Abstract
Ribosomal frameshifting is a translational mechanism used as an essential step in the replication cycle of retroviruses. Programmed frameshifting in retroviral translation involves two sequence elements: A heptanucleotide slippery sequence which induces a low basal level of frameshifting and a downstream RNA structure as an enhancer of the process. The precise mechanism of function of these downstream elements is still unclear, but their effect does not solely depend on their stability. Likewise, the possibility that frameshifting could be controlled by specific proteins that bind to these elements and enable or modulate their effects has yet not been substantiated. The RNA hairpin of the HIV-1 gag-pol frameshift cassette was replaced by the iron-responsive element (IRE) from ferritin mRNA, a stem-loop structure that binds iron regulatory proteins (IRPs) in dependence of the iron status of the cell. When a lacZ/luciferase reporter construct was expressed in transfected BHK-21 cells, the IRE or a point-mutated version that is unable to bind IRPs were found to functionally substitute for the HIV-1 hairpin. When cells were treated with the iron chelator desferrioxamine to stimulate IRP binding to the wild-type IRE, frameshift activity was specifically and strongly augmented by protein binding Our data establish that frameshifting can be regulated in a reversible fashion by mRNA-binding proteins.
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