Accurate annotation of human protein-coding small open reading frames

TF Martinez, Q Chu, C Donaldson, D Tan… - Nature chemical …, 2020 - nature.com
TF Martinez, Q Chu, C Donaldson, D Tan, MN Shokhirev, A Saghatelian
Nature chemical biology, 2020nature.com
Functional protein-coding small open reading frames (smORFs) are emerging as an
important class of genes. However, the number of translated smORFs in the human genome
is unclear because proteogenomic methods are not sensitive enough, and, as we show,
Ribo-seq strategies require additional measures to ensure comprehensive and accurate
smORF annotation. Here, we integrate de novo transcriptome assembly and Ribo-seq into
an improved workflow that overcomes obstacles with previous methods, to more confidently …
Abstract
Functional protein-coding small open reading frames (smORFs) are emerging as an important class of genes. However, the number of translated smORFs in the human genome is unclear because proteogenomic methods are not sensitive enough, and, as we show, Ribo-seq strategies require additional measures to ensure comprehensive and accurate smORF annotation. Here, we integrate de novo transcriptome assembly and Ribo-seq into an improved workflow that overcomes obstacles with previous methods, to more confidently annotate thousands of smORFs. Evolutionary conservation analyses suggest that hundreds of smORF-encoded microproteins are likely functional. Additionally, many smORFs are regulated during fundamental biological processes, such as cell stress. Peptides derived from smORFs are also detectable on human leukocyte antigen complexes, revealing smORFs as a source of antigens. Thus, by including additional validation into our smORF annotation workflow, we accurately identify thousands of unannotated translated smORFs that will provide a rich pool of unexplored, functional human genes.
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