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result(s) for
"Translation initiation"
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More than just scanning: the importance of cap-independent mRNA translation initiation for cellular stress response and cancer
by
Menezes, Juliane
,
Lacerda, Rafaela
,
Romão, Luísa
in
5' Untranslated regions
,
Animals
,
Biochemistry
2017
The scanning model for eukaryotic mRNA translation initiation states that the small ribosomal subunit, along with initiation factors, binds at the cap structure at the 5′ end of the mRNA and scans the 5′ untranslated region (5′UTR) until an initiation codon is found. However, under conditions that impair canonical cap-dependent translation, the synthesis of some proteins is kept by alternative mechanisms that are required for cell survival and stress recovery. Alternative modes of translation initiation include cap- and/or scanning-independent mechanisms of ribosomal recruitment. In most cap-independent translation initiation events there is a direct recruitment of the 40S ribosome into a position upstream, or directly at, the initiation codon via a specific internal ribosome entry site (IRES) element in the 5′UTR. Yet, in some cellular mRNAs, a different translation initiation mechanism that is neither cap- nor IRES-dependent seems to occur through a special RNA structure called cap-independent translational enhancer (CITE). Recent evidence uncovered a distinct mechanism through which mRNAs containing
N
6
-methyladenosine (m
6
A) residues in their 5′UTR directly bind eukaryotic initiation factor 3 (eIF3) and the 40S ribosomal subunit in order to initiate translation in the absence of the cap-binding proteins. This review focuses on the important role of cap-independent translation mechanisms in human cells and how these alternative mechanisms can either act individually or cooperate with other
cis
-acting RNA regulons to orchestrate specific translational responses triggered upon several cellular stress states, and diseases such as cancer. Elucidation of these non-canonical mechanisms reveals the complexity of translational control and points out their potential as prospective novel therapeutic targets.
Journal Article
Symbiotic polyamine metabolism regulates epithelial proliferation and macrophage differentiation in the colon
2021
Intestinal microbiota-derived metabolites have biological importance for the host. Polyamines, such as putrescine and spermidine, are produced by the intestinal microbiota and regulate multiple biological processes. Increased colonic luminal polyamines promote longevity in mice. However, no direct evidence has shown that microbial polyamines are incorporated into host cells to regulate cellular responses. Here, we show that microbial polyamines reinforce colonic epithelial proliferation and regulate macrophage differentiation. Colonisation by wild-type, but not polyamine biosynthesis-deficient,
Escherichia coli
in germ-free mice raises intracellular polyamine levels in colonocytes, accelerating epithelial renewal. Commensal bacterium-derived putrescine increases the abundance of anti-inflammatory macrophages in the colon. The bacterial polyamines ameliorate symptoms of dextran sulfate sodium-induced colitis in mice. These effects mainly result from enhanced hypusination of eukaryotic initiation translation factor. We conclude that bacterial putrescine functions as a substrate for symbiotic metabolism and is further absorbed and metabolised by the host, thus helping maintain mucosal homoeostasis in the intestine.
Polyamines produced by intestinal bacteria are thought to have beneficial effects on the host. Here the authors show that these polyamines increase regulatory macrophage abundance and are taken up by colonic epithelial cells to enhance colonic barrier function and immunity in mice.
Journal Article
Polyglutamine-mediated ribotoxicity disrupts proteostasis and stress responses in Huntington’s disease
2024
Huntington’s disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by expansion of a CAG trinucleotide repeat in the Huntingtin (
HTT
) gene, encoding a homopolymeric polyglutamine (polyQ) tract. Although mutant HTT (mHTT) protein is known to aggregate, the links between aggregation and neurotoxicity remain unclear. Here we show that both translation and aggregation of wild-type HTT and mHTT are regulated by a stress-responsive upstream open reading frame and that polyQ expansions cause abortive translation termination and release of truncated, aggregation-prone mHTT fragments. Notably, we find that mHTT depletes translation elongation factor eIF5A in brains of symptomatic HD mice and cultured HD cells, leading to pervasive ribosome pausing and collisions. Loss of eIF5A disrupts homeostatic controls and impairs recovery from acute stress. Importantly, drugs that inhibit translation initiation reduce premature termination and mitigate this escalating cascade of ribotoxic stress and dysfunction in HD.
Aviner et al. show that translation and aggregation of Huntingtin (HTT) are regulated by a stress-responsive upstream open reading frame. Mutant HTT depletes translation elongation factor eIF5A, leading to ribosome pausing and collisions.
