Nucleic Acids Research Advance Access published online on June 25, 2008
Nucleic Acids Research, doi:10.1093/nar/gkn395
© 2008 The Author(s)
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Minigene-like inhibition of protein synthesis mediated by hungry codons near the start codon
Eva Jacinto-Loeza,
Serafín Vivanco-Domínguez,
Gabriel Guarneros and
Javier Hernández-Sánchez*
Departamento de Genética y Biología Molecular, Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del IPN, Apartado Postal 14-740, México D. F., 07000, México
*To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +(52-55) 5061 3800 ext 5352; Fax: +(52-55) 5747 7100; Email: javierh{at}cinvestav.mx
Received March 14, 2008. Revised June 5, 2008. Accepted June 5, 2008.
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ABSTRACT
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Rare AGA or AGG codons close to the initiation codon inhibit
protein synthesis by a tRNA-sequestering mechanism as toxic
minigenes do. To further understand this mechanism, a parallel
analysis of protein synthesis and peptidyl-tRNA accumulation
was performed using both a set of
lacZ constructs where AGAAGA
codons were moved codon by codon from +2, +3 up to +7, +8 positions
and a series of 3–8 codon minigenes containing AGAAGA
codons before the stop codon. β-Galactosidase synthesis
from the AGAAGA
lacZ constructs (in a Pth defective
in vitro system without exogenous tRNA) diminished as the AGAAGA codons
were closer to AUG codon. Likewise, β-galactosidase expression
from the reporter +7 AGA
lacZ gene (plus tRNA, 0.25 µg/µl)
waned as the AGAAGAUAA minigene shortened. Pth counteracted
both the length-dependent minigene effect on the expression
of β-galactosidase from the +7 AGA
lacZ reporter gene and
the positional effect from the AGAAGA
lacZ constructs. The +2,
+3 AGAAGA
lacZ construct and the shortest +2, +3 AGAAGAUAA minigene
accumulated the highest percentage of peptidyl-tRNA
Arg4. These
observations lead us to propose that hungry codons at early
positions, albeit with less strength, inhibit protein synthesis
by a minigene-like mechanism involving accumulation of peptidyl-tRNA.
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INTRODUCTION
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Codon usage is determined by the relative abundance of cognate
tRNAs (
1,
2). A low cognate tRNA concentration corresponds to
a rare codon and the frequency of rare codons in a gene determines
the rate of protein synthesis of the corresponding protein (
3).
Usually, synthesis is enhanced by over-expression of tRNA(s)
cognate to the rare codon(s) (
4,
5). A computational search of
rare AGA/AGG codons in
Escherichia coli genes showed that they
are located preferentially within the first 25 codons. More
than 100 genes containing a single AGG or AGA codon within the
first 25 codons are associated with essential functions (
6).
Protein synthesis modulation by minor codons close to the initiator
has been proposed by a number of authors. For example, Chen
and Inouye (
7) demonstrated that the closer AGG codons were
to the initiation codon, the stronger the effect on protein
expression. They used synthetic constructs containing from one
to five codons inserted after the 10th codon of the
lacZ gene.
They also showed that single and particularly tandems of two
to five AGG have stronger effects when placed closer to the
translation start (
7). Similar results were obtained when groups
of two to five AGG codons were inserted after codons 13, 223
and 307 in a synthetic codon test system. Insertion of AGG codons
right after codon 13 had the most severe effects on translation
(
8). To explain these effects Chen and Inouye (
6) have proposed
that the rare codons close to the initiator may stall the ribosome
and prevent the entry of new incoming ribosomes. A model in
which some mRNA is released from ribosomes during 5'-translational
blockage by low usage AGG codons has been suggested (
9). In
addition to the codon position, the presence of unfavorable
codons downstream from the first rare codon is also relevant
to the degree of tRNA sequestration (
10). Over-expressing genes
containing clusters of AGG codons in wild-type cells can significantly
exacerbate the depletion of specific tRNAs in the ternary complex
pool (
11,
12). By contrast, no inhibition of translation is found
when AGG codons are interspersed or scattered through the reading
frame (
12). Lambda
int, which encodes the phage integrase, is
a natural gene containing a high frequency of single and clusters
of minor codons including 33 rare arginine codons. Three arginine
tandems containing AGA and/or AGG codons are located at positions
3–4, 108–109 and 176–177. Over expression
of
int in wild-type
E. coli cells inhibits cell growth and protein
synthesis (
13). Changing the rare arginine codons at positions
3 and 4 to common arginine (CGT) codons is enough to enhance
Int translation as much as tRNA
Arg4 supplementation does for
the wild-type gene (
14). These results suggested that
int-mediated
inhibition entails reduction of the tRNA pool provoked by AGA
AGG triplets located at positions 3 and 4. Indeed,
int causes
a stronger cell growth and protein synthesis inhibition in Pth
defective cells, which are reversed by tRNA
Arg4 or Pth supplementation.
