Genome-wide measurement of ribosome occupancy on mRNAs has enabled empirical identification of translated regions, but high-confidence detection of coding regions that overlap annotated coding regions has remained challenging. Here, we report a sensitive and robust algorithm that revealed the translation of 388 N-terminally truncated proteins in budding yeast-more than 30-fold more than previously known. We extensively experimentally validated them and defined two classes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome-wide measurements of ribosome occupancy on mRNA transcripts have enabled global empirical identification of translated regions. These approaches have revealed an unexpected diversity of protein products, but high-confidence identification of new coding regions that entirely overlap annotated coding regions - including those that encode truncated protein isoforms - has remained challenging. Here, we develop a sensitive and robust algorithm focused on identifying N-terminally truncated proteins genome-wide, identifying 388 truncated protein isoforms, a more than 30-fold increase in the number known in budding yeast.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlobal methods for assaying translation have greatly improved our understanding of the protein-coding capacity of the genome. In particular, it is now possible to perform genome-wide and condition-specific identification of translation initiation sites through modified ribosome profiling methods that selectively capture initiating ribosomes. Here we discuss our recent study applying such an approach to meiotic and mitotic timepoints in the simple eukaryote, budding yeast, as an example of the surprising diversity of protein products-many of which are non-canonical-that can be revealed by such methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenomic analyses in budding yeast have helped define the foundational principles of eukaryotic gene expression. However, in the absence of empirical methods for defining coding regions, these analyses have historically excluded specific classes of possible coding regions, such as those initiating at non-AUG start codons. Here, we applied an experimental approach to globally annotate translation initiation sites in yeast and identified 149 genes with alternative N-terminally extended protein isoforms initiating from near-cognate codons upstream of annotated AUG start codons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF