Selected article for: "release factor and slow decoding"

Author: Atkins, John F.; Loughran, Gary; Bhatt, Pramod R.; Firth, Andrew E.; Baranov, Pavel V.
Title: Ribosomal frameshifting and transcriptional slippage: From genetic steganography and cryptography to adventitious use
  • Document date: 2016_9_6
  • ID: 0s8huajd_116
    Snippet: One of the soluble proteins prone to conversion to a prion form is S. cerevisiae release factor 3, eRF3. In cells with the prion form, [PSI+], there is slow decoding of stop codons. This has been demonstrated to lead to elevated frameshifting in the decoding of a gene that requires 'shifty stop' frameshifting (in that case there is UGA in the ribosomal A-site), and this has substantial physiological consequences as it lowers polyamine levels (12).....
    Document: One of the soluble proteins prone to conversion to a prion form is S. cerevisiae release factor 3, eRF3. In cells with the prion form, [PSI+], there is slow decoding of stop codons. This has been demonstrated to lead to elevated frameshifting in the decoding of a gene that requires 'shifty stop' frameshifting (in that case there is UGA in the ribosomal A-site), and this has substantial physiological consequences as it lowers polyamine levels (12) .

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