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Stress-Induced Translation Inhibition through Rapid Displacement of Scanning Initiation Factors

Stefan Bresson, Vadim Shchepachev, Christos Spanos, Tomasz W. Turowski, Juri Rappsilber, David Tollervey

2020Molecular Cell125 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cellular responses to environmental stress are frequently mediated by RNA-binding proteins (RBPs). Here, we examined global RBP dynamics in Saccharomyces cerevisiae in response to glucose starvation and heat shock. Each stress induced rapid remodeling of the RNA-protein interactome without corresponding changes in RBP abundance. Consistent with general translation shutdown, ribosomal proteins contacting the mRNA showed decreased RNA association. Among translation components, RNA association was most reduced for initiation factors involved in 40S scanning (eukaryotic initiation factor 4A [eIF4A], eIF4B, and Ded1), indicating a common mechanism of translational repression. In unstressed cells, eIF4A, eIF4B, and Ded1 primarily targeted the 5' ends of mRNAs. Following glucose withdrawal, 5' binding was abolished within 30 s, explaining the rapid translation shutdown, but mRNAs remained stable. Heat shock induced progressive loss of 5' RNA binding by initiation factors over ∼16 min and provoked mRNA degradation, particularly for translation-related factors, mediated by Xrn1. Taken together, these results reveal mechanisms underlying translational control of gene expression during stress.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyeIF4ATranslation (biology)Initiation factorRNAMessenger RNACell biologyEukaryotic Small Ribosomal SubunitEukaryotic initiation factorProtein biosynthesisEIF4EEukaryotic translationMolecular biologyBiochemistryGeneRNA Research and SplicingRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA regulation and disease
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