Litcius/Paper detail

Translation and mRNA Stability Control

Qiushuang Wu, Ariel Bazzini

2023Annual Review of Biochemistry114 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Messenger RNA (mRNA) stability and translational efficiency are two crucial aspects of the post-transcriptional process that profoundly impact protein production in a cell. While it is widely known that ribosomes produce proteins, studies during the past decade have surprisingly revealed that ribosomes also control mRNA stability in a codon-dependent manner, a process referred to as codon optimality. Therefore, codons, the three-nucleotide words read by the ribosome, have a potent effect on mRNA stability and provide cis -regulatory information that extends beyond the amino acids they encode. While the codon optimality molecular mechanism is still unclear, the translation elongation rate appears to trigger mRNA decay. Thus, transfer RNAs emerge as potential master gene regulators affecting mRNA stability. Furthermore, while few factors related to codon optimality have been identified in yeast, the orthologous genes in vertebrates do not necessary share the same functions. Here, we discuss codon optimality findings and gene regulation layers related to codon composition in different eukaryotic species.

Topics & Concepts

RibosomeMessenger RNATranslation (biology)BiologyCodon usage biasGeneticsProtein biosynthesisGeneStart codonTranslational efficiencyTransfer RNATranslational regulationGenetic codeRNAComputational biologyGenomeRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA modifications and cancerRNA Research and Splicing
Translation and mRNA Stability Control | Litcius