Translational repression by human 4E-BP1 in yeast specifically requires human eIF4E as target

John Mccarthy, John M X Hughes, Marina Ptushkina, Md Manjurul Karim, Nadejda Koloteva, Tobias Von Der Haar, John E G McCarthy

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    4E-binding proteins (4E-BPs) are believed to have important regulatory functions in controlling the rate of translation initiation in mammalian cells. They do so by binding to the mRNA cap-binding protein, eIF4E, thereby inhibiting formation of the cap-binding complex, a process essential for cap- dependent translation initiation. We have reproduced the translation- repressive function of human 4E-BP1 in yeast and find its activity to be dependent on substitution of human eIF4E for its yeast counterpart. Translation initiation and growth are inhibited when human 4E-BP1 is expressed in a strain with the human eIF4E substitution, but not in an unmodified strain. We have compared the relative affinities of human 4E-BP1 for human and yeast eIF4E, both in vitro using an m7GTP cap-binding assay and in vivo using a yeast two-hybrid assay, and find that the affinity of human 4E-BP1 for human eIF4E is markedly greater than for yeast eIF4E. Thus yeast eIF4E lacks structural features required for binding to human 4E-BP1. These results therefore demonstrate that the features of eIF4E required for binding to 4E-BP1 are distinct from those required for cap-complex assembly.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)3261-3264
    Number of pages3
    JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
    Volume274
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 5 Feb 1999

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