The coding sequence for mammalian ornithine decarboxylase
antizyme is in two different partially overlapping reading
frames with no independent ribosome entry to the second
ORF. Immediately before the stop codon of the first ORF,
a proportion of ribosomes undergo a quadruplet translocation
event to shift to the +1 reading frame of the second and
main ORF. The proportion that frameshifts is dependent
on the polyamine level and, because the product antizyme
is a negative regulator of intracellular polyamine levels,
the frameshifting acts to complete an autoregulatory circuit
by sensing polyamine levels. An mRNA element just 5′
of the shift site and a 3′ pseudoknot are important
for efficient frameshifting. Previous work has shown that
a cassette with the mammalian shift site and associated
signals directs efficient shifting in the budding yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae at the same codon to
the correct frame, but that the shift is −2 instead
of +1. The product contains an extra amino acid corresponding
to the shift site. The present work shows efficient frameshifting
also occurs in the fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces
pombe. This frameshifting is 80% +1 and 20% −2.
The response of S. pombe translation apparatus
to the mammalian antizyme recoding signals is more similar
to that of the mammalian system than to that of S.
cerevisiae. S. pombe provides a good model
system for genetic studies on the mechanism of at least
this type of programmed mammalian frameshifting.