Coronavirus frameshifting stimulation element

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Coronavirus frameshifting stimulation element
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Predicted secondary structure and sequence conservation of Corona_FSE
Identifiers
Symbol Corona_FSE
Rfam RF00507
Other data
RNA type Cis-reg; frameshift_element
Domain(s) Viruses
SO 0000233

In molecular biology, the coronavirus frameshifting stimulation element is a conserved stem-loop of RNA found in coronaviruses that can promote ribosomal frameshifting. Such RNA molecules interact with a downstream region to form a pseudoknot structure; the region varies according to the virus but pseudoknot formation is known to stimulate frameshifting. In the classical situation, a sequence 32 nucleotides downstream of the stem is complementary to part of the loop. In other coronaviruses, however, another stem-loop structure around 150 nucleotides downstream can interact with members of this family to form kissing stem-loops and stimulate frameshifting.[1]

Other RNA families identified in the coronavirus include the SL-III cis-acting replication element (CRE), the coronavirus 3' stem-loop II-like motif (s2m), the coronavirus packaging signal and the coronavirus 3' UTR pseudoknot.

During protein synthesis, rapidly changing conditions in the cell can cause ribosomal pausing. In coronaviruses, this can affect growth rate and trigger translational abandonment. This releases the ribsome from the mRNA and the incomplete polypeptide is targeted for destruction.[2]

See also

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Buchan JR, Stansfield I. Halting a cellular production line: responses to ribosomal pausing during translation. Biol Cell. 2007 Sep;99(9):475-87.

External links

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