Abstract

The eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 (eIF2) is central to the onset of protein synthesis and its modulation in response to physiological demands. eIF2, a heterotrimeric G-protein, is activated by guanine nucleotide exchange to deliver the initiator methionyl-tRNA to the ribosome. Here we report that assembly of the eIF2 complex in vivo depends on Cdc123, a cell proliferation protein conserved among eukaryotes. Mutations of CDC123 in budding yeast reduced the association of eIF2 subunits, diminished polysome levels, and increased GCN4 expression indicating that Cdc123 is critical for eIF2 activity. Cdc123 bound the unassembled eIF2γ subunit, but not the eIF2 complex, and the C-terminal domain III region of eIF2γ was both necessary and sufficient for Cdc123 binding. Alterations of the binding site revealed a strict correlation between Cdc123 binding, the biological function of eIF2γ, and its ability to assemble with eIF2α and eIF2β. Interestingly, high levels of Cdc123 neutralized the assembly defect and restored the biological function of an eIF2γ mutant. Moreover, the combined overexpression of eIF2 subunits rescued an otherwise inviable cdc123 deletion mutant. Thus, Cdc123 is a specific eIF2 assembly factor indispensable for the onset of protein synthesis. Human Cdc123 is encoded by a disease risk locus, and, therefore, eIF2 biogenesis control by Cdc123 may prove relevant for normal cell physiology and human health. This work identifies a novel step in the eukaryotic translation initiation pathway and assigns a biochemical function to a protein that is essential for growth and viability of eukaryotic cells.

Highlights

  • The eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 is a heterotrimeric G-protein

  • Translation Initiation and eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 (eIF2) Function Are Compromised in cdc123 Mutants—To address a possible role of Cdc123 in translation initiation, we analyzed the abundance of polysomes in yeast strains impaired in Cdc123 function

  • Cells, which caused a prominent, Gcn2-dependent signal, mutations in CDC123 failed to increase eIF2␣-ser52 phosphorylation above the low level detected in wild type control cells. These results show that mutations of CDC123 lead to an increase of GCN4 expression that is independent of Gcn2 kinase and eIF2␣-ser52 phosphorylation

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Summary

Background

The eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 (eIF2) is a heterotrimeric G-protein. Results: Cdc123, a conserved cell proliferation protein, binds the unassembled eIF2␥ subunit to promote eIF2 complex formation. In addition to its essential function as a carrier of the initiator tRNA, eIF2 is an important target for the regulation of protein synthesis in response to stress conditions, such as nutrient deprivation or viral infection [7, 8]. Under these conditions, eIF2 is phosphorylated on its ␣-subunit and forms an inactive complex with its guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) eIF2B. We report that Cdc123 makes an essential contribution to the onset of mRNA translation by assembling the eIF2 complex from its three protein subunits

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