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Human translation elongation factor 1A (EF1A) is a member of a large class of mRNAs, including ribosomal proteins and other translation elongation factors, which are coordinately translationally regulated under various conditions. Each of these mRNAs contains a terminal oligopyrimidine tract (TOP) that is required for translational control. A human growth hormone (hGH) expression construct containing the promoter region and 5' untranslated region (UTR) of EF1A linked to the hGH coding region (EF1A/hGH) was translationally repressed following rapamycin treatment in similar fashion to endogenous EF1A in human B lymphocytes. Mutation of two nucleotides in the TOP motif abolished the translational regulation. Gel mobility shift assays showed that both La protein from human B lymphocyte cytoplasmic extracts as well as purified recombinant La protein specifically bind to an in vitro-synthesized RNA containing the 5' UTR of EF1A mRNA. Moreover, extracts prepared from rapamycin-treated cells showed increased binding activity to the EF1A 5' UTR RNA, which correlates with TOP mRNA translational repression. In an in vitro translation system, recombinant La dramatically decreased the expression of EF1A/hGH construct mRNA, but not mRNAs lacking an intact TOP element. These results indicate that TOP mRNA translation may be modulated through La binding to the TOP element.  相似文献   

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TOP mRNAs (contain a 5' terminal oligopyrimidine tract) are differentially translated in rapamycin-treated human B lymphocytes. Following rapamycin treatment, ribosomal protein (rp) and translation elongation factor TOP mRNAs were translationally repressed, whereas hnRNP A1 TOP mRNA was not. Poly(A)-binding protein (Pabp1) TOP mRNA was translationally repressed under all conditions tested. To investigate the mechanism involved, chimeric mRNAs containing the hnRNP A1 5' untranslated region (UTR) linked to the human growth hormone (hGH) reporter were analyzed. Wild-type hnRNP A1 construct mRNA behaved similarly to endogenous hnRNP A1, whereas a single mutation (guanosine to cytidine) within the TOP element resulted in increased translational regulation. These results suggest that TOP mRNA translation can be modulated and that all TOP mRNAs are not translated with equal efficiency.  相似文献   

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Xenopus r-protein mRNAs are known to be coordinately regulated at the translational level. To find out if RNA/protein interactions are involved in this control mechanism, we have characterized the particles containing the translationally repressed rp-mRNA and we have investigated the proteins that specifically bind to this type of mRNA. By sedimentation analysis and isopycnic centrifugation we have found that the repressed rp-mRNAs are assembled in slow sedimenting complexes where the RNA is prevalent over the protein mass (2.3 to 1). This composition is maintained also after in vitro reconstitution of the particle. We carried out also a detailed analysis of in vitro RNA/protein complex formation by focusing our attention on the 5'UTR, very similar in different rp-mRNAs and important in the translational regulation. We describe specific interactions of L1 mRNA with four proteins. The binding site of two of them, 57 kD and 47 kD, is in the typical pyrimidine sequence at the 5' end and is position dependent. Proteins of the same size interact also with the analogous region of r-protein S1 and L14 mRNA, not with unrelated RNAs. Binding of two other proteins, 31 kD and 24 kD, in the downstream region of the 5'UTR was also observed. The most evident 57 kD protein has been partially purified. Although the binding of these proteins to the r-protein mRNA 5'UTR is specific, their involvement in the translation regulation remains to be proved.  相似文献   

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《The Journal of cell biology》1986,103(6):2137-2144
Addition of serum or epidermal growth factor to quiescent Swiss mouse 3T3 cells in culture leads to a number of specific changes in the pattern of protein synthesis. Earlier experiments with actinomycin D suggested that the altered expression of these proteins was controlled at either the pretranslational or translational level. Here we have identified and further characterized the regulation of mRNA expression for ten of these proteins, including protein synthesis elongation factor eEF-1 alpha, poly A binding protein, vimentin, the multiple forms of the actin protein family, and alpha- and beta-tubulin. Using an in vitro translation system, we determined the change in the level of mRNA encoding for each of these proteins after serum stimulation. The results showed that the amount of mRNA coding for eEF-1 alpha, poly A binding protein, vimentin, and alpha- and beta-tubulin remains unchanged during this time, whereas that of the actin family increases. Thus, with the exception of the actin family, the results argue that the expression of all the proteins identified is regulated at the translational level. The importance of this latter group of proteins in cell growth and the abundance of their cognate mRNAs should prove them useful tools in elucidating the mechanisms involved in the activation of translationally repressed mRNA during the mitogenic response.  相似文献   

