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Initiation of translation on poliovirus RNA occurs by internal binding of ribosomes to a region within the 5' untranslated region (UTR) of the mRNA. This region has been previously roughly mapped between nucleotides 140 and 631 of the 5' UTR and termed the ribosome landing pad. To identify cis-acting elements in the 5' UTR of poliovirus type 2 (Lansing strain) RNA that confer cap-independent internal initiation, we determined the in vitro translational efficiencies of a series of deletion and point mutations within the 5' UTR of the mRNA. The results demonstrate that the 3' border of the core poliovirus ribosome landing pad is located between nucleotides 556 and 585, whereas a region extending between nucleotides 585 and 612 confers enhanced translation. We studied two cis-acting elements within this region of the 5' UTR: a pyrimidine stretch which is critical for translation and an AUG (number 7 from the 5' end) that is located approximately 20 nucleotides downstream from the pyrimidine stretch and augments translation. We also show that the stem-loop structure which contains this AUG is not required for translation.  相似文献   

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In eubacteria, base pairing between the 3' end of 16S rRNA and the ribosome-binding site of mRNA is required for efficient initiation of translation. An interaction between the 18S rRNA and the mRNA was also proposed for translation initiation in eukaryotes. Here, we used an antisense RNA approach in vivo to identify the regions of 18S rRNA that might interact with the mRNA 5' untranslated region (5' UTR). Various fragments covering the entire mouse 18S rRNA gene were cloned 5' of a cat reporter gene in a eukaryotic vector, and translation products were analyzed after transient expression in human cells. For the largest part of 18S rRNA, we show that the insertion of complementary fragments in the mRNA 5' UTR do not impair translation of the downstream open reading frame (ORF). When translation inhibition is observed, reduction of the size of the complementary sequence to less than 200 nt alleviates the inhibitory effect. A single fragment complementary to the 18S rRNA 3' domain retains its inhibitory potential when reduced to 100 nt. Deletion analyses show that two distinct sequences of approximately 25 nt separated by a spacer sequence of 50 nt are required for the inhibitory effect. Sucrose gradient fractionation of polysomes reveals that mRNAs containing the inhibitory sequences accumulate in the fractions with 40S ribosomal subunits, suggesting that translation is blocked due to stalling of initiation complexes. Our results support an mRNA-rRNA base pairing to explain the translation inhibition observed and suggest that this region of 18S rRNA is properly located for interacting with mRNA.  相似文献   

5.
Xenopus laevis Vgl mRNA undergoes both localization and translational control during oogenesis. Vg1 protein does not appear until late stage IV, after localization is complete. To determine whether Vg1 translation is regulated by cytoplasmic polyadenylation, the RACE-PAT method was used. Vg1 mRNA has a constant poly(A) tail throughout oogenesis, precluding a role for cytoplasmic polyadenylation. To identify cis-acting elements involved in Vg1 translational control, the Vg1 3' UTR was inserted downstream of the luciferase ORF and in vitro transcribed, adenylated mRNA injected into stage III or stage VI oocytes. The Vg1 3' UTR repressed luciferase translation in both stages. Deletion analysis of the Vg1 3' UTR revealed that a 250-nt UA-rich fragment, the Vg1 translational element or VTE, which lies 118 nt downstream of the Vg1 localization element, could repress translation as well as the full-length Vg1 3' UTR. Poly(A)-dependent translation is not necessary for repression as nonadenylated mRNAs are also repressed, but cap-dependent translation is required as introduction of the classical swine fever virus IRES upstream of the luciferase coding region prevents repression by the VTE. Repression by the Vg1 3' UTR has been reproduced in Xenopus oocyte in vitro translation extracts, which show a 10-25-fold synergy between the cap and poly(A) tail. A number of proteins UV crosslink to the VTE including FRGY2 and proteins of 36, 42, 45, and 60 kDa. The abundance of p42, p45, and p60 is strikingly higher in stages I-III than in later stages, consistent with a possible role for these proteins in Vg1 translational control.  相似文献   

