Abstract

Protein synthesis is an energy consuming process characterised as a pivotal and highly regulated step in gene expression. The net protein output is dictated by a combination of translation initiation, elongation and termination rates that have remained difficult to measure. Recently, the development of ribosome profiling has enabled the inference of translation parameters through modelling, as this method informs on the ribosome position along the mRNA. Here, we present an automated, reproducible and portable computational pipeline to infer relative single-codon and codon-pair dwell times as well as gene flux from raw ribosome profiling sequencing data. As a case study, we applied our workflow to a publicly available yeast ribosome profiling dataset consisting of 57 independent gene knockouts related to RNA and tRNA modifications. We uncovered the effects of those modifications on translation elongation and codon selection during decoding. In particular, knocking out mod5 and trm7 increases codon-specific dwell times which indicates their potential tRNA targets, and highlights effects of nucleotide modifications on ribosome decoding rate.

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