These effects are linked to peptidyl-tRNA
Arg4 (pep-tRNA
Arg4)
accumulation mainly in the soluble fraction (
15). In
Escherichia coli NGG codons (CGG, AGG, UGG or GGG) but not GGN or GNG (where
N is non-G) have been associated with low expression of a reporter
gene, if located at positions +2 to +5. NGG codons (CGG, AGG,
GGG and UGG), in the early coding region downstream the initiation
codon of a highly expressed reporter gene, inhibit growth of
a
pth thermo-sensitive (Ts) mutant strain (
16). This effect
is reverted by supplementing the cells with the specific tRNA
and is not seen for other codons or when NGG codons are placed
at a later position (+7). Although not demonstrated, the authors
suggested that the reduced gene expression associated with NGG
in the early coding region of mRNA is the result of pep-tRNA
drop-off from the ribosome during translation. Protein synthesis
inhibition by AGA hungry codons at positions 2+ or 3+ of
lacZ has been observed both
in vivo and
in vitro (
3). The inhibition
has been unambiguously linked to pep-tRNA accumulation and low
levels of Pth activity and/or the cognate tRNA concentration
(
3).
The idea of translation regulation by rare codons and/or codon usage around the initiation region has been suggested by several authors (17,18). To explain these negative effects, several possibilities have been advanced including ribosome pausing, tRNA sequestration and premature translation termination (6,8,19). Stalling of the int translating ribosome at the rare arginine AGA codon at position 3 of the int ORF may also block the binding of new ribosomes in the ribosome-binding site. Interestingly, these observations parallel the reported characteristics of mini-genes (20–23). Mini-gene expression in pth defective (rap) cells inhibits cell growth, arrests protein synthesis and accumulates pep-tRNA (21,22,24). Mini-gene-mediated toxicity is reversed by specific tRNAs or Pth supplementation (20,22). Thus, as minigenes do, overexpression of int and other genes containing AGA or AGG hungry codons near the initiation codon causes a strong cell growth and protein synthesis inhibition in pth defective cells, which are reversed by tRNAArg4 or Pth supplementation. These effects are also accompanied with pep-tRNAArg4 accumulation mainly in the soluble cell fraction. This analogy may be explained by the same underlying mechanisms which involve ribosome stalling and pep-tRNA drop off. To further substantiate these observations we analysed the inhibition of protein synthesis and the accumulation of pep-tRNA from a set of constructs with double AGAAGA codons at positions from 2+ to 7+ and a series of 3–8 codon minigenes containing AGAAGA before the stop codon. Here, we found a dependency between the position of the AGAAGA hungry codons and the degree of protein synthesis inhibition and between the length of the minigene and its capacity to inhibit β-galactosidase (β-gal) expression from a +7 AGA lacZ reporter gene. The closer the hungry codons were located to the initiation codon or the shorter the minigene, the stronger the inhibition of protein synthesis. Interestingly, the highest accumulation of pep-tRNA was produced both by hungry codons at positions +2, +3 and by the shortest minigene and decreased at later positions or as the minigene lengthened. Thus, both the AGAAGA hungry codons and the minigenes showed an inverse relationship between the degree of protein synthesis inhibition and the accumulation of pep-tRNA. These observations lead us to propose that hungry codons at early positions of the reading frame inhibit protein synthesis by a mechanism similar to that of minigenes.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Strains and growth conditions
Escherichia coli strains and plasmids used in this study are
listed in
Table 1. P90C
pth(rap), a Pth-defective strain, contains
10 times less Pth activity than wild-type cells (
25). Unless
different growth conditions are indicated, bacterial cultures
were grown at 32°C in Luria–Bertani medium (
26). When
required, the medium was supplemented with ampicillin (Amp)
100 µg/ml.
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PLASMID CONSTRUCTS
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placZ plasmid containing
lacZ gene was constructed by PCR amplification
of
lacZ gene from pLEX/
lacZ vector (Invitrogen) as previously
described (
27). The
lacZ constructs and minigenes containing
AGAAGA codons used in this work (
Table 1) were constructed from
placZ by site-directed mutagenesis (Stratagene) using complementary
oligonucleotides. For each construct only the forward 5' oligonucleotide
is shown in
Table 2. For example: 5-LacZ 2,3 AGAAGA and 3-LacZ
2,3AGAAGA were used to obtain the
lacZ construct containing
AGAAGA at +2, +3 positions and the pair of oligonucleotides
5-LacZ 2,3 AGAAGAUAA and the complementary 3-LacZ 2,3 AGAAGAUAA
were used to synthesize AUGAGAAGAUAA minigene and so forth.
