scholarly journals Targeting translation activity at the ribosome interface with UV-active small molecules

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Divya T. Kandala ◽  
Alessia Del Piano ◽  
Luca Minati ◽  
Massimiliano Clamer

ABSTRACTPuromycin is a well-known antibiotic that is used to study the mechanism of protein synthesis and to monitor translation efficiency due to its incorporation into nascent peptide chains. However, puromycin effects outside the ribo-some catalytic core remain unexplored. Here, we developed two puromycin analogues (3PB and 3PC) that can efficiently interact with several proteins involved in translation, ribosome function and RNA processing. We biochemically characterized the binding of these analogues and globally mapped the direct small molecule-protein interactions in living cells using clickable and photoreactive puromycin-like probes in combination with in-depth mass spectrometry. We identified a list of proteins that interact with ribosomes during translation (e.g. eEF1A, ENO1 and GRP78) and we addressed possible uses of the probes to sense the activity of protein synthesis and to capture associated RNA. By coupling genome-wide RNA sequencing methods with these molecules, the characterization of unexplored translational control mechanisms will be feasible.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariana H. Moreira ◽  
Géssica C. Barros ◽  
Rodrigo D. Requião ◽  
Silvana Rossetto ◽  
Tatiana Domitrovic ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTTranslation initiation is a critical step in the regulation of protein synthesis, and it is subjected to different control mechanisms, such as 5’ UTR secondary structure and initiation codon context, that can influence the rates at which initiation and consequentially translation occur. For some genes, translation elongation also affects the rate of protein synthesis. With a GFP library containing nearly all possible combinations of nucleotides from the 3rd to the 5th codon positions in the protein coding region of the mRNA, it was previously demonstrated that some nucleotide combinations increased GFP expression up to four orders of magnitude. While it is clear that the codon region from positions 3 to 5 can influence protein expression levels of artificial constructs, its impact on endogenous proteins is still unknown. Through bioinformatics analysis, we identified the nucleotide combinations of the GFP library in Escherichia coli genes and examined the correlation between the expected levels of translation according to the GFP data with the experimental measures of protein expression. We observed that E. coli genes were enriched with the nucleotide compositions that enhanced protein expression in the GFP library, but surprisingly, it seemed to affect the translation efficiency only marginally. Nevertheless, our data indicate that different enterobacteria present similar nucleotide composition enrichment as E. coli, suggesting an evolutionary pressure towards the conservation of short translational enhancer sequences.


2017 ◽  
Vol 199 (21) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hector L. Burgos ◽  
Kevin O'Connor ◽  
Patricia Sanchez-Vazquez ◽  
Richard L. Gourse

ABSTRACT Bacterial ribosome biogenesis is tightly regulated to match nutritional conditions and to prevent formation of defective ribosomal particles. In Escherichia coli, most ribosomal protein (r-protein) synthesis is coordinated with rRNA synthesis by a translational feedback mechanism: when r-proteins exceed rRNAs, specific r-proteins bind to their own mRNAs and inhibit expression of the operon. It was recently discovered that the second messenger nucleotide guanosine tetra and pentaphosphate (ppGpp), which directly regulates rRNA promoters, is also capable of regulating many r-protein promoters. To examine the relative contributions of the translational and transcriptional control mechanisms to the regulation of r-protein synthesis, we devised a reporter system that enabled us to genetically separate the cis-acting sequences responsible for the two mechanisms and to quantify their relative contributions to regulation under the same conditions. We show that the synthesis of r-proteins from the S20 and S10 operons is regulated by ppGpp following shifts in nutritional conditions, but most of the effect of ppGpp required the 5′ region of the r-protein mRNA containing the target site for translational feedback regulation and not the promoter. These results suggest that most regulation of the S20 and S10 operons by ppGpp following nutritional shifts is indirect and occurs in response to changes in rRNA synthesis. In contrast, we found that the promoters for the S20 operon were regulated during outgrowth, likely in response to increasing nucleoside triphosphate (NTP) levels. Thus, r-protein synthesis is dynamic, with different mechanisms acting at different times. IMPORTANCE Bacterial cells have evolved complex and seemingly redundant strategies to regulate many high-energy-consuming processes. In E. coli, synthesis of ribosomal components is tightly regulated with respect to nutritional conditions by mechanisms that act at both the transcription and translation steps. In this work, we conclude that NTP and ppGpp concentrations can regulate synthesis of ribosomal proteins, but most of the effect of ppGpp is indirect as a consequence of translational feedback in response to changes in rRNA levels. Our results illustrate how effects of seemingly redundant regulatory mechanisms can be separated in time and that even when multiple mechanisms act concurrently their contributions are not necessarily equivalent.


