Publication | Open Access
Reading-frame Restoration by Transcriptional Slippage at Long Stretches of Adenine Residues in Mammalian Cells
39
Citations
21
References
1997
Year
GeneticsGenomic MechanismMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsExtra AdenineTranscriptional RegulationLong StretchesAdenine ResiduesGene StructureConsecutive AdeninesGenome InstabilityDna SequencingDna ReplicationGene ExpressionCell BiologyTranscription RegulationChromatinReading-frame RestorationChromatin RemodelingNatural SciencesMedicineGenome Editing
We previously characterized a mutant apoB allele (the apoB86 allele) that produces both a truncated apoB (apoB86) and a full-length apoB100. The mutant allele contained a deletion of a single cytosine in exon 26, creating a stretch of eight consecutive adenines in the -1 reading frame. The altered reading-frame allele was restored, with approximately 10% efficiency, by the transcriptional insertion of an extra adenine into the stretch of eight consecutive adenines, thereby accounting for the synthesis of the full-length apoB100. Here, we demonstrate that this reading-frame restoration does not occur when the long stretch of adenines is interrupted by a cytosine. To assess whether reading-frame restoration is unique to a single site in the apoB gene, the same mutation (eight consecutive adenines in the -1 reading frame) was inserted into another site within the apoB gene. Reading-frame restoration occurred at the second site and was abrogated when the stretch of adenines was interrupted by another base. Of note, a computerized analysis of human cDNA sequences revealed that long stretches of adenines in protein-coding sequences occur at a lower than predicted frequency, suggesting that evolution has selected against these sequences.
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