The +7 AGA reporter gene was also constructed by site-directed
mutagenesis using 5-LacZ 7 AGA and 3-LacZ 7 AGA oligonucleotides.
All the substitutions indicated here, correspond to
E. coli chromosomal
lacZ gene sequence positions. All plasmid constructs
were transformed in the indicated
E. coli strains by the RbCl
2 method and the expression of proteins was under the control
of the IPTG-inducible
ptac promoter.
Cell-free transcription–translation
In vitro reactions (50 µl) were prepared with 2 mg of
plasmid DNA in TE (10 mM HCl, pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA), 20 ml of premix
[87.5 mM Tris-Ac pH 8.0, 476 mM potassium glutamate, 75 mM NH
4(Ac),
5 mM dithiothreitol, 20 mM Mg(Ac)
2, 1.25 mM each of 20 amino
acids, 5 mM ATP, 1.25 mM each of CTP, UTP, GTP, 50 mM phosphoenol
pyruvate, 250 µg/ml
E. coli tRNA, 87.5 mg/ml polyethylene
glycol (8000 Mr), 2.5 mM cAMP, 50 µg/ml folinic acid]
and 15 µl of S30 prepared as previously described (
28,
29).
Radiolabeled proteins were synthesized using a premix lacking
methionine. A 10 µCi of [
35S]-methionine (1170 Ci/mmol)
were then added to a final concentration of 2
x 10
–11 M. Protein was precipitated from 15 µl reactions by addition
of 60 µl of acetone followed by centrifugation. The protein
pellets were dried and re-suspended in SDS sample buffer prior
to gradient polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (
30). Immediately
following electrophoresis, wet gels were dried and then visualized
by autoradiography. When indicated, dried gels were analysed
in a radioactivity scanner (Typhon, Molecular Dynamics) to quantify
β-gal radioactivity levels as electronic density values
(pixels).
Isolation and detection of pep-tRNAArg4
IPTG-induced cells were collected by centrifugation, resuspended in 3 ml of 0.1 M NaOAc pH 4.5, 0.1% SDS and sonicated (Soniprep 150 MSE Sanyo) to lysis (four 30-s periods at 12 microns with 1 min intervals). After centrifuging at 20 000g for 20 min at 4°C, the supernatant was extracted with an equal volume of acid-equilibrated phenol, vortexed for 1 min, and centrifuged at 20 000g for 20 min at 4°C. The aqueous phase was ethanol precipitated with 0.066 volumes of 3 M NaOAc pH 4.5 and 2.5 volumes of ethanol for 1 h at –20°C and was then spun at 14 000 g for 15 min at 4°C. The pellet was resuspended in 3 µl of 0.3 M NaOAc pH 4.5, with 2.5 volumes of ethanol and pelleted as before. It was finally resuspended in 3 µl of 10 mM NaOAc pH 4.5 and stored at –70°C.
Northern assay
Total RNA from various transformants isolated under acidic conditions as described above was resolved on 6.5% acid urea PAGE gels at 4°C, and electroblotted onto a nylon membrane (31). tRNA-specific oligonucleotide probes were synthesized according to the complementary DNA sequence reported by Dong et al. (2). Hybridization with 5'-32P end-labeled oligonucleotides was performed as described by Varshney et al. (31). Where indicated, samples were treated with 100 mM CuSO4 (Cu++). The radioactive signals were quantified using a Typhoon Scan (Amersham Biosciences). Under no treatment, samples showed two bands. The lower band corresponded to free tRNAArg4 and the upper band to aa-tRNAArg4 and/or pep-tRNAArg4. Treatment with Cu++ chases the aminoacyl-tRNA fraction from the upper band to the lower band. The respective percentages of uncharged, aminoacylated or peptidylated tRNAs were estimated relative to the total tRNA for each electrophoretic lane using the following formula:
% tRNA species (uncharged-' aminoacyl- or peptidyl-)
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RESULTS
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Close dependence of protein synthesis on the position of hungry codons
AGG and/or AGA codons at positions +2, +3 of
lacZ inhibit protein
synthesis and cell growth in Pth defective cells (
27). NGG codons,
where N is non-G, are associated with a very low gene expression
if located at positions +2, +3 and +5 but with higher expression
if placed a few codons further downstream (
32). We took advantage
of these observations to examine the effect of AGA rare codons
at early positions on the translation of β-gal.
lacZ variants,
containing tandems of rare AGAAGA codons at positions 2–3
to 7–8, were cloned in the pKQV4 vector downstream the
ptac promoter, which allows expression to be induced by the
addition of isopropyl β-
D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG).