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Heat-shock avian reticulocytes exhibit enhanced synthesis of a greater than 450-kDa protein. Biochemical, immunochemical, and visual criteria were used to identify this protein as the iron storage protein ferritin. The 21-kDa ferritin subunits synthesized during heat shock are similar in size and pI to the subunits that are constitutively synthesized. The 2-6-fold heat shock-induced increase in ferritin synthesis appears to be regulated at the translational level as it is insensitive to actinomycin D. Northern and dot-blot hybridization analyses of cytoplasmic RNAs with avian H-ferritin cDNA fragments support the contention that the heat shock stimulation of ferritin synthesis is translationally regulated. These latter studies demonstrate that the heat shock-induced synthesis of ferritin does not involve a change in the amount of total cytoplasmic ferritin mRNAs, but rather appears to entail a translocation of cytoplasmic H-ferritin mRNAs from a polyribosome-free, translationally repressed state to a polyribosome-associated, translationally active state. These results suggest that thermally stressed avian reticulocytes have a critical and functional need for the synthesis of additional ferritin and that its enhanced synthesis, unlike the new and/or enhanced synthesis of the well-established avian heat shock proteins, is regulated wholly at the translational level.  相似文献   

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I have compared the quantity and the length of the poly(A) tracts of five haploid-expressed mRNAs in the polysomal and nonpolysomal fractions of round and elongating spermatids in mice: transition proteins 1 and 2, protamines 1 and 2, and an unidentified mRNA of about 1050 bases. Postmitochondrial supernatants of highly enriched populations of round and elongating spermatids (early and late haploid spermatogenic cells) were sedimented on sucrose gradients, and the size and amount of each mRNA in gradient fractions were analyzed in Northern blots. In round spermatids, all five mRNAs are restricted to the postpolysomal fractions, but in elongating spermatids about 30-40% of each mRNA is associated with the polysomes. The distribution of these mRNAs in sucrose gradients suggests that all five mRNAs are stored in a translationally repressed state in round and early elongating spermatids, and that they become translationally active in middle and late elongating spermatids. The translationally repressed forms of all five mRNAs are long and homogenous in size, whereas the polysomal forms are shorter and more heterogenous due to shortening of their poly(A) tracts. The relationship between translational activity and poly(A) size exemplified by these five mRNAs may be typical of mRNAs which are translationally repressed in round spermatids and translationally active in elongating spermatids.  相似文献   

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Regulation of gene expression during myeloid cell differentiation has been analyzed using clones of myeloid leukemic cells that differ in their competence to be induced to differentiate by the normal macrophage- and granulocyte-inducing protein MGI. Changes in the relative rate of synthesis for specific proteins were compared to changes in the relative amounts of corresponding translatable poly(A)+ mRNAs, assayed in the reticulocyte cell-free translation system, using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Of the 217 proteins which changed during MGI-induced differentiation of normally differentiating MGI+D+ leukemic cells, 136 could be identified as products of cell-free translation. Eighty-four percent of the 70 decreases in synthesis, most of which occurred early during differentiation, were not accompanied by a parallel decrease in the amount of translatable mRNA, but were accompanied by a parallel shift of the corresponding mRNAs from the polysomal to the monosomal and free mRNA fractions. These results indicate that most of the early decreases in the synthesis of proteins were translationally regulated. In contrast, 81% of the proteins which increased in synthesis and 71% of the proteins that were induced de novo were regulated at the level of mRNA production. Experiments with differentiation defective mutants have shown that they were blocked both at the level of mRNA production and mRNA translation. The data with these mutants have suggested that there were different subsets of translationally regulated proteins which were separately regulated. The translational blocks for several proteins in these mutant clones have also made it possible to identify additional translational sites of regulation for protein changes that were controlled at the level of mRNA production during normal differentiation. The results indicate that translational regulation may predominantly have a different function in cell differentiation than regulation by mRNA production, and that differentiation-defective mutants can be blocked at either level.  相似文献   

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Translational control by the 3′untranslated regions (3′UTRs) of mRNAs contributes to important events throughout the development of C. elegans. In oocytes and early embryos, maternal mRNAs are controlled by 3′UTR elements to restrict translation of their protein products to specific blastomeres. Localized translation is probably critical for specifying blastomere identity. In both germline and somatic cells, mRNAs from sex determining genes are translationally repressed by 3′UTR controls. These controls balance the activities that specify male and female cell fates. During larval development, the temporal sequence of cell lineages requires 3′UTR-mediated regulation of heterochronic genes by a small non-protein coding RNA. We review what is known about these translational control mechanisms in C. elegans. This overview illustrates that translational control by 3′UTR elements is a powerful mechanism for regulating the expression of multiple gene products in diverse cell types during development of a multi-cellular animal.  相似文献   

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