A trans locus causes a ribosomopathy in hypertrophic hearts that affects mRNA translation in a protein length-dependent fashion

Autor/a

Witte, Franziska

Ruiz Orera, Jorge

Ciolli Mattioli, Camilla

Blachut, Susanne

Adami, Eleonora

Felicitas Schulz, Jana

Schneider-Lunitz, Valentin

Hummel, Oliver

Patone, Giannino

Mücke, Michael Benedikt

Šilhavý, Jan

Heinig, Matthias

Bottolo, Leonardo

Sanchis, Daniel

Vingron, Martin

Chekulaeva, Marina

Pravenec, Michal

Hubner, Norbert

Van Heesch, Sebastiaan

Fecha de publicación

2021-10-13T10:53:04Z

2021-10-13T10:53:04Z

2021



Resumen

Background: Little is known about the impact of trans-acting genetic variation on the rates with which proteins are synthesized by ribosomes. Here, we investigate the influence of such distant genetic loci on the efficiency of mRNA translation and define their contribution to the development of complex disease phenotypes within a panel of rat recombinant inbred lines. Results: We identify several tissue-specific master regulatory hotspots that each control the translation rates of multiple proteins. One of these loci is restricted to hypertrophic hearts, where it drives a translatome-wide and protein length-dependent change in translational efficiency, altering the stoichiometric translation rates of sarcomere proteins. Mechanistic dissection of this locus across multiple congenic lines points to a translation machinery defect, characterized by marked differences in polysome profiles and misregulation of the small nucleolar RNA SNORA48. Strikingly, from yeast to humans, we observe reproducible protein length-dependent shifts in translational efficiency as a conserved hallmark of translation machinery mutants, including those that cause ribosomopathies. Depending on the factor mutated, a pre-existing negative correlation between protein length and translation rates could either be enhanced or reduced, which we propose to result from mRNA-specific imbalances in canonical translation initiation and reinitiation rates. Conclusions: We show that distant genetic control of mRNA translation is abundant in mammalian tissues, exemplified by a single genomic locus that triggers a translation-driven molecular mechanism. Our work illustrates the complexity through which genetic variation can drive phenotypic variability between individuals and thereby contribute to complex disease.


S.v.H. was supported by an EMBO long-term fellowship (ALTF 186-2015, LTFCOFUND2013, GA-2013-609409). N.H. is the recipient of an ERC advanced grant under the European Union Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program (grant agreement AdG788970) and is supported by a grant from the Leducq Foundation (16CVD03). M.P. was supported by Praemium Academiae award (AP1502) of the Czech Academy of Sciences. D.S. was funded by Grant 20153810 from Fundació La Marató de TV3. Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.

Tipo de documento

Artículo
Versión publicada

Lengua

Inglés

Materias y palabras clave

Genetic variation; trans QTL mapping; Translational efficiency; Ribosome profiling

Publicado por

BMC

Documentos relacionados

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-021-02397-w

Genome Biology, 2021, vol. 22, 191

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/788970/EU/CodingHeart

Derechos

cc-by (c) Witte et al., 2021

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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