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TYW5 Gene

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gene678 wordssynced 2026-04-02

TYW5 Gene

Overview

The TYW5 gene (tRNA-yW synthesizing protein 5) is located on chromosome 2q31.1 and encodes a protein essential for the biosynthesis of wybutosine (yW), a hypermodified nucleoside found in transfer RNAs (tRNAs). This gene was identified through functional studies examining the enzymatic steps required for yW modification, a complex post-transcriptional process occurring in eukaryotic cells. The TYW5 protein represents one component of a coordinated modification system that decorates specific tRNA molecules, particularly those carrying phenylalanine codons. While initially characterized for its role in standard cellular translation, emerging evidence suggests that dysregulation of TYW5 and the wybutosine modification pathway may contribute to neurodegenerative disease pathogenesis, particularly through mechanisms affecting translation fidelity and ribosomal function.

Function/Biology

The TYW5 protein functions as a key enzymatic component in the multi-step wybutosine biosynthetic pathway. Wybutosine is an unusually complex modified nucleoside that replaces the first nucleotide (position 37) adjacent to the anticodon in specific tRNAs. This position is critical for proper codon-anticodon interactions and translation accuracy. The modification process involves sequential enzymatic steps catalyzed by multiple proteins, including TYW1, TYW2, TYW3, and TYW5, along with several other cofactors and enzyme complexes.

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