The vector carries the
laclq gene to maintain repression in
the absence of IPTG. The resulting constructs were expressed
in a Pth-defective synthesizing S30 cell-free extract prepared
as described in Materials and Methods section
but without exogenous tRNA. The synthesis was carried out in
the presence of [
35S]-methionine and the synthesized proteins
were resolved by SDS–PAGE and visualized by autoradiography.
The +2, +3 AGAAGA
lacZ construct showed lower synthesis of β-gal,
although higher than the wild-type
lacZ control (
Figure 1A).
β-Gal synthesis increased gradually as the AGAAGA tandem
changed from +3, +4 to +7, +8 positions. These results show
a tendency in which the closer the AGAAGA codons to the initiator
the lower the synthesis of β-gal. That the positional effect
took place at a translational level is indicated by the fact
that the same set of constructs showed an inverted tendency
in protein synthesis when tested in a wild-type Pth
in vitro reaction (data not shown). Similar results were obtained in
the equivalent experiments described below where Pth-defective
in vitro reactions were supplemented with Pth. Thus, the differences
in protein synthesis were due to a deficient Pth activity or
tRNA concentration and not to effects on transcription or mRNA
stability. The growing tendency in the synthesis of β-gal,
as the AGAAGA codons moved away from the start codon was more
apparent in the chart (
Figure 1B) where the levels of protein
synthesis represented as electronic density values/mm
2 (pixels)
were plotted versus the position of the AGAAGA tandem in the
lacZ constructs.

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Figure 1. Positional effect of AGAAGA codons in the synthesis of β-gal. (A) In vitro transcription–translation reactions deficient in Pth activity, not supplemented with tRNA and carried out as described in Materials and Methods' section, were directed by: placZ (a); placZ2-3AGAAGA (b); placZ3-4AGAAGA (c); placZ4-5AGAAGA (d); placZ5-6AGAAGA (e); placZ6-7AGAAGA (f); placZ7-8AGAAGA (g). After 1 h incubation, samples were processed for autoradiography as described in Materials and Methods section. The mobility of β-galactosidase (β-gal) and β-lactamase (β-lac) is indicated. β-gal absolute radioactivity levels indicated as electronic density values (pixels; shown below each lane) were quantified as indicated in Materials and Methods section. (B) β-gal synthesis from the AGAAGA constructs was plotted against the AGAAGA codon position.
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The inhibition of protein synthesis by minigenes depends inversely on the length of their open reading frame
Previous studies have shown that multiple parameters related
to the sequence of the mini-gene contribute to the growth inhibitory
effect (
21). In addition to these parameters, the effect of
the length of minigenes on pep-tRNA accumulation and
in vivo toxicity has also been studied (
33). Thus, the rate of pep-tRNA
drop-off and ribosome recycling without dissociating from the
ribosome increases as the size of the minigene is shortened
from 8 to 2 codons while the rate of translation termination
decreases. These antecedents and the observation that the degree
of minigene-mediated inhibition of protein synthesis correlates
with the number of hungry codons in the reporter gene (
3) provided
the basis to predict an inverse relationship between the length
of the minigene and the degree of protein synthesis of a gene
containing a codon starved by the minigene. To test this prediction,
we analysed in a two-template based in vitro system, the effect
of each of a series of minigenes containing from 3 to 8 sense
codons including the tandem AGAAGA before the stop codon (plasmid
placx-yAGAAGAUAA, where
x–
y represents codon positions
from 2–3 to 7–8;
Table 1) on the expression of a
lacZ reporter gene containing AGA at position +7 (placZ7AGA;
Table 1). When the analysis was first performed as in the previous
section (without exogenous tRNA) a complete inhibition of β-gal
was produced by all minigenes (data not shown). It was necessary
to supplement the
in vitro reaction with tRNA (0.25 µg/µl)
to reveal a gradual effect of the minigenes on β-gal synthesis.
As expected, the shortest minigene (+2, +3 AGAAGAUAA) produced
the strongest inhibition of β-gal and as the length of
the minigene increased the synthesis built up to a level comparable
to that of wild-type β-gal (
Figure 2A). No difference in
the expression of β-gal was observed when the +7 AGA
lacZ
was substituted by wild-type
lacZ (
Figure 2B and D) or when
the experiment was performed in a wild-type
in vitro reaction
(data not shown) indicating that the effect is mediated by a
tRNA-sequestering mechanism. Thus, the results showed a clear
dependency on the length of the minigene, in which, the shortest
minigene produced the highest inhibition. Unlike the AGAAGA
lacZ constructs, minigenes consumed higher levels of tRNA
Arg4 as indicated by the necessity to supplement the
in vitro reaction
with tRNA. This tendency and its analogy with that produced
by the AGAAGA
lacZ constructs are clearer in the charts (compare
Figure 1B with
2C).

