4.2 Article

Dark matter worlds of unstable RNA and protein

期刊

NUCLEUS
卷 5, 期 4, 页码 281-286

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/nucl.29577

关键词

open-reading frame; protein turnover; RNA turnover; translation; uORF

资金

  1. Felix Scholarship Trust of The University of Oxford
  2. Sir William Dunn School of Pathology

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Astrophysicists use the term dark matter to describe the majority of the matter and/or energy in the universe that is hidden from view, and biologists now apply it to the new families of RNA they are uncovering. We review evidence for an analogous hidden world containing peptides. The critical experiments involved pulse-labeling human cells with tagged amino acids for periods as short as five seconds. Results are extraordinary in two respects: both nucleus and cytoplasm become labeled, and most signals disappear with a half-life of less than one minute. Just as the synthesis of each mature mRNA is regulated by the abortive production of hundreds of shorter transcripts that are quickly degraded, it seems that the synthesis of each full-length protein in the stable proteome is regulated by an apparently wasteful production and degradation of shorter peptides. Some of the nuclear synthesis is probably a byproduct of nuclear ribosomes proofreading newlymade RNA for inappropriately-placed termination codons (a process that triggers nonsense-mediated decay). We speculate that some dark-matter peptides will play other important roles in the cell.

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