Institute of Protein Biochemistry, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Via P. Castellino 111, 80131, Naples, Italy.
Extremophiles. 2012 Nov;16(6):793-803. doi: 10.1007/s00792-012-0482-8. Epub 2012 Sep 27.
Translational recoding includes a group of events occurring during gene translation, namely stop codon readthrough, programmed ±1 frameshifting, and ribosome bypassing, which have been found in organisms from all domains of life. They serve to regulate protein expression at translational level and represent a relatively less known exception to the traditional central 'dogma' of biology that information flows as DNA→RNA→protein and that it is stored in a co-linear way between the 5'→3' of nucleic acids and N→C-terminal of polypeptides. In archaea, in which translational recoding regulates the decoding of the 21st and the 22nd amino acids selenocysteine and pyrrolysine, respectively, only one case of programmed -1 frameshifting has been reported so far and further examples, although promising, have not been confirmed yet. We here summarize the current state-of-the-art of this field that, especially in archaea, has relevant implications for the physiology of life in extreme environments and for the origin of life.
翻译转码包括一组在基因翻译过程中发生的事件,即终止密码通读、有规律的+1 移码和核糖体跳跃,这些事件在所有生命领域的生物中都有发现。它们在翻译水平上调节蛋白质表达,代表了对生物学传统中心“教条”的一个相对不太为人所知的例外,即信息从 DNA→RNA→蛋白质流动,并且在核酸的 5'→3'和多肽的 N→C 末端之间以线性方式存储。在古菌中,翻译转码分别调节第 21 位和第 22 位氨基酸硒代半胱氨酸和吡咯赖氨酸的解码,迄今为止只报告了一个有规律的-1 移码的例子,尽管有希望,但其他例子尚未得到证实。我们在这里总结了这一领域的最新进展,特别是在古菌中,这对极端环境中生命的生理学和生命的起源都有相关意义。