| Literature DB >> 23950723 |
Cristina Barbosa1, Isabel Peixeiro, Luísa Romão.
Abstract
Upstream open reading frames (uORFs) are major gene expression regulatory elements. In many eukaryotic mRNAs, one or more uORFs precede the initiation codon of the main coding region. Indeed, several studies have revealed that almost half of human transcripts present uORFs. Very interesting examples have shown that these uORFs can impact gene expression of the downstream main ORF by triggering mRNA decay or by regulating translation. Also, evidence from recent genetic and bioinformatic studies implicates disturbed uORF-mediated translational control in the etiology of many human diseases, including malignancies, metabolic or neurologic disorders, and inherited syndromes. In this review, we will briefly present the mechanisms through which uORFs regulate gene expression and how they can impact on the organism's response to different cell stress conditions. Then, we will emphasize the importance of these structures by illustrating, with specific examples, how disturbed uORF-mediated translational control can be involved in the etiology of human diseases, giving special importance to genotype-phenotype correlations. Identifying and studying more cases of uORF-altering mutations will help us to understand and establish genotype-phenotype associations, leading to advancements in diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of many human disorders.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23950723 PMCID: PMC3738444 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003529
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Figure 1uORF-mediated translational control can occur through different mechanisms.
(A) The leaky scanning mechanism is dependent on the efficiency of uAUG recognition; sometimes the ribosome can translate the uORF, but other times the scanning machinery bypasses the uAUG, recognizing the downstream AUG and translating the main ORF. (B) When a scanning ribosome recognizes and translates a functional uORF, there is synthesis of a small peptide; if translation termination of the uORF is efficient, both 60S and 40S ribosomal subunits might dissociate from the transcript and the main ORF is not translated. (C) A uORF can repress translation of the main ORF in a peptide-dependent manner; in this case, the uORF-encoded peptide interacts with the translating machinery and promotes ribosome blockage. (D) The termination codon of a uORF can be recognized as premature and nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is triggered through a mechanism involving the UPF1 protein and ribonucleases. (E) After translation termination of the uORF, the 40S ribosomal subunit can remain associated with the transcript, resume scanning, and recognize the downstream main AUG—a mechanism designated as translation reinitiation. (F) The impact that the uORFs can have on translation depends on (i) distance between the 5′ cap (m7G) and the uORF (distance to the cap), (ii) context in which the uORF AUG is located (AUG context), (iii) length of the uORF, (iv) number of uORFs per transcript, (v) secondary structure of the uORF, (vi) conservation among species, (vii) length of the intercistronic sequence(s), and (viii) position of the uORF termination codon, upstream or downstream of the main initiation codon (length, number, secondary structure, conservation, position of stop codon). The increase of translational repression exerted by a uORF correlates with increasing distance between the m7G and the uORF, increasing length of the uORF and intercistronic sequence, a higher number of uORFs, and a stronger uAUG Kozak context. (G) In response to stress conditions, the presence of more than one uORF in a transcript can promote an increase in translation efficiency of the main ORF; the reinitiation after translation of the uORF1 is less efficient since there is less ternary complex available. Consequently, reinitiation will take more time/distance to occur and the ternary complex will only be available by the time the 40S ribosomal subunit has already bypassed the subsequent uORFs, augmenting the recognition of the main AUG. (H) In response to stress conditions, the presence of one uORF in a transcript can promote an increase of the corresponding protein levels; the higher levels of phosphorylated eIF2α contribute to increase leaky scanning of the uORF and translation of the main ORF is favored.
Figure 2Examples of human genes encoding mRNAs that, under stress conditions, evade global repression of translation and are upregulated due to the presence of uORFs.
For each mRNA, the schematic representation of the 5′ leader sequence is shown with the length (in nucleotides; nts) indicated below each representation; boxes with numbers represent the uORF(s), where the number indicates the corresponding length in codons.
