| Publication Type | journal article |
| School or College | School of Medicine |
| Department | Human Genetics |
| Creator | Gesteland, Raymond F.; Baranov, Pavel V.; Atkins, John F.; Hammer, Andrew W. |
| Other Author | Zhou, Jiadong |
| Title | Transcriptional slippage in bacteria: distribution in sequenced genomes and utilization in IS element gene expression |
| Date | 2005 |
| Description | ABSTRACT: Background: Transcription slippage occurs on certain patterns of repeat mononucleotides, resulting in synthesis of a heterogeneous population of mRNAs. Individual mRNA molecules within this population differ in the number of nucleotides they contain that are not specified by the template. When transcriptional slippage occurs in a coding sequence, translation of the resulting mRNAs yields more than one protein product. Except where the products of the resulting mRNAs have distinct functions, transcription slippage occurring in a coding region is expected to be disadvantageous. This probably leads to selection against most slippage-prone sequences in coding regions. Results: To find a length at which such selection is evident, we analyzed the distribution of repetitive runs of A and T of different lengths in 108 bacterial genomes. This length varies significantly among different bacteria, but in a large proportion of available genomes corresponds to nine nucleotides. Comparative sequence analysis of these genomes was used to identify occurrences of 9A and 9T transcriptional slippage-prone sequences used for gene expression. Conclusions: IS element genes are the largest group found to exploit this phenomenon. A number of genes with disrupted open reading frames (ORFs) have slippage-prone sequences at which transcriptional slippage would result in uninterrupted ORF restoration at the mRNA level. The ability of such genes to encode functional full-length protein products brings into question their annotation as pseudogenes and in these cases is pertinent to the significance of the term 'authentic frameshift' frequently assigned to such genes. |
| Type | Text |
| Publisher | BioMed Central |
| Volume | 6 |
| Issue | 3 |
| Subject | Transcription slippage; Bacterial genomes; IS element genes |
| Subject MESH | Nucleotides; Bacterial Proteins; Genome, Bacterial |
| Language | eng |
| Bibliographic Citation | Baranov PV, Hammer AW, Zhou J, Gesteland RF, Atkins JF. 2005. Transcriptional slippage in bacteria: distribution in sequenced genomes and utilization in IS element gene expression. Genome Biol 6(3):R25 |
| Rights Management | © [Author |
| Format Medium | application/pdf |
| Format Extent | 236,406 Bytes |
| Identifier | ir-main,3779 |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6mw3186 |
| Setname | ir_uspace |
| ID | 702783 |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6mw3186 |