Reading two bases twice: Mammalian antizyme frameshifting in yeast

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Abstract

Programmed translational frameshifting is essential for the expression of mammalian ornithine decarboxylase antizyme, a protein involved in the regulation of intracellular polyamines. A cassette containing antizyme frameshift signals is found to direct high-level (16%) frameshifting in yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In contrast to +1 frameshifting in the mammalian system, in yeast the same frame is reached by -2 frameshifting. Two bases are read twice. The -2 frameshifting is likely to be mediated by slippage of mRNA and re-pairing with the tRNA in the P-site. The downstream pseudoknot stimulates frameshifting by 30-fold compared with 2.5-fold in reticulocyte lysates. When the length of the spacer between the shift site and the pseudoknot is extended by three nucleotides, +1 and -2 frameshifting become equal.

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Matsufuji, S., Matsufuji, T., Wills, N. M., Gesteland, R. F., & Atkins, J. F. (1996). Reading two bases twice: Mammalian antizyme frameshifting in yeast. EMBO Journal, 15(6), 1360–1370. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1460-2075.1996.tb00478.x

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