On 2017 Jul 07, Wei Wang commented:
Several other problems have been reported: https://pubpeer.com/publications/DAA39CA8966C9B4DAB38EDAA343B4C
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On 2017 Jul 07, Wei Wang commented:
Several other problems have been reported: https://pubpeer.com/publications/DAA39CA8966C9B4DAB38EDAA343B4C
On 2014 Dec 15, Ivan Shatsky commented:
General comment: The phenomenon studied in this paper is very exciting. I read the article with a great interest. Unfortunately, I regret to say that the underlying mechanism remained uncovered. Although I agree that the authors identified some curious structures within the 5’UTRs of HOXA mRNAs which might be implicated in the regulation of these mRNAs by RPL38, I did not find sufficient evidence for existence of IRES-elements in these mRNAs. As in numerous other similar investigations, to identify IRES-elements the authors employed the method of DNA bicistronic constructs, the approach that had been repeatedly shown to be associated with almost unavoidable artifacts (see Jackson Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol. 2013 Feb 1;5(2); Lemp et al. Nucleic Acids Res. 2012 Aug;40(15):7280-90.). And I suspect this paper is not free of those artifacts either (see below). Several crucial control experiments necessary to support or to exclude the IRES-mediated mechanism have been recently described (for references see Shatsky et al. Mol Cells. 2010 Oct; 30(4):285-93). One of them, for instance, is the ratio of translational activities for m7G capped versus uncapped (A-capped) monocistronic constructs. This value estimates contribution of the cap to the translational potential of a 5’UTR under selected conditions. If this contribution is very high (as is the case of cap-dependent mRNAs) one may exclude the presence of a true IRES. I think that this and other obligatory controls are feasible to perform with cells C3H10T1/2 used in this paper but they were not done.
Some specific points:
On 2014 Dec 15, Ivan Shatsky commented:
General comment: The phenomenon studied in this paper is very exciting. I read the article with a great interest. Unfortunately, I regret to say that the underlying mechanism remained uncovered. Although I agree that the authors identified some curious structures within the 5’UTRs of HOXA mRNAs which might be implicated in the regulation of these mRNAs by RPL38, I did not find sufficient evidence for existence of IRES-elements in these mRNAs. As in numerous other similar investigations, to identify IRES-elements the authors employed the method of DNA bicistronic constructs, the approach that had been repeatedly shown to be associated with almost unavoidable artifacts (see Jackson Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol. 2013 Feb 1;5(2); Lemp et al. Nucleic Acids Res. 2012 Aug;40(15):7280-90.). And I suspect this paper is not free of those artifacts either (see below). Several crucial control experiments necessary to support or to exclude the IRES-mediated mechanism have been recently described (for references see Shatsky et al. Mol Cells. 2010 Oct; 30(4):285-93). One of them, for instance, is the ratio of translational activities for m7G capped versus uncapped (A-capped) monocistronic constructs. This value estimates contribution of the cap to the translational potential of a 5’UTR under selected conditions. If this contribution is very high (as is the case of cap-dependent mRNAs) one may exclude the presence of a true IRES. I think that this and other obligatory controls are feasible to perform with cells C3H10T1/2 used in this paper but they were not done.
Some specific points:
On 2017 Jul 07, Wei Wang commented:
Several other problems have been reported: https://pubpeer.com/publications/DAA39CA8966C9B4DAB38EDAA343B4C