Abstract

BackgroundEpimutations arising from transcriptional slippage seem to have more important role in regulating gene expression than earlier though. Since the level and the fidelity of transcription primarily determine the overall efficiency of gene expression, all factors contributing to their decrease should be identified and optimized.ResultsTo examine the influence of A/T homopolymeric sequences on introduction of erroneous nucleotides by slippage mechanism green fluorescence protein (GFP) reporter was chosen. The in- or out-of-frame gfp gene was fused to upstream fragment with variable number of adenine or thymine stretches resulting in several hybrid GFP proteins with diverse amino acids at N-terminus. Here, by using T7 phage expression system we showed that the intensity of GFP fluorescence mainly depends on the number of the retained natural amino acids. While the lack of serine (S2) residue results in negligible effects, the lack of serine and lysine (S2K3) contributed to a significant reduction in fluorescence by 2.7-fold for polyA-based in-frame controls and twofold for polyTs. What is more, N-terminal tails amino acid composition was rather of secondary importance, since the whole-cell fluorescence differed in a range of 9–18% between corresponding polyA- and polyT-based constructs.ConclusionsHere we present experimental evidence for utility of GFP reporter for accurate estimation of A/T homopolymeric sequence contribution in transcriptional slippage induction. We showed that the intensity of GFP hybrid fluorescence mainly depends on the number of retained natural amino acids, thus fluorescence raw data need to be referred to appropriate positive control. Moreover, only in case of GFP hybrids with relatively short N-terminal tags the fluorescence level solely reflects production yield, what further indicates the impact of an individual slippage sequence. Our results demonstrate that in contrast to the E. coli enzyme, T7 RNA polymerase exhibits extremely high propensity to slippage even on runs as short as 3 adenine or 4 thymine residues.

Highlights

  • Epimutations arising from transcriptional slippage seem to have more important role in regulating gene expression than earlier though

  • Productive transcriptional slippage at such sites involves unwindingrewinding of the RNA:DNA hybrid which is not sensed by RNA polymerases (RNAPs) active site and hereby does not lead to enzyme backtracking and mRNA correction

  • We evaluated Green fluorescent protein (GFP) protein reporter for potential use in a study of the transcriptional slippage phenomenon which occurs during expression of out of frame fusion genes with upstream fragments containing A/T homopolymeric sequences

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Summary

Introduction

Epimutations arising from transcriptional slippage seem to have more important role in regulating gene expression than earlier though. Forward and backward mRNA slippage generates insertion/deletion errors in nascent transcripts, resulting in shift of reading frame [6]. Insertion/deletion (indels) type of transcriptional errors may be considered as ambiguous. From one side they are detrimental to efficiency of gene expression, but on the other hand can be beneficial for cell physiology. We evaluated GFP protein reporter for potential use in a study of the transcriptional slippage phenomenon which occurs during expression of out of frame fusion genes with upstream fragments containing A/T homopolymeric sequences. The results demonstrate utility of GFP fusion gene to study transcriptional slippage effect in homopolymer sequence-dependent manner

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