On 2016 Feb 26, Martin Holcik commented:
we posted the following comment on the Science website, but reposting it here as well:
Internal initiation of translation writ large. S.D. Baird, Z. King and M. Holcik
In the article “Systematic discovery of cap-independent translation sequences in human and viral genomes” (15 January 2016 )(1) Weingarten-Gabby et al. surveyed a large number of mRNA-derived 210 bp segments for their ability to internally initiate translation. Our own search for IRESes with a secondary structure similar to that of a known IRES from XIAP mRNA identified two new IRESes but, surprisingly, with little notable structure similarity (2). Was that serendipity? We therefore wondered how prevalent IRESes are within the human transcriptome, and asked how many IRESes are there if we test 10 random UTRs. We selected 10 random 5'-UTRs from the UTRdb (3) using a perl script with a randomization function and tested their ability to initiate internal initiation using a previously characterized gal/CAT bicistronic reporter system (4). We identified one UTR from ZNF584 that showed bona fide IRES activity (without any cryptic promoter or splicing activity) but missed two IRESes discovered by the systematic survey (TEX2 and ZNF146). This is because the UTRs were improperly annotated at the time of our cloning; theoretically we had 3 genes out of 10 with IRES elements, or 30% of transcriptome, which is a bit higher than the 10% reported by the survey. While Weingarten-Gabby et al.'s test of small segments may have missed large structural IRESes like HCV, their discovery of so many IRES elements shows the IRES mechanism as a common feature, and that it frequently occurs within the coding sequence points to the ability of a cell to selectively express a more complex proteome than is evident by the transcriptome. Should the IRES elements be annotated into the RefSeq sequence features? Are there sequences that will recruit the ribosome, and coupled with RNA modification (such as recently described adenosine methylation or hydroxymethylation of cysteine (5) also regulate translation? The transcriptome to the proteome is not a simple step as ribosomal proteins and RNA binding proteins which control IRES activity will control which proteins are expressed. Nevertheless, these new insights suggest that internal initiation on cellular mRNAs writ large.
- S. Weingarten-Gabbay et al., Comparative genetics. Systematic discovery of cap-independent translation sequences in human and viral genomes. Science. 351(6270). aad4939. doi: 4910.1126/science.aad4939. Epub 2016 Jan 4914. (2016).
- S. D. Baird, S. M. Lewis, M. Turcotte, M. Holcik, A search for structurally similar cellular internal ribosome entry sites. Nucleic Acids Res. 35, 4664-4677. (2007).
- F. Mignone et al., UTRdb and UTRsite: a collection of sequences and regulatory motifs of the untranslated regions of eukaryotic mRNAs. Nucleic Acids Res. 33, D141-146. (2005).
- M. Holcik et al., Spurious splicing within the XIAP 5' UTR occurs in the Rluc/Fluc but not the {beta}gal/CAT bicistronic reporter system. RNA 11, 1605-1609 (2005).
- B. Delatte et al., RNA biochemistry. Transcriptome-wide distribution and function of RNA hydroxymethylcytosine. Science. 351, 282-285. doi: 210.1126/science.aac5253. (2016).
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