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J.Health Sci., 46(6), 405-408, 2000

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From RNA Structure to the Identification of New Genes: The Example of Selenoproteins

Alain Lescure,a Daniel Gautheret,b Delphine Fagegaltier,a Philippe Carbon,a and Alain Krol *, a

aUPR 9002 du CNRS, Structure des Macromolecules Biologiques et Mecanismes de Reconnaissance, Institut de Biologie Moleculaire et Cellulaire, 67084 Strasbourg Cedex, France and bUMR 1889 du CNRS, Information Genetique et Structurale, 31, Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13402 Marseille Cedex 20, France

Selenocysteine is incorporated into selenoproteins by an in-frame UGA codon whose readthrough requires the selenocysteine insertion sequence (SECIS), a conserved hairpin in the 3' untranslated region (3'UTR) of eukaryotic selenoprotein mRNAs. To identify new selenoproteins, we developed a strategy that obviates the need for prior amino acid sequence information. A computational screen was used to scan nucleotide sequence databases for sequences presenting a potential SECIS secondary structure. The computer-selected hairpins were then assayed in vivo for their functional capacities and the cDNAs corresponding to the SECIS winners were identified. Four of them encoded novel selenoproteins as confirmed by in vivo experiments. Among these, SelZf1 and SelZf2 share a common domain with the mitochondrial thioredoxin reductase TrxR2. The three proteins, however, possess distinct N-terminal domains. We found that another protein, SelX, displays sequence similarity to a protein involved in bacterial pili formation. For the first time, four novel selenoproteins were discovered based on a computational screen for the RNA hairpin directing selenocysteine incorporation.