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Does Paramecium primaurelia use a different genetic code in its macronucleus?

Abstract

It has long been known that messenger RNAs (mRNAs) of ciliates and in particular of Paramecium are not translated well in heterologous in vitro translation systems1–4. Recently, we have demonstrated for Paramecium primaurelia that this phenomenon results from the presence of well-defined blocking sites in the coding sequences of almost all mRNAs, and that these sites are an intrinsic feature of the primary as opposed to the secondary structure of the mRNAs5. Here we show that both the gene and the mRNA for the G surface antigen of P. primaurelia contain numerous TAA and TAG codons scattered throughout their coding sequences. We propose that these codons do not represent termination codons in P. primaurelia but instead code for glutamic acid or glutamine and that the in vitro translation of Paramecium mRNAs is blocked by their presence.

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Caron, F., Meyer, E. Does Paramecium primaurelia use a different genetic code in its macronucleus?. Nature 314, 185–188 (1985). https://doi.org/10.1038/314185a0

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