Translation termination factor eRF1 is an important cellular protein that plays a key role in translation termination, nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD), and stop-codons readthrough. An amount of eRF1 in the cell influences all these processes. The mechanism of eRF1 translation regulation through an autoregulatory NMD-dependent expression circuit has been described for plants and fungi, but the mechanisms of human eRF1 translation regulation have not yet been studied. Using reporter constructs, we studied the effect of eRF1 mRNA elements on its translation in cell-free translation systems and HEK293 cells. Our data do not support the presence of the NMD-dependent autoregulatory circuit of human eRF1 expression. We found that the 5'-untranslated region (5'-UTR) of eRF1 mRNA and the start codon of the upstream open reading frame (uORF) have the greatest influence on the translation of CDS. According to the DataBase of Transcriptional Start Sites (DBTSS), eRF1 mRNA has a high heterogeneity of transcription start sites and variable length of 5'-UTRs as a consequence. Moreover, the start codon of the eRF1 CDS is located within the known Translation Initiator of Short 5′UTR (TISU), which also stimulates mRNA transcription of genes with high transcription start heterogeneity. We hypothesize that regulation of eRF1 mRNA translation occurs at both the transcriptional and translational levels. At the transcription level, the length of the 5'-UTRs of eRF1 and the number of short open reading frames in it are regulated, which in turn regulate eRF1 production at the translational level.
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