Examples of human diseases associated with polymorphisms or mutations that introduce/eliminate uORFs or modify the encoded uORF peptide.
| Disease | Gene | Mode of Pathogenesis | Reference |
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| 1. Thrombotic predisposition |
| The -4C to T polymorphism creates a uORF that reduces mRNA translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 2. β-Thalassemia |
| The -29G to A mutation creates a new translation initiation codon in a favorable Kozak consensus sequence, which leads to the introduction of a new uORF that overlaps with the main ORF, but out of frame, and decreases translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 3. Carney complex type 1 |
| The -97G to A mutation creates a uORF that overlaps with the main ORF, but out of frame, and decreases translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 4. Van der Woude syndrome |
| The -48A to T mutation creates a uORF that overlaps with the main ORF, but out of frame, and decreases translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 5. Gonadal dysgenesis |
| The -75G to A mutation creates a second uORF and reduces mRNA translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 6. Hereditary pancreatitis |
| The -53C to T mutation creates a uORF and reduces mRNA translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 7. Melanoma predisposition |
| Both described -21C to T and -34G to T mutations create a uORF that reduces mRNA translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 8. Familial hypercholesterolemia |
| A single C nucleotide deletion (at position -22) creates a uORF and reduces mRNA translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 9. Disseminated bronchiectasis |
| The -34C to T mutation creates a uORF overlapping, but out of frame, with the CFTR protein coding sequence, which decreases gene expression by reducing mRNA stability and translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 10. Congenital hyperinsulinism |
| The -54C to T mutation creates a new translation initiation codon in a favorable Kozak consensus sequence, which leads to the introduction of a new uORF that overlaps with the main ORF, but out of frame, and decreases translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 11. Rhizomelic chondrodysplasia punctata |
| The -45C to T mutation creates a new translation initiation codon in a favorable Kozak consensus sequence, which leads to the introduction of a new uORF that overlaps with the main ORF, but out of frame, and decreases translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 12. Proopiomelanocortin deficiency |
| The -11C to A mutation creates a new translation initiation codon in a favorable Kozak consensus sequence, which leads to the introduction of a new uORF that overlaps with the main ORF, but out of frame, and decreases translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 13. Levodopa responsive dystonia | GCH1 | The -22C to T mutation creates a new translation initiation codon that leads to the introduction of a new uORF overlapping with the main ORF, but out of frame, and decreases translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 14. Juvenile hemochromatosis |
| The -25G to A mutation creates a new translation initiation codon, which leads to the introduction of a new uORF overlapping with the physiological ORF, but out of frame, and decreases translation efficiency from the main ORF |
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| 15. Marie Unna hereditary hypotrichosis |
| The -321A to G mutation disrupts one of the existing uORFs and results in an increased translational efficiency of the main |
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| 16. Thrombocythemia |
| -31G to T mutation generates a new stop codon in uORF 7 and thereby shortens uORF 7 by 42 nucleotides. The truncated uORF 7 no longer extends past the physiological initiation codon, and thus it improves translational efficiency by allowing translation reinitiation |
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| The G to C transversion in the splice donor site of intron 3 of the |
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| A single G nucleotide deletion (at position -50) in the 5′ leader sequence of the |
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| 17. Schizophrenia predisposition |
| The -204A to G polymorphism within a 36-codon uORF originates a Lys9Glu amino acid substitution in the uORF-encoded peptide that might decrease efficiency of ribosomal blockage; this change causes an increase in the DRD3 protein levels |
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| 18. Aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease |
| The -36G to A polymorphism originates a Gly18Arg amino acid substitution in the uORF-encoded peptide |
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| 19. Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy |
| The -30G to A mutation within an 88-codon uORF originates a Arg36His amino acid substitution in a putative 88–amino acid inhibitory peptide encoded by the uORF; this change causes an increase in the TGF-β3 protein levels |
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| 20. Bipolar affective disorder and major depression |
| -42C to T mutation originates a Pro16Ser amino acid substitution in the uORF-encoded peptide and is postulated to decrease the efficiency of the uORF repression causing an increase in the HT3A protein levels |
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| 21. Acute myeloid leukemia |
| The |
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| 22. Breast cancer |
| The |
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| 23. Several tumors |
| A switch in promoter usage favors transcription of an isoform without uORFs which overexpresses MDM2 protein in comparison with what occurs in normal cells, where one isoform with two uORFs is mainly expressed |
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| 24. Alzheimer's disease |
| Elevated levels of phosphorylated eIF2α induce a bypass of the inhibitory mechanism exerted by |
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Position of the mutation is relative to the main AUG start codon, where the A is nucleotide +1.
It has been experimentally tested to affect translational efficiency.
It is not experimentally tested.