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Título
eIF1A residues implicated in cancer stabilize translation preinitiation complexes and favor suboptimal initiation sites in yeast
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Instituto de Biología Funcional y Genómica
Biochemistry
Chemical biology
eIF1A residues
Pre-initiation complex
Uveal melanoma
Yeast
Fecha de publicación
2017-12
Editor
Nahum Sonenberg, McGill University, Canada
Citación
Martin-Marcos, P. et al. (2017). eIF1A residues implicated in cancer stabilize translation preinitiation complexes and favor suboptimal initiation sites in yeast. eLife 2017; 6: e31250. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31250
Resumen
[EN] The translation pre-initiation complex (PIC) scans the mRNA for an AUG codon in
favorable context, and AUG recognition stabilizes a closed PIC conformation. The unstructured
N-terminal tail (NTT) of yeast eIF1A deploys five basic residues to contact tRNAi, mRNA, or 18S
rRNA exclusively in the closed state. Interestingly, EIF1AX mutations altering the human eIF1A NTT
are associated with uveal melanoma (UM). We found that substituting all five basic residues, and
seven UM-associated substitutions, in yeast eIF1A suppresses initiation at near-cognate UUG
codons and AUGs in poor context. Ribosome profiling of NTT substitution R13P reveals heightened
discrimination against unfavorable AUG context genome-wide. Both R13P and K16D substitutions
destabilize the closed complex at UUG codons in reconstituted PICs. Thus, electrostatic
interactions involving the eIF1A NTT stabilize the closed conformation and promote utilization of
suboptimal start codons. We predict UM-associated mutations alter human gene expression by
increasing discrimination against poor initiation sites.
URI
DOI
10.7554/eLife.31250
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