RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Systematic effects of mRNA secondary structure on gene expression and molecular function in budding yeast JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 138792 DO 10.1101/138792 A1 Xia Wang A1 Pidong Li A1 Ryan N. Gutenkunst YR 2017 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/05/16/138792.abstract AB Dynamic control of gene expression is crucial for cellular adaptation to environmental challenges. mRNA secondary structure is known to be associated with mRNA and protein abundance, but little is known about how mRNA secondary structure affects gene expression dynamics. We report a genome-wide computational analysis of mRNA secondary structure, codon usage, and gene expression in budding yeast. We show that mRNA secondary structure combined with codon optimality regulates gene expression in multiple ways, from transcription to mRNA stability to translation. Moreover, we find that the effect of mRNA secondary structure on mRNA abundance is primarily mediated by transcription, not mRNA stability. Notably, genes with low mRNA secondary structure were substantially enriched for functions relevant to stress response, acting in the mitochondrion, endoplasmic reticulum, and ribosome. On the other hand, genes with high mRNA secondary structure were enriched for functions relevant to cellular maintenance, including macromolecular metabolism and biosynthesis. Our results suggest that mRNA secondary structure affects gene expression through coordination of multiple stages in protein biogenesis, with important consequences for stress response. The coupling of transcription to mRNA stability to translation makes concerted changes in mRNA and protein abundance possible and may amplify the effect of regulation to make quick responses to environmental variations.PARSparallel analysis of RNA structureRNAPIIRNA polymerase IICAIcodon adaptation indexGOGene OntologyERendoplasmic reticulum.