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Figure 2. The inhibition of protein synthesis from the reporter +7 AGA lacZ construct depends inversely on the length of the AGAAGAUAA minigenes. (A) In vitro transcription–translation reactions were directed by: +7 AGA lacZ (a); +7 placZ plus: placZ2-3AGAGAUAA (b); placZ3-4AGAAGAUAA (c); placZ4-5AGAAGAUAA (d); placZ5-6AGAAGAUAA (e); placZ6-7AGAAGAUAA (f); placZ7-8AGAAGAUAA (g). The mobility of β-galactosidase (β-gal) and β-lactamase (β-lac) is indicated. β-Gal absolute radioactivity levels are indicated as electronic density values (pixels, shown below each lane). (B) In vitro reactions were primed as in (A) but lacZ replaced +7 AGA lacZ. β-Gal synthesis from the reporter +7 AGA lacZ (C) or lacZ (D) constructs was plotted against minigene length.
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Positional effect of hungry codons close to the initiation codon on the accumulation of pep-tRNA
Lambda
int gene and
lacZ constructs containing AGAAGG and AGAAGA
codons at +3, +4 and +2, +3 positions, respectively, were previously
associated with a high accumulation of pep-tRNA
Arg (
15,
27).
Thus, it was interesting to find out if the level of β-gal
synthesis showed by the AGAAGA
lacZ variants correlated with
the production of pep-tRNA and whether this kinetics paralleled
the accumulation of pep-tRNA
Arg4 by the AGAAGAUAA minigenes.
For this purpose Pth defective cells (P90C rap) were transformed
with the plasmids containing the AGAAGA
lacZ variants or AGAAGA
minigenes. pep-tRNA
Arg4 was analysed in total cell extracts
from IPTG-induced cells by a northern blot assay and the percentages
of pep-tRNA relative to aminoacyl-tRNA and uncharged tRNA were
calculated as indicated in Materials and Methods
section. The results of a representative experiment are presented.
The largest amount of pep-tRNA
Arg4 was produced by both the
shortest +2, +3 AGAAGAUAA minigene and the +2, +3 AGAAGA
lacZ
construct (
Figure 3A, lane a). The accumulation of pep-tRNA
Arg4 was still evident for minigene +3, +4 AGAAGAUAA, however, the
level of pep-tRNA
Arg4 abruptly decreased either as minigene
length increased or the AGAAGA tandem moved away from the start
codon in
lacZ constructs. Albeit not clear in the northern blots,
the percentages of pep-tRNA relative to the total tRNA, estimated
for each electrophoretic lane using the formula described in
Materials and Methods section, indicated the presence
of decreasing amounts of pep-tRNA
Arg4 and that the lowest percentages
were generated both by the longest minigene (+7, +8 AGAAGAUAA)
and the +7, +8 AGAAGAUAA
lacZ construct (
Figure 3B). No pep-tRNA
was observed when the
lacZ constructs or minigenes were expressed
in wild-type
pth cells (data not shown).

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Figure 3. The positional effect of AGAAGA codons in the lacZ constructs is similar to the length-dependent effect of the AGAAGAUAA minigenes in the production of pep-tRNAArg4. (A) The order of the AGAAGA lacZ constructs or the AGAAGAUAA minigenes is the same as that shown for lanes b–g, panel A from Figures 1A and 2A, respectively. Pth defective cells (P90C rap) were processed as described in Materials and Methods to detect pep-tRNAArg4. Samples were treated with Cu++ and pep-tRNAArg4 was revealed by northern blotting using a specific 32P-labeled oligo-probe in samples of total RNA. The relative locations of the various tRNAArg4 derivatives are arrowed. The absolute amount of material applied to each lane varied according to the efficiency of recovery of the tRNA in each manipulation. Band intensities of the different tRNA forms should only be compared within lanes. (B) Percentages of pep-tRNAArg4 calculated as described in Materials and Methods section are outlined against AGAAGA codon positions or the length of the minigene.
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It was previously reported that different parameters affecting
pep-tRNA accumulation like the dissociation rate of pep-tRNA
and ribosome recycling without leaving the ribosome are inversely
correlated with the length of the coding sequence of the minigene
(
33). This tendency was also observed with
in vivo toxicity,
which decreased (growth rate increased) with the mini-gene length.