Journal Article
Initiation of mRNA translation in bacteria: structural and dynamic aspects
2015
Initiation of mRNA translation is a major checkpoint for regulating level and fidelity of protein synthesis. Being rate limiting in protein synthesis, translation initiation also represents the target of many post-transcriptional mechanisms regulating gene expression. The process begins with the formation of an unstable 30S pre-initiation complex (30S pre-
IC
) containing initiation factors (IFs) IF1, IF2 and IF3, the translation initiation region of an mRNA and initiator fMet-tRNA whose codon and anticodon pair in the P-site following a first-order rearrangement of the 30S pre-
IC
produces a locked 30S initiation complex (30S
IC
); this is docked by the 50S subunit to form a 70S complex that, following several conformational changes, positional readjustments of its ligands and ejection of the IFs, becomes a 70S initiation complex productive in initiation dipeptide formation. The first EF-G-dependent translocation marks the beginning of the elongation phase of translation. Here, we review structural, mechanistic and dynamical aspects of this process.
Journal Article
NetStart 2.0: prediction of eukaryotic translation initiation sites using a protein language model
by
Pedersen, Anders Gorm
,
Winther, Ole
,
Nielsen, Line Sandvad
in
Algorithms
,
Amino acids
,
Annotations
2025
Background
Accurate identification of translation initiation sites is essential for the proper translation of mRNA into functional proteins. In eukaryotes, the choice of the translation initiation site is influenced by multiple factors, including its proximity to the 5
end and the local start codon context. Translation initiation sites mark the transition from non-coding to coding regions. This fact motivates the expectation that the upstream sequence, if translated, would assemble a nonsensical order of amino acids, while the downstream sequence would correspond to the structured beginning of a protein. This distinction suggests potential for predicting translation initiation sites using a protein language model.
Results
We present NetStart 2.0, a deep learning-based model that integrates the ESM-2 protein language model with the local sequence context to predict translation initiation sites across a broad range of eukaryotic species. NetStart 2.0 was trained as a single model across multiple species, and despite the broad phylogenetic diversity represented in the training data, it consistently relied on features marking the transition from non-coding to coding regions.
Conclusion
By leveraging “protein-ness”, NetStart 2.0 achieves state-of-the-art performance in predicting translation initiation sites across a diverse range of eukaryotic species. This success underscores the potential of protein language models to bridge transcript- and peptide-level information in complex biological prediction tasks. The NetStart 2.0 webserver is available at:
https://services.healthtech.dtu.dk/services/NetStart-2.0/
.
Journal Article
Translational initiation factor eIF5 replaces eIF1 on the 40S ribosomal subunit to promote start-codon recognition
by
Kumar, Rakesh
,
Nanda, Jagpreet Singh
,
Gordiyenko, Yuliya
in
Binding Sites
,
Childrens health
,
Codon, Initiator - genetics
2018
In eukaryotic translation initiation, AUG recognition of the mRNA requires accommodation of Met-tRNAi in a ‘PIN’ state, which is antagonized by the factor eIF1. eIF5 is a GTPase activating protein (GAP) of eIF2 that additionally promotes stringent AUG selection, but the molecular basis of its dual function was unknown. We present a cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) reconstruction of a yeast 48S pre-initiation complex (PIC), at an overall resolution of 3.0 Å, featuring the N-terminal domain (NTD) of eIF5 bound to the 40S subunit at the location vacated by eIF1. eIF5 interacts with and allows a more accommodated orientation of Met-tRNAi. Substitutions of eIF5 residues involved in the eIF5-NTD/tRNAi interaction influenced initiation at near-cognate UUG codonsin vivo, and the closed/open PIC conformation in vitro, consistent with direct stabilization of the codon:anticodon duplex by the wild-type eIF5-NTD. The present structure reveals the basis for a key role of eIF5 in start-codon selection.
Journal Article
The Proteins Diversity of the eIF4E Family in the eIF4F Complex
by
Phat, Tien Do
,
Nikonov, Oleg S.
,
Nikonova, Ekaterina Yu
in
Animals
,
Binding proteins
,
Binding sites
2025
In eukaryotes, translation initiation occurs by the cap-dependent mechanism. Each translated mRNA must be pre-bound by the translation initiation factor eIF4E. All isoforms of this factor are combined into one family. The review considers natural diversity of the eIF4E isoforms in different organisms, provides structural information about them, and describes their functional role in the processes, such as oncogenesis, participation in the translation of certain mRNAs under stress, and selective use of the individual isoforms by viruses. In addition, this review briefly describes the mechanism of cap-dependent translation initiation and possible ways to regulate the eIF4E function.