6.
We demonstrate that a bacteriophage protein and a spliceosomal protein can be converted into eukaryotic translational repressor proteins. mRNAs with binding sites for the bacteriophage MS2 coat protein or the spliceosomal human U1A protein were expressed in human HeLa cells and yeast. The presence of the appropriate binding protein resulted in specific, dose-dependent translational repression when the binding sites were located in the 5' untranslated region (UTR) of the reporter mRNAs. Neither mRNA export from the nucleus to the cytoplasm nor mRNA stability was demonstrably affected by the binding proteins. The data thus reveal a general mechanism for translational regulation: formation of mRNA-protein complexes in the 5' UTR controls translation initiation by steric blockage of a sensitive step in the initiation pathway. Moreover, the findings establish the basis for novel strategies to study RNA-protein interactions in vivo and to clone RNA-binding proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Although insulin normally activates global mRNA translation, it has a specific inhibitory effect on translation of apolipoprotein B (apoB) mRNA. This suggests that insulin induces a unique signaling cascade that leads to specific inhibition of apoB mRNA translation despite global translational stimulation. Recent studies have revealed that insulin functions to regulate apoB mRNA translation through a mechanism involving the apoB mRNA 5' untranslated region (5' UTR). Here, we further investigate the role of downstream insulin signaling molecules on apoB mRNA translation, and the mechanism of apoB mRNA translation itself. Transfection studies in HepG2 cells expressing deletion constructs of the apoB 5' UTR showed that the cis-acting region responding to insulin was localized within the first 64 nucleotides. Experiments using chimeric apoB UTR-luciferase constructs transfected into HepG2 cells followed by treatment with wortmannin, a PI-3K inhibitor, and rapamycin, an mTOR inhibitor, showed that signaling via PI-3K and mTOR pathways is necessary for insulin-mediated inhibition of chimeric 5' UTR-luciferase expression. In vitro translation of chimeric cRNA confirmed that the effects observed were translational in nature. Furthermore, using RNA-EMSA we found that wortmannin pretreatment blocked insulin-mediated inhibition of the binding of RNA-binding factor(s), migrating near the 110 kDa marker, to the 5' UTR. Radiolabeling studies in HepG2 cells also showed that insulin-mediated control of the synthesis of endogenously expressed full length apoB100 is mediated via the PI-3K and mTOR pathways. Finally, using dual-cistronic luciferase constructs we demonstrate that apoB 5' UTR may have weak internal ribosomal entry (IRES) translation which is not affected by insulin stimulation, and may function to stimulate basal levels of apoB mRNA translation.  相似文献   

8.
Huang SW  Chan MY  Hsu WL  Huang CC  Tsai CH 《PloS one》2012,7(3):e33764
The 3' untranslated region (UTR) is usually involved in the switch of the translation and replication for a positive-sense RNA virus. To understand the 3' UTR involved in an internal ribosome entry site (IRES)-mediated translation in Classical swine fever virus (CSFV), we first confirmed the predicted secondary structure (designated as SLI, SLII, SLIII, and SLIV) by enzymatic probing. Using a reporter assay in which the luciferase expression is under the control of CSFV 5' and 3' UTRs, we found that the 3' UTR harbors the positive and negative regulatory elements for translational control. Unlike other stem loops, SLI acts as a repressor for expression of the reporter gene. The negative cis-acting element in SLI is further mapped to the very 3'-end hexamer CGGCCC sequence. Further, the CSFV IRES-mediated translation can be enhanced by the heterologous 3'-ends such as the poly(A) or the 3' UTR of Hepatitis C virus (HCV). Interestingly, such an enhancement was repressed by flanking this hexamer to the end of poly(A) or HCV 3' UTR. After sequence comparison and alignment, we have found that this hexamer sequence could hypothetically base pair with the sequence in the IRES IIId1, the 40 S ribosomal subunit binding site for the translational initiation, located at the 5' UTR. In conclusion, we have found that the 3'-end terminal sequence can play a role in regulating the translation of CSFV.  相似文献   

9.
Barley yellow dwarf virus RNA lacks both a 5' cap and a poly(A) tail, yet it is translated efficiently. It contains a cap-independent translation element (TE), located in the 3' UTR, that confers efficient translation initiation at the AUG closest to the 5' end of the mRNA. We propose that the TE must both recruit ribosomes and facilitate 3'-5' communication. To dissect its function, we determined the secondary structure of the TE and roles of domains within it. Nuclease probing and structure-directed mutagenesis revealed that the 105-nt TE (TE105) forms a cruciform secondary structure containing four helices connected by single-stranded regions. TE105 can function in either UTR in wheat germ translation extracts. A longer viral sequence (at most 869 nt) is required for full cap-independent translation in plant cells. However, substantial translation of uncapped mRNAs can be obtained in plant cells with TE105 combined with a poly(A) tail. All secondary structural elements and most primary sequences that were mutated are required for cap-independent translation in the 3' and 5' UTR contexts. A seven-base loop sequence was needed only in the 3' UTR context. Thus, this loop sequence may be involved only in communication between the UTRs and not directly in recruiting translational machinery. This structural and functional analysis provides a framework for understanding an emerging class of cap-independent translation elements distinguished by their location in the 3' UTR.  相似文献   