Thus, the growing tendency in the synthesis of β-gal, both
as the AGAAGA codons moved away from the start codon or the
minigene lengthened correlated inversely with the percentages
of pep-tRNA
Arg, calculated as indicated in Materials
and Methods section.
The positional effect of the AGAAGA rare codons is reverted by Pth
The expression of toxic mini-genes entails specific pep-tRNA accumulation and protein synthesis inhibition in Pth defective cells. The inhibition is averted by over-production of Pth or supplementation with tRNA (20,22). Likewise, lambda int gene which contains AGAAGG codons at positions +3, +4 inhibits protein synthesis and cell growth of Pth defective cells and these effects are suppressed by over-production of Pth or tRNAArg4. These observations made it interesting to analyse whether the positional effect observed on the inhibition of protein synthesis and the accumulation of pep-tRNA, is primarily caused by the lack of Pth. As expected, the length-dependent inhibition of the minigenes was averted by the addition of Pth to the Pth-defective cell-free system (Figure 4B). The reversion is also apparent in the chart where the levels of protein synthesis were plotted versus the length of the minigene (Figure 4D). In other words, β-gal synthesis from the +7 lacZ reporter gene did not show great variations regardless of the minigene expressed. As to the AGAAGA lacZ constructs, not only was the synthesis of β-gal restored by the addition of Pth to the in vitro reaction but the positional effect was also inverted (Figure 4A and C). Thus, the tRNA recycling activity of Pth unveiled a promoting effect of the same codons, which was stronger as the AGA codons got closer to the initiation codon. The same results were obtained when the set of constructs were expressed in a wild-type in vitro reaction, which is equivalent to the Pth defective in vitro reaction supplemented with Pth (data not shown).

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Figure 4. Peptidyl-tRNA hydrolase prevents the inhibition of β-gal caused by the AGAAGA codons. (A) In vitro transcription–translation reactions, supplemented with Pth (3 µg/50 µg reaction), were primed with AGAAGA lacZ constructs as described in Figure 1 legend. (C) Absolute radioactivity levels indicated as electronic density values (pixels) from each construct were quantified as indicated in Materials and Methods section and plotted against the AGAAGA codon position. (B) In vitro reactions, supplemented with Pth (3 µg/50 µl reaction), were directed with the +7 AGA lacZ construct and the AGAAGAUAA minigenes as in Figure 2 legend. The mobility of β-galactosidase (β-gal) and β-lactamase (β-lac) is indicated. (D) β-gal absolute radioactivity levels from the reporter gene indicated as electronic density values (pixels) were plotted against minigene length.
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DISCUSSION
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The results presented in this work indicate that the positional
effect on the inhibition of protein synthesis by hungry codons
close to initiation codon resembles the length-dependent inhibition
caused by minigenes, i.e. pep-tRNA accumulation. While the production
of β-gal from AGAAGA
lacZ constructs declined as the AGAAGA
codons were closer to AUG codon, the inhibition of β-gal
from the reporter +7 AGA
lacZ gene became stronger as the AGAAGAUAA
minigene shortened. In addition, the production of pep-tRNA
Arg4 followed the same tendency according to which the +2, +3 AGAAGA
lacZ construct or the +2, +3 AGAAGAUAA minigene accumulated
the highest percentage of pep-tRNA
Arg4. Unlike the AGAAGA
lacZ constructs, AGAAGAUAA minigenes consumed more tRNA
Arg as indicated
by the necessity to supplement the
in vitro reaction with tRNA.
Without additional tRNA, a complete inhibition of β-gal
is produced (not shown). In addition, high levels of pep-tRNA
Arg4 were still apparent with the +3, +4 AGAAGAUAA minigene. As expected,
Pth reverted the length-dependent minigene effect on the expression
of β-gal from the +7 AGA
lacZ reporter gene. In the case
of the AGAAGA
lacZ constructs, Pth not only restored the synthesis
but the tendency was inverted. Thus, β-gal synthesis was
higher the closer the AGAAGA codons to the initiator. We discuss
below these results and the fact that even the +2, +3 AGAAGA
lacZ construct produced more β-gal than wild-type
lacZ
(Compare lanes a and b in
Figures 1A and
4A).
Protein synthesis modulation by minor codons close to the initiator has been proposed by different authors. However, the parallel analysis of protein synthesis and pep-tRNA production had not been performed on a set of minigenes of various lengths and lacZ constructs where the hungry codons are moved away codon by codon from the initiator. Thus, the series of AGAAGA lacZ constructs analysed in this work clearly showed a direct relationship between the degree of in vitro β-gal synthesis and the position of the hungry codons and this behavior was similar to that presented by the minigenes.
