Abstract

Trans-splicing of trypanosomatid polycistronic transcripts produces polyadenylated monocistronic mRNAs modified to form the 5′ cap4 structure (m7Gpppm36,6,2′Apm2′Apm2′Cpm23,2′U). NMR and X-ray crystallography reveal that Leishmania has a unique type of N-terminally-extended cap-binding protein (eIF4E4) that binds via a PAM2 motif to PABP1. This relies on the interactions of a combination of polar and charged amino acid side-chains together with multiple hydrophobic interactions, and underpins a novel architecture in the Leishmania cap4-binding translation factor complex. Measurements using microscale thermophoresis, fluorescence anisotropy and surface plasmon resonance characterize the key interactions driving assembly of the Leishmania translation initiation complex. We demonstrate that this complex can accommodate Leishmania eIF4G3 which, unlike the standard eukaryotic initiation complex paradigm, binds tightly to eIF4E4, but not to PABP1. Thus, in Leishmania, the chain of interactions 5′cap4-eIF4E4–PABP1-poly(A) bridges the mRNA 5′ and 3′ ends. Exceptionally, therefore, by binding tightly to two protein ligands and to the mRNA 5′ cap4 structure, the trypanosomatid N-terminally extended form of eIF4E acts as the core molecular scaffold for the mRNA-cap-binding complex. Finally, the eIF4E4 N-terminal extension is an intrinsically disordered region that transitions to a partly folded form upon binding to PABP1, whereby this interaction is not modulated by poly(A) binding to PABP1.

Highlights

  • The eukaryotic translation machinery is highly complex, comprising ribosomes and tRNAs and a host of translation factors that promote mRNA recruitment and AUG recognition, as well as polypeptide elongation and termination [1,2]

  • This finding is consistent with the results of previous pull-down and two-hybrid assay experiments performed with PABP1 and eIF4E4 [7]

  • We have demonstrated that the N-terminal extension found in Leishmania eIF4E4 acts as a focal structural element in formation of a unique type of eukaryotic cap-binding complex architecture

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Summary

Introduction

The eukaryotic translation machinery is highly complex, comprising ribosomes and tRNAs and a host of translation factors that promote mRNA recruitment and AUG (start codon) recognition, as well as polypeptide elongation and termination [1,2]. While it has been evident for some time that there are variations in terms of the structural and functional properties of eukaryotic translation factors across the animals, plants and fungi [3], recent work has highlighted distinctive features of the trypanosomatid translation machinery.

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