Readthrough of stop codons under limiting ABCE1 concentration involves frameshifting and inhibits nonsense-mediated mRNA decay

Author:

Annibaldis Giuditta12,Domanski Michal1ORCID,Dreos René3ORCID,Contu Lara12,Carl Sarah4ORCID,Kläy Nina1,Mühlemann Oliver1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Bern, Freiestrasse 3, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland

2. Graduate School for Cellular and Biomedical Sciences, University of Bern, Mittelstrasse 43, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland

3. Center for Integrative Genomics, University of Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland

4. Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, Maulbeerstrasse 66, CH-4058 Basel, Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractTo gain insight into the mechanistic link between translation termination and nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD), we depleted the ribosome recycling factor ABCE1 in human cells, resulting in an upregulation of NMD-sensitive mRNAs. Suppression of NMD on these mRNAs occurs prior to their SMG6-mediated endonucleolytic cleavage. ABCE1 depletion caused ribosome stalling at termination codons (TCs) and increased ribosome occupancy in 3′ UTRs, implying enhanced TC readthrough. ABCE1 knockdown indeed increased the rate of readthrough and continuation of translation in different reading frames, providing a possible explanation for the observed NMD inhibition, since enhanced readthrough displaces NMD activating proteins from the 3′ UTR. Our results indicate that stalling at TCs triggers ribosome collisions and activates ribosome quality control. Collectively, we show that improper translation termination can lead to readthrough of the TC, presumably due to ribosome collisions pushing the stalled ribosomes into the 3′ UTR, where it can resume translation in-frame as well as out-of-frame.

Funder

Swiss National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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