Overlapping open reading frames strongly reduce human and yeast STN1 gene expression and affect telomere function.
Victoria TorranceDavid LydallPublished in: PLoS genetics (2018)
The levels of telomeric proteins, such as telomerase, can have profound effects on telomere function, cell division and human disease. Here we demonstrate how levels of Stn1, a component of the conserved telomere capping CST (Cdc13, Stn1, Ten1) complex, are tightly regulated by an upstream overlapping open reading frame (oORF). In budding yeast inactivation of the STN1 oORF leads to a 10-fold increase in Stn1 levels, reduced telomere length, suppression of cdc13-1 and enhancement of yku70Δ growth defects. The STN1 oORF impedes translation of the main ORF and reduces STN1 mRNA via the nonsense mediated mRNA decay (NMD) pathway. Interestingly, the homologs of the translation re-initiation factors, MCT-1Tma20/DENRTma22 also reduce Stn1 levels via the oORF. Human STN1 also contains oORFs, which reduce expression, demonstrating that oORFs are a conserved mechanism for reducing Stn1 levels. Bioinformatic analyses of the yeast and human transcriptomes show that oORFs are more underrepresented than upstream ORFs (uORFs) and associated with lower protein abundance. We propose that oORFs are an important mechanism to control expression of a subset of the proteome.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- gene expression
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- poor prognosis
- working memory
- dna methylation
- transcription factor
- stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- autism spectrum disorder
- microbial community
- intellectual disability
- long non coding rna
- wastewater treatment
- cell therapy
- amino acid
- dna damage response