Abstract

Triple-stranded DNA:RNA helices of unknown function in vertebrate mitochondria associate with replication and transcription. Antiparallel Hoogsteen pairings form triplexes at physiological conditions. Intermolecular antiparallel triplexes require inverted 3'-to-5' RNA polymerization, which was never observed. Three rare, long natural 3'-to-5' inverted GenBank RNAs from mice mitochondria suggest occasional inverted transcription, putatively coding for proteins. BLAST aligns 18 GenBank-stored proteins with hypothetical proteins translated from the 3'-to-5' inverted Mus musculus mitochondrial genome. Three are DNA-binding, five are membrane proteins. 25% of main frame codons contribute to their 3'-to-5' overlap coding. Properties of these codons match those of overlap coding protein genes, as compared to codons not expected involved in inverted coding: a) nucleotide contents at synonymous codon positions in mitochondrial genomes fit replicational deamination gradients (A->G and C->T), but digress from gradients when functioning as nonsynonymous positions in putative 3'-to-5' overlapping genes; b) bias against 'circular code' codons (codon groups creating unambiguity between frames), and favouring homogenous codons (AAA, CCC, GGG, TTT) characterize overlapping genes, including putative 3'-to-5' overlapping genes, as compared to nonoverlapping coding sequences from the same main frame gene. This signature correlates with digression from deamination gradients. Deamination and circular code tests confirm independently alignment-based predictions of overlapping 3'-to-5' protein coding genes. Results indicate varying expression for different 3'-to-5' overlapping genes. Inverted 3'-to-5' RNA is produced, perhaps by an unknown RNA polymerase (invertase) putatively coded by 3'-to-5' inverted RNA.

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