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Figure 1 Protein production and the effects of the Sup35 protein and its modified form, the [PSI+] prion, in yeast. a, In cells with normal Sup35 protein, translation of the messenger RNA sequence into a protein sequence by the ribosome is normally terminated by a stop codon. Termination requires an interaction between Sup35 and other proteins such as Sup45. b, In [PSI+] cells, the Sup35 protein takes up the prion conformation and forms aggregates that fail to interact properly with the termination complex. Stop codons are therefore sometimes missed, producing proteins with an extra segment. True and Lindquist3 argue that the prion is maintained by natural selection because the variant proteins it induces sometimes increase yeast-cell ability to survive environmental change. (Graphic modified from material provided by Julie Feder.) 
 
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