The roles of individual eukaryotic translation initiation factors in ribosomal scanning and initiation codon selection

  1. Tatyana V. Pestova1,2,3 and
  2. Victoria G. Kolupaeva1
  1. 1Department of Microbiology and Immunology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York 11203-2098, USA; 2A.N. Belozersky Institute of Physico-Chemical Biology, Moscow State University, 119899 Moscow, Russia

Abstract

To elucidate an outline of the mechanism of eukaryotic translation initiation, 48S complex formation was analyzed on defined mRNAs in reactions reconstituted in vitro from fully purified translation components. We found that a ribosomal 40S subunit, eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF) 3, and the eIF2 ternary complex form a 43S complex that can bind to the 5′-end of an unstructured 5′-untranslated region (5′-UTR) and in the presence of eIF1 scan along it and locate the initiation codon without a requirement for adenosine triphosphate (ATP) or factors (eIF4A, eIF4B, eIF4F) associated with ATP hydrolysis. Scanning on unstructured 5′-UTRs was enhanced by ATP, eIFs 4A and 4B, and the central domain of the eIF4G subunit of eIF4F. Their omission increased the dependence of scanning on eIFs 1 and 1A. Ribosomal movement on 5′-UTRs containing even weak secondary structures required ATP and RNA helicases. eIF4F was essential for scanning, and eIFs 4A and 4B were insufficient to promote this process in the absence of eIF4F. We report that in addition to its function in scanning, eIF1 also plays a principal role in initiation codon selection. In the absence of eIF1, 43S complexes could no longer discriminate between cognate and noncognate initiation codons or sense the nucleotide context of initiation codons and were able to assemble 48S complexes on 5′-proximal AUG triplets located only 1, 2, and 4 nt from the 5′-end of mRNA.

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Footnotes

  • 3 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL tatyana.pestova{at}downstate.edu; FAX (718) 270-2656.

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.1020902.

    • Received July 3, 2002.
    • Accepted September 23, 2002.
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