CRL2 aids elimination of truncated selenoproteins produced by failed UGA/Sec decoding

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Abstract

Selenocysteine (Sec) is translated from the codon UGA, typically a termination signal. Codon duality extends the genetic code; however, the coexistence of two competing UGA-decoding mechanisms immediately compromises proteome fidelity. Selenium availability tunes the reassignment of UGA to Sec. We report a CRL2 ubiquitin ligase-mediated protein quality-control system that specifically eliminates truncated proteins that result from reassignment failures. Exposing the peptide immediately N-terminal to Sec, a CRL2 recognition degron, promotes protein degradation. Sec incorporation destroys the degron, protecting read-through proteins from detection by CRL2. Our findings reveal a coupling between directed translation termination and proteolysis-assisted protein quality control, as well as a cellular strategy to cope with fluctuations in organismal selenium intake.

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Lin, H. C., Ho, S. C., Chen, Y. Y., Khoo, K. H., Hsu, P. H., & Yen, H. C. S. (2015). CRL2 aids elimination of truncated selenoproteins produced by failed UGA/Sec decoding. Science, 349(6243), 91–95. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aab0515

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