10.
Kumari S  Bugaut A  Balasubramanian S 《Biochemistry》2008,47(48):12664-12669
Nucleic acid secondary structures in the 5' untranslated regions (UTRs) of mRNAs have been shown to play a critical role in translation regulation. We recently demonstrated that a naturally occurring, conserved, and stable RNA G-quadruplex element (5'-GGGAGGGGCGGGUCUGGG-3'), located close to the 5' cap within the 5' UTR of the NRAS proto-oncogene mRNA, modulates gene expression at the translational level. Herein, we show that the translational effect of this G-quadruplex motif in NRAS 5' UTR is not uniform, but rather depends on the location of the G-quadruplex-forming sequence. The RNA G-quadruplex-forming sequence represses translation when situated relatively proximal to the 5' end, within the first 50 nt, in the 5' UTR of the NRAS proto-oncogene, whereas it has no significant effect on translation if located comparatively away from the 5' end. We have also demonstrated that the thermodynamic stability of the RNA G-quadruplex at its natural position within the NRAS 5' UTR is an important factor contributing toward its ability to repress translation.  相似文献   

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S Wang  K S Browning    W A Miller 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(13):4107-4116
For recognition by the translational machinery, most eukaryotic cellular mRNAs have a 5' cap structure [e.g. m7G(5')ppp(5')N]. We describe a translation enhancer sequence (3'TE) located in the 3'-untranslated region (UTR) of the genome of the PAV barley yellow dwarf virus (BYDV-PAV) which stimulates translation from uncapped mRNA by 30- to 100-fold in vitro and in vivo to a level equal to that of efficient capped mRNAs. A four base duplication within the 3'TE destroyed the stimulatory activity. Efficient translation was recovered by addition of a 5' cap to this mRNA. Translation of both uncapped mRNA containing the 3'TE in cis and capped mRNA lacking any BYDV-PAV sequence was inhibited specifically by added 3'TE RNA in trans. This inhibition was reversed by adding initiation factor 4F (eIF4F), suggesting that the 3'TE, like the 5' cap, mediates eIF4F-dependent translation initiation. The BYDV-PAV 5'UTR was necessary for the 3'TE to function, except when the 3'TE itself was moved to the 5'UTR. Thus, the 3'TE is sufficient for recruiting the translation factors and ribosomes, while the viral 5'UTR may serve only for the long distance 3'-5' communication. Models are proposed to explain this novel mechanism of cap-independent translation initiation facilitated by the 3'UTR.  相似文献   

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PC12 cells contain NR1 mRNA but lack significant expression of NR1 protein suggesting translational or posttranslational regulation. Translational activity of NR1 mRNA in PC12 cells was examined by sucrose gradient fractionation and by heterologous luciferase NR1 gene expression studies. The cosedimentation and association of NR1 mRNA with large polyribosomes (polysomes) confirmed the translatability of NR1 message in PC12 cells. Possible initiation and/or elongation defects during the translation of NR1 mRNAs were investigated by cyclohexamide treatment. The marked decline in the number of ribosomes associated with NR1 mRNA after prolonged exposure to cyclohexamide suggested that initiation was limiting translation of NR1 mRNA in PC12 cells. Consequently, the effect of the 5' and 3' untranslated regions (UTRs) on translation was examined using fusion constructs consisting of the luciferase coding region fused to either or both the 5' UTR and 3' UTR of NR1. The transfection of PC12 cells with the luciferase NR1-UTR fusion constructs revealed that the 3' UTR of NR1 had a significant inhibitory effect on luciferase expression. In contrast, the 5' UTR of NR1 had no inhibitory effect on mRNA translation in PC12 cells. The results from this study indicate that the translation of NR1 mRNA in PC12 cells may be impeded at initiation and this inhibition may be regulated at least in part through the 3' UTR of NR1.  相似文献   

