Abstract

The myeov gene has been isolated by the tumorigenicity assay and is localized at chromosome 11q13, a frequent site for chromosomal rearrangements in various carcinomas and B-cell neoplasms. In addition, myeov is coamplified with cyclin D1 and overexpressed in carcinomas of various organs. The mechanisms of myeov regulation remain enigmatic. The 5'-untranslated region (5'-UTR) of the myeov gene is long, encompasses several upstream AUGs, and is predicted to fold in a strong secondary structure, suggesting that its translation might be regulated by an internal ribosomal entry site. Here we show that initial experiments using monocistronic and dicistronic reporter constructs supported this assumption. However, the application of in vitro transcription/translation assays, Northern blot analysis, and promoterless dicistronic constructs revealed promoter activity of the myeov 5'-UTR. DNA transfection of dicistronic DNA constructs, normal and mutated forms of myeov cDNA fragments cloned in a eukaryotic expression vector, and direct RNA transfection analysis revealed that upstream AUG triplets in the 5'-UTR of the myeov transcript abrogate translation. Alternative splicing mechanisms in specific cell types and/or developmental stage may evade this translation control. Control experiments suggest that the 5'-UTR from encephalomyocarditis virus, when inserted at the midpoint of a dicistronic vector, is also able to function as a cryptic promoter.

Highlights

  • The chromosomal region 11q13 is frequently associated with genetic rearrangements in a large number of human malignancies, including B-cell neoplasms and carcinomas of the breast, lung, bladder, and esophagus (2–7), and overexpression of myeov is frequently observed in breast tumors and oral and esophageal squamous cell carcinomas (8)

  • Structural Features and Predicted Secondary Structure of the myeov 5Ј-UTR—The myeov 5Ј-UTR has a length of 445 nucleotides and contains four AUG codons upstream of the main ORF

  • The presence of upstream AUGs (uAUGs) and stable secondary structure should cause ribosome scanning to be inefficient. This suggests that myeov mRNA translation might be regulated by a cap-independent mechanism

Read more

Summary

Control of MYEOV Protein Synthesis by Upstream Open Reading Frames*

The myeov gene has been isolated by the tumorigenicity assay and is localized at chromosome 11q13, a frequent site for chromosomal rearrangements in various carcinomas and B-cell neoplasms. The 5؅-untranslated region (5؅-UTR) of the myeov gene is long, encompasses several upstream AUGs, and is predicted to fold in a strong secondary structure, suggesting that its translation might be regulated by an internal ribosomal entry site. The application of in vitro transcription/translation assays, Northern blot analysis, and promoterless dicistronic constructs revealed promoter activity of the myeov 5؅-UTR. DNA transfection of dicistronic DNA constructs, normal and mutated forms of myeov cDNA fragments cloned in a eukaryotic expression vector, and direct RNA transfection analysis revealed that upstream AUG triplets in the 5؅-UTR of the myeov transcript abrogate translation. The myeov gene fits the paradigm wherein an encumbered 5Ј-UTR is used to limit translation of a potent protein that is likely to be harmful if overproduced (23)

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call