Journal article

Long non-stop reading frames on the antisense strand of heat shock protein 70 genes and prion protein (PrP) genes are conserved between species

KI Rother, OK Clay, JP Bourquin, J Silke, W Schaffner

Biological Chemistry | WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH | Published : 1997

Abstract

Several mammalian genes, including heat shock protein (Hsp70) and prion protein (PrP) genes, have been reported to have long open reading frames (ORFs) or non-stop reading frames (NRFs) in the antisense direction. A simple explanation would be that these long antisense reading frames, which are usually in the same triplet frame as the coding strand, are the fortuitous byproduct of a high overall [G + C] content with concomitant preference for G/C over A/T in the third codon position, a preference for RNY type codons (purine/any nucleotide/pyrimidine), and/or a bias against serine and leucine, the only amino acids with codons that can be read as stop codons in the antisense direction. The PrP..

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University of Melbourne Researchers