| Literature DB >> 35732735 |
Rosslyn Grosely1, Masaaki Sokabe2, Christopher P Lapointe1, Carlos Alvarado1, Jinfan Wang1, Elizabeth Montabana1, Nancy Villa2, Byung-Sik Shin3, Thomas E Dever3, Christopher S Fraser2, Israel S Fernández4, Joseph D Puglisi5.
Abstract
Translation initiation defines the identity and quantity of a synthesized protein. The process is dysregulated in many human diseases1,2. A key commitment step is when the ribosomal subunits join at a translation start site on a messenger RNA to form a functional ribosome. Here, we combined single-molecule spectroscopy and structural methods using an in vitro reconstituted system to examine how the human ribosomal subunits join. Single-molecule fluorescence revealed when the universally conserved eukaryotic initiation factors eIF1A and eIF5B associate with and depart from initiation complexes. Guided by single-molecule dynamics, we visualized initiation complexes that contained both eIF1A and eIF5B using single-particle cryo-electron microscopy. The resulting structure revealed how eukaryote-specific contacts between the two proteins remodel the initiation complex to orient the initiator aminoacyl-tRNA in a conformation compatible with ribosomal subunit joining. Collectively, our findings provide a quantitative and architectural framework for the molecular choreography orchestrated by eIF1A and eIF5B during translation initiation in humans.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35732735 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04858-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 69.504