Abstract

The synthesis of eukaryotic selenoproteins involves the recoding of an internal UGA codon as a site for selenocysteine incorporation. This recoding event is directed by a selenocysteine insertion sequence in the 3'-untranslated region. Because UGA also functions as a signal for peptidyl-tRNA hydrolysis, we have investigated how the rates of translational termination and selenocysteine incorporation relate to cis-acting elements in the mRNA as well as to trans-acting factors in the cytoplasm. We used cis-elements from the phospholipid glutathione peroxidase gene as the basis for this work because of its relatively high efficiency of selenocysteine incorporation. The last two codons preceding the UGA were found to exert a far greater influence on selenocysteine incorporation than nucleotides downstream of it. The efficiency of selenocysteine incorporation was generally much less than 100% but could be partially enhanced by concomitant overexpression of the tRNA(Sec) gene. The combination of two or three UGA codons in one reading frame led to a dramatic reduction in the yield of full-length protein. It is therefore unlikely that multiple incorporations of selenocysteine are processive with respect to the mode of action of the ribosomal complex binding to the UGA site. These observations are discussed in terms of the mechanism of selenoprotein synthesis and its ability to compete with termination at UGA codons.

Highlights

  • The synthesis of eukaryotic selenoproteins involves the recoding of an internal UGA codon as a site for selenocysteine incorporation

  • We chose the pig heart phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPx; Ref. 33) gene as a starting point, because previous work had shown that the selenocysteine insertion sequence (SECIS) of this gene supported a higher incorporation efficiency than the other SECIS elements tested [24]

  • We have investigated a range of parameters that could influence the efficiency of selenocysteine incorporation at single or multiple sites in selenoprotein genes

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Summary

PHGPXSL-B

5Ј-GA TCC CAG AAT CCG TAA ACC ACA CTC AGC ATA TCG GGC GTG CAG GTC GAC CAG CTG AGT GTA GTT TAC CTC CGT CTT GCC TCA TTG AGA GGC CAC-3Ј. We examine whether processivity is likely to be the molecular basis for this phenomenon

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