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Ribosome reinitiation can explain length-dependent translation of messenger RNA

David W. Rogers, Marvin A. Böettcher, Arne Traulsen, Duncan Greig
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/103689
David W. Rogers
1Experimental Evolution Research Group, Plön, Germany
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  • For correspondence: rogers@evolbio.mpg.de
Marvin A. Böettcher
2Department of Evolutionary Theory, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Plön, Germany
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Arne Traulsen
2Department of Evolutionary Theory, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Plön, Germany
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Duncan Greig
1Experimental Evolution Research Group, Plön, Germany
3Department of Genetics, Evolution, and Environment, University College London, London, WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
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Abstract

Models of mRNA translation usually presume that transcripts are linear; upon reaching the end of a transcript each terminating ribosome returns to the cytoplasmic pool before initiating anew on a different transcript. A consequence of linear models is that faster translation of a given mRNA is unlikely to generate more of the encoded protein, particularly at low ribosome availability. Recent evidence indicates that eukaryotic mRNAs are circularized, potentially allowing terminating ribosomes to preferentially reinitiate on the same transcript. Here we model the effect of ribosome reinitiation on translation and show that, at high levels of reinitiation, protein synthesis rates are dominated by the time required to translate a given transcript. Our model provides a simple mechanistic explanation for many previously enigmatic features of eukaryotic translation, including the negative correlation of both ribosome densities and protein abundance on transcript length, the importance of codon usage in determining protein synthesis rates, and the negative correlation between transcript length and both codon adaptation and 5' mRNA folding energies. In contrast to linear models where translation is largely limited by initiation rates, our model reveals that all three stages of translation - initiation, elongation, and termination/reinitiation - determine protein synthesis rates even at low ribosome availability.

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Posted January 27, 2017.
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Ribosome reinitiation can explain length-dependent translation of messenger RNA
David W. Rogers, Marvin A. Böettcher, Arne Traulsen, Duncan Greig
bioRxiv 103689; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/103689
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Ribosome reinitiation can explain length-dependent translation of messenger RNA
David W. Rogers, Marvin A. Böettcher, Arne Traulsen, Duncan Greig
bioRxiv 103689; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/103689

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