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  3. Guidelines for minimal reporting requirements, design and interpretation of experiments involving the use of eukaryotic dual gene expression reporters (MINDR).
 

Guidelines for minimal reporting requirements, design and interpretation of experiments involving the use of eukaryotic dual gene expression reporters (MINDR).

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/86861
Date of Publication
March 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

DCBP Gruppe Prof. Lei...

DCBP Gruppe Prof. Müh...

Author
Loughran, Gary
Andreev, Dmitry E
Terenin, Ilya M
Namy, Olivier
Mikl, Martin
Yordanova, Martina M
McManus, C Joel
Firth, Andrew E
Atkins, John F
Fraser, Christopher S
Ignatova, Zoya
Iwasaki, Shintaro
Kufel, Joanna
Larsson, Ola
Leidel, Sebastian A.
DCBP Gruppe Prof. Leidel
Mankin, Alexander S
Mariotti, Marco
Tanenbaum, Marvin E
Topisirovic, Ivan
Vázquez-Laslop, Nora
Viero, Gabriela
Caliskan, Neva
Chen, Yiwen
Clark, Patricia L
Dinman, Jonathan D
Farabaugh, Philip J
Gilbert, Wendy V
Ivanov, Pavel
Kieft, Jeffrey S
Mühlemann, Oliverorcid-logo
DCBP Gruppe Prof. Mühlemann
Sachs, Matthew S
Shatsky, Ivan N
Sonenberg, Nahum
Steckelberg, Anna-Lena
Willis, Anne E
Woodside, Michael T
Valasek, Leos Shivaya
Dmitriev, Sergey E
Baranov, Pavel V
Subject(s)

500 - Science::540 - ...

Series
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1545-9985
1545-9993
Publisher
Nature Research
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1038/s41594-025-01492-x
PubMed ID
40033152
Description
Dual reporters encoding two distinct proteins within the same mRNA have had a crucial role in identifying and characterizing unconventional mechanisms of eukaryotic translation. These mechanisms include initiation via internal ribosomal entry sites (IRESs), ribosomal frameshifting, stop codon readthrough and reinitiation. This design enables the expression of one reporter to be influenced by the specific mechanism under investigation, while the other reporter serves as an internal control. However, challenges arise when intervening test sequences are placed between these two reporters. Such sequences can inadvertently impact the expression or function of either reporter, independent of translation-related changes, potentially biasing the results. These effects may occur due to cryptic regulatory elements inducing or affecting transcription initiation, splicing, polyadenylation and antisense transcription as well as unpredictable effects of the translated test sequences on the stability and activity of the reporters. Unfortunately, these unintended effects may lead to misinterpretation of data and the publication of incorrect conclusions in the scientific literature. To address this issue and to assist the scientific community in accurately interpreting dual-reporter experiments, we have developed comprehensive guidelines. These guidelines cover experimental design, interpretation and the minimal requirements for reporting results. They are designed to aid researchers conducting these experiments as well as reviewers, editors and other investigators who seek to evaluate published data.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/206041
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File(s)
FileFile TypeFormatSizeLicensePublisher/Copright statementContent
s41594-025-01492-x.pdftextAdobe PDF1.15 MBpublished restricted
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