Although previous studies have already shown that both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial activities of glycyltRNA synthetase are provided by a single gene, GRS1, in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the mechanism by which this occurs remains unclear. Evidence presented here indicates that this bifunctional property is actually a result of two distinct translational products alternatively generated from a single transcript of this gene. Except for an amino-terminal 23-amino acid extension, these two isoforms have the same polypeptide sequence and function exclusively in their respective compartments under normal conditions. Reporter gene assays further suggest that this leader peptide can function independently as a mitochondrial targeting signal and plays the major role in the subcellular localization of the isoforms. Additionally, whereas the short protein is translationally initiated from a traditional AUG triplet, the longer isoform is generated from an upstream inframe UUG codon. To our knowledge, GRS1 appears to be the first example in the yeast wherein a functional protein isoform is initiated from a naturally occurring non-AUG codon. The results suggest that non-AUG initiation might be a mechanism existing throughout all kingdoms.
Previous studies have shown that translation of mRNA for yeast glycyl-tRNA synthetase is alternatively initiated from UUG and a downstream AUG initiation codon. Evidence presented here shows that unlike an AUG initiation codon, efficiency of this non-AUG initiation codon is significantly affected by its sequence context, in particular the nucleotides at positions ؊3 to ؊1 relative to the initiation codon. A/A/R (R represents A or G) and C/G/C appear to be the most and least favorable sequences at these positions, respectively. Mutation of the native context sequence ؊3 to ؊1 from AAA to CGC reduced translation initiation from the UUG codon up to 32-fold and resulted in loss of mitochondrial respiration. Although an AUG initiation codon is, in general, unresponsive to context changes in yeast, an AAA (؊3 to ؊1) to CGC mutation still reduced its initiating activity up to 8-fold under similar conditions. These results suggest that sequence context is more important for translation initiation in yeast than previously appreciated.
Previous studies showed that yeast VAS1 encodes both the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial forms of valyl-tRNA synthetase (ValRS), using alternative transcription and translation. The ValRS isoforms have identical polypeptide sequences, except for a 46-amino acid leader peptide that functions as a mitochondrial targeting signal. Although the two forms of the enzyme exhibit indistinguishable tRNA specificities in vitro, they cannot substitute for each other in vivo because of their different localizations. Here we show that the 46-residue leader sequence can be divided into two nonoverlapping peptides, each of which retains the ability to target the enzyme into mitochondria. The engineered proteins (with truncated leader sequences) are dual-targeted, rescuing both the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial defects of a vas1 knockout strain. Thus, in addition to alternative splicing and alternative translation initiation as mechanisms by which a single gene can encode cytoplasmic and mitochondrial activities, the inherent characteristics of a single polypeptide may enable it to be distributed simultaneously between two cellular compartments. This mechanism may explain how certain other single genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae provide dual functions.
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