2007 ◽  
Vol 292 (2) ◽  
pp. E629-E636 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renan A. Orellana ◽  
Scot R. Kimball ◽  
Agus Suryawan ◽  
Jeffery Escobar ◽  
Hanh V. Nguyen ◽  
...  

Skeletal muscle protein synthesis is reduced in neonatal pigs in response to endotoxemia. To examine the role of insulin in this response, neonatal pigs were infused with endotoxin (LPS, 0 and 10 μg·kg−1·h−1), whereas glucose and amino acids were maintained at fasting levels and insulin was clamped at fasting or fed (2 or 10 μU/ml) levels. Fractional rates of protein synthesis and translational control mechanisms were examined in longissimus dorsi muscle and liver. In the presence of fasting insulin, LPS reduced muscle protein synthesis (−29%), and increasing insulin to fed levels accelerated muscle protein synthesis in both groups (controls, +44%; LPS, +64%). LPS, but not insulin, increased liver protein synthesis by +28%. In muscle of fasting neonatal pigs, LPS reduced 4E-BP1 phosphorylation and eIF4E to eIF4G binding. In muscle of controls, but not LPS pigs, raising insulin to fed levels increased 4E-BP1 and S6K1 phosphorylation and eIF4E to eIF4G binding. In muscle and liver, neither LPS nor insulin altered eIF2B activity. eEF2 phosphorylation decreased in response to insulin in both LPS and control animals. The results suggest that, in endotoxemic neonatal animals, the response of protein synthesis to insulin is maintained despite suppression of mTOR-dependent translation initiation and eIF4E availability for eIF4F assembly. Maintenance of an anabolic response to the feeding-induced rise in insulin likely exerts a protective effect for the neonate to the catabolic processes induced by sepsis.


1998 ◽  
Vol 18 (12) ◽  
pp. 7499-7509 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuguang Shi ◽  
Krishna M. Vattem ◽  
Ruchira Sood ◽  
Jie An ◽  
Jingdong Liang ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT In response to various environmental stresses, eukaryotic cells down-regulate protein synthesis by phosphorylation of the α subunit of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 (eIF-2α). In mammals, the phosphorylation was shown to be carried out by eIF-2α kinases PKR and HRI. We report the identification and characterization of a cDNA from rat pancreatic islet cells that encodes a new related kinase, which we term pancreatic eIF-2α kinase, or PEK. In addition to a catalytic domain with sequence and structural features conserved among eIF-2α kinases, PEK contains a distinctive amino-terminal region 550 residues in length. Using recombinant PEK produced inEscherichia coli or Sf-9 insect cells, we demonstrate that PEK is autophosphorylated on both serine and threonine residues and that the recombinant enzyme can specifically phosphorylate eIF-2α on serine-51. Northern blot analyses indicate that PEK mRNA is expressed in all tissues examined, with highest levels in pancreas cells. Consistent with our mRNA assays, PEK activity was predominantly detected in pancreas and pancreatic islet cells. The regulatory role of PEK in protein synthesis was demonstrated both in vitro and in vivo. The addition of recombinant PEK to reticulocyte lysates caused a dose-dependent inhibition of translation. In theSaccharomyces model system, PEK functionally substituted for the endogenous yeast eIF-2α kinase, GCN2, by a process requiring the serine-51 phosphorylation site in eIF-2α. We also identified PEK homologs from both Caenorhabditis elegans and the puffer fish Fugu rubripes, suggesting that this eIF-2α kinase plays an important role in translational control from nematodes to mammals.


Author(s):  
Malgorzata Kwasniak-Owczarek ◽  
Urszula Kazmierczak ◽  
Artur Tomal ◽  
Pawel Mackiewicz ◽  
Hanna Janska