Journal Article
Inhibiting translation elongation by reducing eIF5A activity induces feedback inhibition of initiation, limiting tumour cell proliferation
2025
Cancer development is associated with dysregulation of the translatome, and targeting canonical eukaryotic initiation and elongation factors can offer treatment avenues for various neoplasms. Emerging evidence indicates that dysregulated mRNA elongation, involving alterations in eEF2 activity and eIF5A expression, also contributes to tumour cell growth. In this study, we investigate whether targeting eIF5A with the inhibitor GC7 is a viable strategy to curtail aberrant cell growth. Our findings demonstrate that inhibiting elongation by reducing eIF5A activity induces feedback inhibition of initiation through eIF2α phosphorylation, decreasing ternary complex formation and shutting down bulk protein synthesis. Employing dynamic SILAC, we identify proteins impacted by reduced eIF5A activity, and show their decreased translation results from feedback inhibition to initiation or other processes downstream of eIF5A. Decreased eIF5A activity impairs mitochondrial function, which activates signalling through HRI to eIF2α phosphorylation, reducing cancer cell proliferation. These effects are reversed by treatment with the integrated stress response inhibitor, implying that the impact of GC7 on cancer cell proliferation is mediated via translation initiation rather than elongation inhibition. These data suggest that eIF5A inhibition could be used to target cancer cells that depend on mitochondrial function for their proliferation and survival.
Translation initiation and elongation factors can be targets for cancer treatment. Here, the authors show that inhibiting translation elongation through eIF5A impairs mitochondrial function, slowing the proliferation of tumour cells.
Journal Article
Kozak Similarity Score Algorithm Identifies Alternative Translation Initiation Codons Implicated in Cancers
2022
Ribosome profiling and mass spectroscopy have identified canonical and noncanonical translation initiation codons (TICs) that are upstream of the main translation initiation site and used to translate oncogenic proteins. There have previously been conflicting reports about the patterns of nucleotides that surround noncanonical TICs. Here, we use a Kozak Similarity Score algorithm to find that nearly all of these TICs have flanking nucleotides closely matching the Kozak sequence. Remarkably, the nucleotides flanking alternative noncanonical TICs are frequently closer to the Kozak sequence than the nucleotides flanking TICs used to translate the gene’s main protein. Of note, the 5′ untranslated region (5‘UTR) of cancer-associated genes with an upstream TIC tend to be significantly longer than the same region in genes not associated with cancer. The presence of a longer-than-typical 5′UTR increases the likelihood of ribosome binding to upstream noncanonical TICs, and may be a distinguishing feature of a number of genes overexpressed in cancer. Noncanonical TICs that are located in the 5′UTR, although thought by some to be disadvantageous and suppressed by evolution, may translate oncogenic proteins because of their flanking nucleotides.
Journal Article
To New Beginnings: Riboproteogenomics Discovery of N-Terminal Proteoforms in Arabidopsis Thaliana
by
Van Breusegem, Frank
,
Jonckheere, Veronique
,
Willems, Patrick
in
Acetylation
,
alternative translation initiation
,
Annotations
2022
Alternative translation initiation is a widespread event in biology that can shape multiple protein forms or proteoforms from a single gene. However, the respective contribution of alternative translation to protein complexity remains largely enigmatic. By complementary ribosome profiling and N-terminal proteomics (i.e., riboproteogenomics), we provide clear-cut evidence for ~90 N-terminal proteoform pairs shaped by (alternative) translation initiation in Arabidopsis thaliana . Next to several cases additionally confirmed by directed mutagenesis, identified alternative protein N-termini follow the enzymatic rules of co-translational N-terminal protein acetylation and initiator methionine removal. In contrast to other eukaryotic models, N-terminal acetylation in plants cannot generally be considered as a proxy of translation initiation because of its posttranslational occurrence on mature proteolytic neo-termini (N-termini) localized in the chloroplast stroma. Quantification of N-terminal acetylation revealed differing co- vs. posttranslational N-terminal acetylation patterns. Intriguingly, our data additionally hints to alternative translation initiation serving as a common mechanism to supply protein copies in multiple cellular compartments, as alternative translation sites are often in close proximity to cleavage sites of N-terminal transit sequences of nuclear-encoded chloroplastic and mitochondrial proteins. Overall, riboproteogenomics screening enables the identification of (differential localized) N-terminal proteoforms raised upon alternative translation.
Journal Article