A number of parameters have been shown to affect the rate of pep-tRNA accumulation and the toxicity of minigenes. Among these, the length of the minigene affected directly four important parameters that determine the pool of pep-tRNA: (i) the average number of times an mRNA is recycled and translated before it is degraded, without leaving the 30S subunit; (ii) the rate of pep-tRNA dissociation from the ribosome at each translation round; (iii) normal termination catalysed by release factors, the principal reaction competing with drop-off and (iv) Pth activity, which allows recycling of pep-tRNA thereby avoiding tRNA sequestration. In addition, we have previously shown that the expression of toxic minigenes inhibits primarily the synthesis of proteins encoded by genes that contain the codon recognized by the tRNA which has been sequestered by the minigene (3). Therefore, these antecedents predict a gradual inhibition of a reporter gene according to the length of the minigene. This hypothesis was tested with a set of minigenes derived from the wild-type lacZ where three codon groups were substituted by AGAAGAUAA codons so that a set of minigenes spanning from 3 to 8 codons including the AGAAGA tandem before the stop codon was generated. Thus, the shortest minigene produced the highest inhibition of β-gal paralleling the same tendency produced by the AGAAGA lacZ constructs suggesting that the same mechanism is underlying these phenomena. To further understand this mechanism, pep-tRNAArg4 accumulated by the AGAAGA lacZ constructs or the AGAAGAUAA minigenes was analysed. Interestingly, the accumulation profile of pep-tRNAArg4 was similar for both series. The percentages of pep-tRNAArg4 dropped steeply as the AGAAGA tandem moved from +2, +3 to +3, +4 for the AGAAGA lacZ constructs or from +3, +4 to +4, +5 in the case of the minigenes, thereafter, decreased slowly to a minimum for the +7, +8 AGAAGA lacZ construct or the +7, +8 AGAAGAUAA minigene. These results and the fact that AGAAGAUAA minigenes consumed more tRNAArg as indicated by the necessity to supplement the in vitro reaction with tRNA suggest that minigenes produce more pep-tRNA which makes them more toxic than the AGAAGA lacZ constructs. These results also indicated that the positional inhibition of the AGAAGA codons resembles the length-dependent inhibition of the minigenes as to the depletion of specific tRNA. The abrupt drop in the accumulation of pep-tRNA when the AGAAGA tandem is moved from +2, +3 to +3, +4 positions or when the minigene enlarges from 4 to 5 codons poorly correlated with the more gradual effects observed in protein synthesis experiments (Figures 1 and 2
). However, the profile of pep-tRNA accumulation (including the low levels produced by the constructs containing AGAAGA at +3, +4 or later positions) should be produced specifically since no pep-tRNA was observed when the same constructs or minigenes were expressed in a wild-type Pth background (data not shown). That a tRNA-sequestering mechanism is also mediating the effect in the intermediate lacZ constructs or minigenes is supported by the fact that no inhibition in protein synthesis was observed when the same set of minigenes was expressed in a wild-type cell-free reaction or an inverted effect was produced in the case of the lacZ constructs (data not shown). This is equivalent to the Pth-defective background experiments where supplemental Pth also reverted the inhibitory effect of the AGAAGAUAA minigenes on the expression of the lacZ reporter gene (Figure 4B and D). In the case of the AGAAGA lacZ constructs, the expression of β-gal not only was reverted by Pth but the tendency was inverted in such a way that the closer the AGAAGA codons to the initiator, the higher the expression (compare Figures 1A and B with Figures 4A and C). A stimulatory effect of lacZ variants containing AGA and AGG codons at positions +2 and +3 on the expression of the lacZ reporter gene in wild-type bacteria was observed in a previous study (27). The same variants were deficient in gene expression in pth defective cells due to pep-tRNAArg4 accumulation and ribosome stalling at these codons. In addition, the expression in wild-type cells was comparable to that attained by the lacZ variant that carries +2, +3 AAAAAA, a codon configuration frequently found in the highly expressed genes of E. coli (34–36). The correlation of adenine-rich regions with efficient translation in E. coli was first noted by Dreyfus (37), and in later studies workers reported stimulatory effects on translation due to the addition of adenines (38–40). Several studies have analysed the promoting effect of adenine-containing codons downstream the initiation codon during translation initiation or in early elongation (27,34,35). It has even been proposed that the promoting effect is due to the direct binding of the mRNA with the 16S RNA (38,39). We favor the hypothesis that adenines close to the initiation codon promote an efficient binding of the mRNA which is eventually reflected in an efficient protein synthesis provided that tRNA is not exhausted. Thus, AGA and AGG codons containing adenines either promote the efficient translation when tRNA is available (in pth wild-type in vivo or in vitro systems) or lead to the inhibition of protein synthesis under limiting