Abstract

Transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms are commonly accepted paradigms of tumorigenesis. The view is emerging that deregulation of translation contributes importantly to cancer development, a role not generally appreciated before. Eukaryotic initiation factor eIF3 contains at least thirteen non-identical subunits, named from eIF3a to eIF3m, and plays an essential role in the rate-limiting initiation phase of translation. Increased mRNA and protein levels of the eIF3a, -3b, -3c, -3h, and -3i subunits have been detected in a wide variety of human tumors and are frequently identified as prognostic biomarkers for poor clinical outcome. However, it remains to be established whether up-regulation of eIF3 subunits is a consequence or a cause of the malignant phenotypes. Here we report that ectopic expression of eIF3a, -3b, -3c, -3h, or -3i in stably transfected NIH3T3 cells leads to a number of oncogenic properties: decreased doubling times, increased clonogenicity and viability, facilitated S-phase entry, attenuation of apoptosis, formation of transformed foci, and anchorage-independent growth. Only overexpression of the transforming subunits results in a stimulation of initiation and global protein synthesis rates and enhanced translation of poorly translated mRNAs that encode growth-regulating proteins, including cyclinD1, c-Myc, fibroblast growth factor-2, and ornithine decarboxylase, which may be responsible for oncogenic malignancy in the transformed cell lines. Based on these results, we hypothesize that eIF3 contributes to hyperactivation of the translation initiation machinery and thereby may play an important role in neoplasia. Cancer cells appear to require an aberrantly activated translational state to survive, suggesting that the initiation factors may be promising therapeutic targets for treating cancer.

Highlights

  • Translation initiation factor eIF4E2 causes malignant transformation of immortal cells [2,3,4,5,6,7]. eIF4E binds the m7G-cap structure at the 5Ј terminus of mRNAs and plays a key role in the binding of mRNAs to ribosomes [8]

  • This unexpected result suggests that eIF3 may play a causal role in neoplasia, consistent with misregulation of translation being a contributory factor to cancer pathology. eIF3 subunit overexpression results in a modest increase in the global rate of protein synthesis and selectively enhances translation of several malignancy-associated mRNAs, which may be responsible for the oncogenic properties of the transformed cells

  • The finding that overexpression of any one of five different eIF3 subunits leads to malignant transformation of immortal NIH3T3 fibroblasts is truly unexpected

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Summary

Introduction

Translation initiation factor eIF4E2 causes malignant transformation of immortal cells [2,3,4,5,6,7]. eIF4E binds the m7G-cap structure at the 5Ј terminus of mRNAs and plays a key role in the binding of mRNAs to ribosomes [8]. EIF3 subunit overexpression results in a modest increase in the global rate of protein synthesis and selectively enhances translation of several malignancy-associated mRNAs, which may be responsible for the oncogenic properties of the transformed cells.

Results
Conclusion
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