Abstract

Translational efficiency in Escherichia coli is strongly controlled by the secondary structure of the mRNA in the translational initiation region. We have previously shown that protein production from the coat-protein gene of RNA bacteriophage MS2 is directly related to the fraction of mRNA molecules in which the ribosome binding site is unfolded. This fraction is dictated by the free energy (Δ G f 0) of the local secondary structure. We now present a similar analysis of published data on four other ribosome binding sites. The results conform quantitatively to the same relationship as found for the MS2 coat-protein gene. The efficiency of translation is determined by the overall stability of the structure at the ribosome binding site, whether the initiation codon itself is base-paired or not. Structures weaker than -6 kcal/mol usually do not reduce translational efficiency. Below this threshold, all systems show a tenfold decrease in expression for every -1.4 kcal/mol, as predicted from theory.

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