Literature DB >> 19056476

Evolution and the universality of the mechanism of initiation of protein synthesis.

Tokumasa Nakamoto1.   

Abstract

The main mechanisms advanced to account for the specificity of the initiation of protein synthesis are reviewed. A mechanism proposed by Shine and Dalgarno (SD), focused on the base pairing of a unique leader sequence in the initiation site--the SD sequence--with the 3' end of the 30S ribosomal RNA as the only step necessary for selecting the initiation site in prokaryotes. Studies showed, however, that the SD interaction is not obligatory and protein synthesis can occur even in its absence. In fact, comparison of a large number of initiation site sequences revealed that the sites are composed of diverse combinations of preferred bases, and, thus, the apparatus that is able to recognize all these sites is de facto a multisubstrate enzyme system. As such, it has the hallmarks of the cumulative specificity mechanism, and the SD interaction, when present, is only one of a number of contributing factors in the selection of the initiation site. The cumulative specificity mechanism proposed that secondary structure selectively interdicts access to most of the non-initiator methionine codons while leaving open the true initiation site and that the final recognition of the initiation site occurs by cooperativity and cumulative specificity of the several ligand recognition sites of the ribosomes, which confer broad substrate specificity to the system. This mechanism appears to be universal; it can encompass the initiation of all protein syntheses since it is consistent with all the salient observations on the initiation of both eukaryotic and prokaryotic protein syntheses. Studies of eukaryotic/prokaryotic hybrid systems further strengthen this conclusion: They show that the prokaryotic initiation signals are evolutionarily conserved in the eukaryotic mRNAs, since prokaryotic ribosomes are able to translate eukaryotic mRNAs. Conversely, eukaryotic ribosomes also recognize prokaryotic initiation signals and initiate synthesis, indicating that the eukaryotic ribosomes may have also conserved the prokaryotic initiation mechanism. The universality of a single process of protein synthesis in all kingdoms is also manifest in the conservation of a complex apparatus, consisting of ribosomes, mRNA's, tRNA's including an initiator methionyl-tRNA, aminoacyl tRNA synthetases, and other protein factors. Thus, the mechanism of initiation of protein synthesis is conserved, and it is universal. The third initiation mechanism is the scanning mechanism for eukaryotes. It proposes that the 40S ribosome-methionyl-tRNA complex recognizes and binds to the 5'-end of the mRNA and the complex then scans the messenger for the initiator codon. Once it is located, the 80S ribosome initiation complex is formed with the 60S subunit and initiation is completed when a second aminoacyl-tRNA is bound and a peptide bond is formed. Exceptions to this mechanism were observed, where the ribosome bound directly to internal mRNA sites and initiated synthesis. Consideration of the conflicting observations in this review, however, has led to the conclusion that the primary eukaryotic mechanism is a conserved prokaryotic mechanism and that the "scanning process" involves two steps. The first step is an interaction of the initiation factors with the cap, which makes the IS accessible, and the second, initiation of translation by the conserved prokaryotic mechanism.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19056476     DOI: 10.1016/j.gene.2008.11.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gene        ISSN: 0378-1119            Impact factor:   3.688


  18 in total

1.  Mechanisms of the initiation of protein synthesis: in reading frame binding of ribosomes to mRNA.

Authors:  Tokumasa Nakamoto
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2010-05-14       Impact factor: 2.316

Review 2.  Eukaryotes first: how could that be?

Authors:  Carlos Mariscal; W Ford Doolittle
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2015-09-26       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  Evidence for context-dependent complementarity of non-Shine-Dalgarno ribosome binding sites to Escherichia coli rRNA.

Authors:  Pamela A Barendt; Najaf A Shah; Gregory A Barendt; Parth A Kothari; Casim A Sarkar
Journal:  ACS Chem Biol       Date:  2013-03-07       Impact factor: 5.100

4.  Afferent regulation of chicken auditory brainstem neurons: rapid changes in phosphorylation of elongation factor 2.

Authors:  Ethan G McBride; Edwin W Rubel; Yuan Wang
Journal:  J Comp Neurol       Date:  2013-04-01       Impact factor: 3.215

5.  The 5' untranslated region of the soybean cytosolic glutamine synthetase β(1) gene contains prokaryotic translation initiation signals and acts as a translational enhancer in plants.

Authors:  Jose Luis Ortega; Olivia L Wilson; Champa Sengupta-Gopalan
Journal:  Mol Genet Genomics       Date:  2012-10-19       Impact factor: 3.291

Review 6.  The diversity of Shine-Dalgarno sequences sheds light on the evolution of translation initiation.

Authors:  Jin-Der Wen; Syue-Ting Kuo; Hsin-Hung David Chou
Journal:  RNA Biol       Date:  2020-12-21       Impact factor: 4.652

7.  Broad-specificity mRNA-rRNA complementarity in efficient protein translation.

Authors:  Pamela A Barendt; Najaf A Shah; Gregory A Barendt; Casim A Sarkar
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2012-03-22       Impact factor: 5.917

8.  A comparison of the molecular organization of genomic regions associated with resistance to common bacterial blight in two Phaseolus vulgaris genotypes.

Authors:  Gregory Perry; Claudia Dinatale; Weilong Xie; Alireza Navabi; Yarmilla Reinprecht; William Crosby; Kangfu Yu; Chun Shi; K Peter Pauls
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2013-08-29       Impact factor: 5.753

9.  Bipartite and tripartite Cucumber mosaic virus-based vectors for producing the Acidothermus cellulolyticus endo-1,4-β-glucanase and other proteins in non-transgenic plants.

Authors:  Min Sook Hwang; Benjamin E Lindenmuth; Karen A McDonald; Bryce W Falk
Journal:  BMC Biotechnol       Date:  2012-09-21       Impact factor: 2.563

10.  Polycysteine-encoding leaderless short ORFs function as cysteine-responsive attenuators of operonic gene expression in mycobacteria.

Authors:  Jill G Canestrari; Erica Lasek-Nesselquist; Ashutosh Upadhyay; Martina Rofaeil; Matthew M Champion; Joseph T Wade; Keith M Derbyshire; Todd A Gray
Journal:  Mol Microbiol       Date:  2020-04-09       Impact factor: 3.501

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