Abstract

During unfavorable conditions (e.g. tumor hypoxia or viral infection), canonical, cap-dependent mRNA translation is suppressed in human cells. Nonetheless, a subset of physiologically important mRNAs (e.g. hypoxia-inducible factor 1α [HIF-1α], fibroblast growth factor 9 [FGF-9], and p53) is still translated by an unknown, cap-independent mechanism. Additionally, expression levels of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4GI (eIF4GI) and of its homolog, death-associated protein 5 (DAP5), are elevated. By examining the 5' UTRs of HIF-1α, FGF-9, and p53 mRNAs and using fluorescence anisotropy binding studies, luciferase reporter-based in vitro translation assays, and mutational analyses, we demonstrate here that eIF4GI and DAP5 specifically bind to the 5' UTRs of these cap-independently translated mRNAs. Surprisingly, we found that the eIF4E-binding domain of eIF4GI increases not only the binding affinity but also the selectivity among these mRNAs. We further demonstrate that the affinities of eIF4GI and DAP5 binding to these 5' UTRs correlate with the efficiency with which these factors drive cap-independent translation of these mRNAs. Integrating the results of our binding and translation assays, we conclude that eIF4GI or DAP5 is critical for recruitment of a specific subset of mRNAs to the ribosome, providing mechanistic insight into their cap-independent translation.

Highlights

  • Translation of mRNAs into proteins is the most energy-consuming process in the cell [1, 2] and plays a major role in the regulation of gene expression

  • We propose that unlike cap-dependent translation, where binding of eukaryotic initiation factor 4E (eIF4E) to the m7G-cap is the initial event in protein synthesis, an important initial event in cap-independent initiation of eukaryotic cellular mRNAs with structured 59 untranslated regions (UTRs) is the binding of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4GI (eIF4GI) or death-associated protein 5 (DAP5)

  • In this study, using a fluorescence anisotropy-based equilibrium binding assay and a luciferase-based gene expression reporter assay, we have demonstrated that eIF4GI and DAP5 directly bind to and stimulate cap-independent translation initiation of a subset of cellular mRNAs

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Summary

Introduction

Translation of mRNAs into proteins is the most energy-consuming process in the cell [1, 2] and plays a major role in the regulation of gene expression.

Results
Conclusion
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