| Literature DB >> 28808135 |
Liyuan Zhang1, Xinye Liu1, Kishor Gaikwad2, Xiaoxia Kou1, Fei Wang1, Xuejun Tian1, Mingming Xin1, Zhongfu Ni1, Qixin Sun1, Huiru Peng3, Elizabeth Vierling4.
Abstract
The conserved eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5B, eIF5B, is a GTPase that acts late in translation initiation. We found that an Arabidopsis thaliana mutant sensitive to hot temperatures 3 (hot3-1), which behaves as the wild type in the absence of stress but is unable to acclimate to high temperature, carries a missense mutation in the eIF5B1 gene (At1g76810), producing a temperature sensitive protein. A more severe, T-DNA insertion allele (hot3-2) causes pleiotropic developmental phenotypes. Surprisingly, Arabidopsis has three other eIF5B genes that do not substitute for eIF5B1; two of these appear to be in the process of pseudogenization. Polysome profiling and RNA-seq analysis of hot3-1 plants show delayed recovery of polysomes after heat stress and reduced translational efficiency (TE) of a subset of stress protective proteins, demonstrating the critical role of translational control early in heat acclimation. Plants carrying the severe hot3-2 allele show decreased TE of auxin-regulated, ribosome-related, and electron transport genes, even under optimal growth conditions. The hot3-2 data suggest that disrupting specific eIF5B interactions on the ribosome can, directly or indirectly, differentially affect translation. Thus, modulating eIF5B interactions could be another mechanism of gene-specific translational control.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28808135 PMCID: PMC5590492 DOI: 10.1105/tpc.16.00808
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell ISSN: 1040-4651 Impact factor: 11.277