15.
Translation of the full-length messenger RNA (mRNA) of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) generates the precursor of the viral enzymes via a programmed -1 ribosomal frameshift. Here, using dual-luciferase reporters, we investigated whether the highly structured 5' untranslated region (UTR) of this mRNA, which interferes with translation initiation, can modulate HIV-1 frameshift efficiency. We showed that, when the 5' UTR of HIV-1 mRNA occupies the 5' end of the reporter mRNA, HIV-1 frameshift efficiency is increased about fourfold in Jurkat T-cells, compared with a control dual-luciferase reporter with a short unstructured 5' UTR. This increase was related to an interference with cap-dependent translation initiation by the TAR-Poly(A) region at the 5' end of the messenger. HIV-1 mRNA 5' UTR also contains an internal ribosome entry site (IRES), but we showed that, when the cap-dependent initiation mode is available, the IRES is not used or is weakly used. However, when the ribosomes have to use the IRES to translate the dual-luciferase reporter, the frameshift efficiency is comparable to that of the control dual-luciferase reporter. The decrease in cap-dependent initiation and the accompanying increase in frameshift efficiency caused by the 5' UTR of HIV-1 mRNA is antagonized, in a dose-dependent way, by the Tat viral protein. Tat also stimulates the IRES-dependent initiation and decreases the corresponding frameshift efficiency. A model is presented that accounts for the variations in frameshift efficiency depending on the 5' UTR and the presence of Tat, and it is proposed that a range of frameshift efficiencies is compatible with the virus replication.  相似文献   

16.
One consequence of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) treatment is inhibition of Cdk4 synthesis, and this is dependent on p53. Here, we show that the 5' untranslated region (UTR) of the cdk4 mRNA is both necessary and sufficient for wild-type p53-dependent TGF-beta-regulated translational inhibition of cdk4. Wild-type p53 bound selectively to the 5' UTR of the cdk4 mRNA and inhibited translation of RNAs that contain this region. RNA binding and translational control are two genetically separable functions of p53, as are specific and nonspecific RNA binding. Moreover, transactivation-defective mutants of p53 retain the ability to regulate cdk4 translation. Our findings suggest that p53 functions as a regulator of translation in response to TGF-beta in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
V I Kruys  M G Wathelet  G A Huez 《Gene》1988,72(1-2):191-200
We have previously reported that the 3' untranslated region (UTR) of the human interferon-beta mRNA has an inhibitory effect on the mRNA translation both in vitro, in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate, and in vivo, in the Xenopus oocyte. In the present study, we identify the sequence in the 3' UTR which is responsible for this translation inhibition. We show that this sequence is located between the 100th and 161st nucleotides downstream from the translation stop codon. It contains several repeats of the A + U-rich consensus octanucleotide UUAUUUAU, which is also present in the 3' UTR of several mRNAs involved in the inflammatory response. We also demonstrate here that the inhibitory effect of the sequence on the mRNA translation does not depend on its position in relation to the termination codon. However, no inhibition of translation is observed when this sequence is inserted in the 5' UTR of the mRNA. The removal of the translation inhibitory sequence not only improves the mRNA translation in Xenopus oocytes but it also strongly decreases the IFN-beta mRNA stability in those cells. This suggests that, in this system at least, the mRNA degradation is linked to its translational efficiency.  相似文献   

18.
The cap structure and the poly(A) tail synergistically activate mRNA translation in vivo. Recent work using Saccharomyces cerevisiae spheroplasts and a yeast cell-free translation system revealed that the poly(A) tail can function as an independent promotor for ribosome recruitment, to internal initiation sites within an mRNA. This raises the question of how regulatory upstream open reading frames and translational repressor proteins binding to the 5'UTR can function, as well as how regulated polyadenylation can support faithful activation of protein synthesis. We investigated the function of the regulatory upstream open reading frame 4 from the yeast GCN 4 gene and the effect of IRP-1 binding to an iron-responsive element introduced into the 5' UTR of reporter mRNAs. Both manipulations effectively block cap-dependent translation, whereas ribosome recruitment promoted by the poly(A) tail under non-competitive conditions can efficiently bypass both blocks. We show that the synergistic use of both, the cap structure and the poly-A tail enforced by mRNA competition reinstates the full extent of translational control by both types of 5' UTR regulatory elements. With a view towards regulated polyadenylation, we studied the function of poly(A) tails of defined length on the translation of capped mRNAs. We find that poly(A) tail elongation increases translational efficiency, particularly under competitive conditions. Our results integrate recent findings on the function of the poly(A) tail into an understanding of translational control.  相似文献   

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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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