TeixeiraPhong H T NguyenGaoyuan SongChristian Montes-SereyJames Mitch ElmoreJustin W WalleyPolly Yingshan Hsu
Published in: The Plant cell (2023)
A crucial step in functional genomics is identifying actively translated open reading frames (ORFs) and linking them to biological functions. The challenge lies in identifying short ORFs, as their identification is greatly influenced by data quality and depth. Here, we improved the coverage of super-resolution Ribo-seq in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), revealing uncharacterized translation events for nuclear, chloroplastic, and mitochondrial genes. Assisted by a transcriptome assembly, we identified 7,751 unconventional translation events, comprising 6,996 upstream ORFs (uORFs) and 209 downstream ORFs on annotated protein-coding genes, as well as 546 ORFs in presumed non-coding RNAs. Proteomics data confirmed the production of stable proteins from some of these unannotated translation events. We present evidence of active translation from primary transcripts of tasiRNAs (TAS1-4) and microRNAs (pri-MIR163, pri-MIR169), and periodic ribosome stalling supporting co-translational decay. Additionally, we developed a method for identifying extremely short uORFs, including 370 minimum uORFs (AUG-stop), and 2,921 tiny uORFs (2-10 amino acids), and 681 uORFs that overlap with each other. Remarkably, these short uORFs exhibit strong translational repression as do longer uORFs. We also systematically discovered 594 uORFs regulated by alternative splicing, suggesting widespread isoform-specific translational control. Finally, these prevalent uORFs are associated with numerous important pathways. In summary, our improved Arabidopsis translational landscape provides valuable resources to study gene expression regulation.
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