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Conserved Peptide Upstream Open Reading Frames Act Via Ribosome Stalling to Regulate Translation in Response to Environmental Signals.
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  • Barry Causier,
  • Tayah Hopes,
  • Mary McKay,
  • Zachary Paling,
  • Brendan Davies
Barry Causier
University of Leeds

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Tayah Hopes
University of Leeds
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Mary McKay
University of Leeds
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Zachary Paling
University of Leeds
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Brendan Davies
University of Leeds
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Abstract

The regulation of protein synthesis plays a key role in growth and development in all organisms. Upstream open reading frames (uORFs) are commonly found in eukaryotic mRNA transcripts and typically inhibit translation of downstream ORFs, in part by stalling ribosomes. Conserved peptide uORFs (CPuORFs) are a rare subset of uORFs, some of which conditionally regulate translation. Here we identify three Arabidopsis CPuORFs that specifically regulate translation of any downstream ORF, in response to the agriculturally significant environmental signals, heat shock and water limitation. Mechanistically, we provide evidence that CPuORF translation causes ribosome stalling, in a peptide sequence-dependent manner, attenuating translation of downstream ORFs. We propose a model in which plant CPuORFs are not simply on/off switches for translation, but rather act conditionally, along a continuum, to fine-tune translation dynamically.