| Literature DB >> 31855182 |
Maïté Courel1, Yves Clément2, Clémentine Bossevain1, Dominika Foretek3, Olivia Vidal Cruchez4, Zhou Yi5, Marianne Bénard1, Marie-Noëlle Benassy1, Michel Kress1, Caroline Vindry6, Michèle Ernoult-Lange1, Christophe Antoniewski7, Antonin Morillon3, Patrick Brest4, Arnaud Hubstenberger5, Hugues Roest Crollius2, Nancy Standart6, Dominique Weil1.
Abstract
mRNA translation and decay appear often intimately linked although the rules of this interplay are poorly understood. In this study, we combined our recent P-body transcriptome with transcriptomes obtained following silencing of broadly acting mRNA decay and repression factors, and with available CLIP and related data. This revealed the central role of GC content in mRNA fate, in terms of P-body localization, mRNA translation and mRNA stability: P-bodies contain mostly AU-rich mRNAs, which have a particular codon usage associated with a low protein yield; AU-rich and GC-rich transcripts tend to follow distinct decay pathways; and the targets of sequence-specific RBPs and miRNAs are also biased in terms of GC content. Altogether, these results suggest an integrated view of post-transcriptional control in human cells where most translation regulation is dedicated to inefficiently translated AU-rich mRNAs, whereas control at the level of 5' decay applies to optimally translated GC-rich mRNAs.Entities:
Keywords: GC content; P-bodies; chromosomes; codon usage; gene expression; human; mRNA decay; mRNA storage; post-transcriptional regulation
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31855182 PMCID: PMC6944446 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.49708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140