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Cytoplasmic mRNA recapping has limited impact on proteome complexity

Authors :
Agana, Bernice A.
Wysocki, Vicki H.
Schoenberg, Daniel R.
Source :
Open Biology, Vol 10, Iss 11 (2020), Open Biology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
The Royal Society, 2020.

Abstract

The m7G cap marks the 5′ end of all eukaryotic mRNAs, but there are also capped ends that map downstream within spliced exons. A portion of the mRNA transcriptome undergoes a cyclical process of decapping and recapping, termed cap homeostasis, which impacts the translation and stability of these mRNAs. Blocking cytoplasmic capping results in the appearance of uncapped 5′ ends at native cap sites but also near downstream cap sites. If translation initiates at these sites the products would lack the expected N-terminal sequences, raising the possibility of a link between mRNA recapping and proteome complexity. We performed a shotgun proteomics analysis on cells carrying an inducible inhibitor of cytoplasmic capping. A total of 21 875 tryptic peptides corresponding to 3565 proteins were identified in induced and uninduced cells. Of these, only 29 proteins significantly increased, and 28 proteins significantly decreased, when cytoplasmic capping was inhibited, indicating mRNA recapping has little overall impact on protein expression. In addition, overall peptide coverage per protein did not change significantly when cytoplasmic capping was inhibited. Together with previous work, our findings indicate cap homeostasis functions primarily in gating mRNAs between translating and non-translating states, and not as a source of proteome complexity.

Details

ISSN :
20462441
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Open Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5e21c103d0fdf2481dc9aaa7ccc4e9e7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsob.200313