Abstract

Translational regulation has invited considerable interest consequent of its circumstantial dysregulation during cancer genesis. eIF4E (Eukaryotic Initiation Factor 4E) has been identified as an important factor involved in tumor progression by way of instrumenting the convergence of oncogenic signals for up-regulation of Cap-dependent translation. In the backdrop of dramatic eIF4E over-expression in a large population of human cancers, we suggest that the tumorigenic property of eIF4E is strictly attributed to its phosphorylation state. We provide evidence that while phosphorylated eIF4E fails to be sequestered by 4E-BP1, its dephosphorylated form shows overwhelming binding with 4E-BP1 without any consideration to the state of 4E-BP1 phosphorylation to suggest that eIF4E-4EBP1 binding is governed by eIF4E phosphorylation instead of 4E-BP1. We also show that eIF4E engages in Cap-assembly formation preferably in a phosphorylation-dependent manner to suggest that eIF4E phosphorylation rather than 4E-BP1 regulates its availability for Cap-assembly.

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