concentrations of tRNA (in pth defective systems or when the construct is over-expressed in a wild-type background). Thus, the inhibition of protein synthesis has been observed when the constructs containing rare AGA and/or AGG (hungry) codons are expressed under conditions where a specific tRNA becomes scarce (7,8) and the inhibition is reversed by tRNA (14,15). The inhibitory effect by AGA codons has also been observed when the constructs are expressed in Pth defective cells (3,15,27). In these cases, the translational down-regulation is mostly caused by a tRNA sequestering mechanism as indicates the reversion with the specific tRNA. On the other hand, the promoting effect by AGA or adenine-containing codons has been reported to occur under conditions where the pool of tRNA is not exhausted and the constructs are over-expressed in wild-type cells (27,38,39). For example, the lacZ construct containing AGAAGA at +2, +3 positions over expresses β-gal in wild-type cells but inhibits protein synthesis and cell growth in Pth defective cells and this effect is reverted by supplementing the cells with tRNAArg4 (27). In this work, a limited expression of β-gal is produced from the AGAAGA lacZ constructs in a Pth defective in vitro transcription–translation system. If the pool of tRNAArg4 were further reduced, β-gal synthesis from the AGAAGA constructs would even be lower than that expressed from wild-type lacZ (Figure 1, lanes a and b). Consequently, supplementation with Pth, a condition that increases the pool of aminoacylable tRNAArg4 inverses the effect in such a way that the closer the AGA codons to the initiation codon the stronger the synthesis of β-gal (Figure 4). Unpublished results (manuscript in preparation, Castillo Mendez et al.) indicate that not only AGA or AGG codons but in general adenine-containing codons (AAA, AUA, etc.) either enhance translation under conditions where the pool of tRNA is not exhausted or lead to the so called tRNA-sequestering mechanism when the cognate tRNA is scarce and/or Pth activity is defective. Thus, we propose that the adenine-containing transcripts compete efficiently with S30 subunits during initiation of translation conferring them advantage over other mRNAs. Under conditions where the pool of tRNA is not exhausted, the ribosomal complexes translate efficiently. However, if the adenines are part of rare codons (AUA, AGA) and/or the construct is expressed in a Pth-defective background, the pool of tRNA becomes exhausted and the tRNA-sequestering mechanisms is manifested. The pool of tRNA eventually becomes exhausted even in a wild-type background when a number of factors (high-copy plasmid, translational enhancer) contribute to optimize the level of expression of the construct. Thus, the rare codon effect resembles the adenine promoting effect because in both cases the effect is stronger (inhibition or stimulation depending on the levels of tRNA) the closer the adenine-containing codons are to the initiation codon.
The results presented here corroborate and extend the parallelism in the observed characteristics of mini-genes and hungry codons near the initiator (20–22). Like minigenes, the lacZ constructs containing AGA codons close to the initiation codon arrest protein synthesis in a Pth-defective cell-free system, accumulate pep-tRNA, and the inhibition is reverted by supplemental Pth. In addition, the positional effect of AGAAGA in the lacZ constructs is similar to the length-dependent effect of AGAAGAUAA minigenes in protein synthesis inhibition and pep-tRNA accumulation. This may be explained because the mechanisms underlying these effects, at least involve ribosome stalling, pep-tRNA accumulation and possibly ribosome recycling.
Finally, messengers containing clusters of AGA or CGA codons can be tagged by the SsrA system (42). An essential requirement for tagging at rare AGA codons is a scarcity for the cognate tRNA. Supplemental tRNAAGA suppresses tagging and depleting the available pool of tRNA enhances tagging and reveals tagging caused by single rare AGA codons. The results presented here indicate that the positional effect of the AGA codons in the synthesis of β-gal is not relevant for tagging, otherwise triggering of the tmRNA rescue system by the AGA rare codons would compete for the ribosomal complexes stalled at the AGA codons preventing the release of pep-tRNA. Whether the tmRNA rescue system is working in our system or not, the results presented here indicate that its participation does not greatly interfere with the tRNA-sequestering mechanism.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
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The authors wish to thank Marco A. Magos-Castro, José
G. Bueno-Martínez and Guadalupe Aguilar González
for skilful technical support. J.H.S. and G.G. were supported
by grants from the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología
(CONACyT, Mexico). E.J.L. was recipient of loan-fellowships
from CONACyT and Consejo del Sistema Nacional de Educación
Technológica (COSNET). Funding to pay the Open Access
publication charges for the article was provided by Centro de
Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados.
Conflict of interest statement. None declared.
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