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The Translational Landscape of the Human Heart

Authors :
Markus Landthaler
Catherine L. Worth
Allison Faber
Marcel Schilling
Oliver Hummel
Eleonora Adami
Valentin Schneider-Lunitz
Roel A. de Weger
Magdalena Harakalova
Sebastiaan van Heesch
Philipp Mertins
Norbert Hubner
Uwe Ohler
Christoph Schramm
Leanne E. Felkin
Stuart A. Cook
Sivakumar Viswanathan
Sebastian Schafer
Henrike Maatz
Aryan Vink
Marieluise Kirchner
Konstantinos Vanezis
Wolfgang A. Linke
Benedikt Obermayer
Nikolaus Rajewsky
Rhys Merriott
Anissa A. Widjaja
Masatoshi Kanda
Paul J.R. Barton
Anna Gärtner-Rommel
Nancy Mah
Su-Jun Oh
Marcial Sebode
Emanuel Wyler
Masaya Mukai
Michael Benedikt Mucke
Sebastian Memczak
Franziska Witte
Nicholas M Quaife
Christine E. Seidman
Folkert W. Asselbergs
Lorenzo Calviello
Sebastian Diecke
Jonathan G. Seidman
Franziska Trnka
Susanne Blachut
Giannino Patone
Eric L. Lindberg
Jana Felicitas Schulz
Dorothee Schwinge
Andreas Kurtz
Clara-Louisa Sandmann
Hendrik Milting
Christoph Knosalla
Martin Vingron
Cris dos Remedios
Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust
Heart Research UK
Fondation Leducq
Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust- BRC Funding
Imper
Source :
Cell, 260.e29
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Gene expression in human tissue has primarily been studied on the transcriptional level, largely neglecting translational regulation. Here, we analyze the translatomes of 80 human hearts to identify new translation events and quantify the effect of translational regulation. We show extensive translational control of cardiac gene expression, which is orchestrated in a process-specific manner. Translation downstream of predicted disease-causing protein-truncating variants appears to be frequent, suggesting inefficient translation termination. We identify hundreds of previously undetected microproteins, expressed from lncRNAs and circRNAs, for which we validate the protein products in vivo. The translation of microproteins is not restricted to the heart and prominent in the translatomes of human kidney and liver. We associate these microproteins with diverse cellular processes and compartments and find that many locate to the mitochondria. Importantly, dozens of microproteins are translated from lncRNAs with well-characterized noncoding functions, indicating previously unrecognized biology.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell, 260.e29
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6667e51caad943171c7f0a0b8d94cc0d