Abstract The ribosome is not only a protein-making machine, but also a regulatory element in protein synthesis. This view is supported by our earlier data showing that Arabidopsis mitoribosomes altered due to the silencing of the nuclear RPS10 gene encoding mitochondrial ribosomal protein S10 differentially translate mitochondrial transcripts compared with the wild-type. Here, we used ribosome profiling to determine the contribution of transcriptional and translational control in the regulation of protein synthesis in rps10 mitochondria compared with the wild-type ones. Oxidative phosphorylation system proteins are preferentially synthesized in wild-type mitochondria but this feature is lost in the mutant. The rps10 mitoribosomes show slightly reduced translation efficiency of most respiration-related proteins and at the same time markedly more efficiently synthesize ribosomal proteins and MatR and TatC proteins. The mitoribosomes deficient in S10 protein protect shorter transcript fragments which exhibit a weaker 3-nt periodicity compared with the wild-type. The decrease in the triplet periodicity is particularly drastic for genes containing introns. Notably, splicing is considerably less effective in the mutant, indicating an unexpected link between the deficiency of S10 and mitochondrial splicing. Thus, a shortage of the mitoribosomal S10 protein has wide-ranging consequences on mitochondrial gene expression.


2020 ◽  
Vol 127 (6) ◽  
pp. 827-846 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiangbin Wu ◽  
Kadiam C. Venkata Subbaiah ◽  
Li Huitong Xie ◽  
Feng Jiang ◽  
Eng-Soon Khor ◽  
...  

Rationale: Increased protein synthesis of profibrotic genes is a common feature in cardiac fibrosis and heart failure. Despite this observation, critical factors and molecular mechanisms for translational control of profibrotic genes during cardiac fibrosis remain unclear. Objective: To investigate the role of a bifunctional ARS (aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase), EPRS (glutamyl-prolyl-tRNA synthetase) in translational control of cardiac fibrosis. Methods and Results: Results from reanalyses of multiple publicly available data sets of human and mouse heart failure, demonstrated that EPRS acted as an integrated node among the ARSs in various cardiac pathogenic processes. We confirmed that EPRS was induced at mRNA and protein levels (≈1.5–2.5-fold increase) in failing hearts compared with nonfailing hearts using our cohort of human and mouse heart samples. Genetic knockout of one allele of Eprs globally ( Eprs +/− ) using CRISPR-Cas9 technology or in a Postn-Cre-dependent manner ( Eprs flox/+ ; Postn MCM/+ ) strongly reduces cardiac fibrosis (≈50% reduction) in isoproterenol-, transverse aortic constriction-, and myocardial infarction (MI)-induced heart failure mouse models. Inhibition of EPRS using a PRS (prolyl-tRNA synthetase)-specific inhibitor, halofuginone, significantly decreases translation efficiency (TE) of proline-rich collagens in cardiac fibroblasts as well as TGF-β (transforming growth factor-β)-activated myofibroblasts. Overexpression of EPRS increases collagen protein expression in primary cardiac fibroblasts under TGF-β stimulation. Using transcriptome-wide RNA-Seq and polysome profiling-Seq in halofuginone-treated fibroblasts, we identified multiple novel Pro-rich genes in addition to collagens, such as Ltbp2 (latent TGF-β-binding protein 2) and Sulf1 (sulfatase 1), which are translationally regulated by EPRS. SULF1 is highly enriched in human and mouse myofibroblasts. In the primary cardiac fibroblast culture system, siRNA-mediated knockdown of SULF1 attenuates cardiac myofibroblast activation and collagen deposition. Overexpression of SULF1 promotes TGF-β-induced myofibroblast activation and partially antagonizes anti-fibrotic effects of halofuginone treatment. Conclusions: Our results indicate that EPRS preferentially controls translational activation of proline codon rich profibrotic genes in cardiac fibroblasts and augments pathological cardiac remodeling. Graphical Abstract: A graphical abstract is available for this article.


2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irina Goldenkova-Pavlova ◽  
Olga Pavlenko ◽  
Orkhan Mustafaev ◽  
Igor Deyneko ◽  
Ksenya Kabardaeva ◽  
...  

The control of translation in the course of gene expression regulation plays a crucial role in plants’ cellular events and, particularly, in responses to environmental factors. The paradox of the great variance between levels of mRNAs and their protein products in eukaryotic cells, including plants, requires thorough investigation of the regulatory mechanisms of translation. A wide and amazingly complex network of mechanisms decoding the plant genome into proteome challenges researchers to design new methods for genome-wide analysis of translational control, develop computational algorithms detecting regulatory mRNA contexts, and to establish rules underlying differential translation. The aims of this review are to (i) describe the experimental approaches for investigation of differential translation in plants on a genome-wide scale; (ii) summarize the current data on computational algorithms for detection of specific structure–function features and key determinants in plant mRNAs and their correlation with translation efficiency; (iii) highlight the methods for experimental verification of existed and theoretically predicted features within plant mRNAs important for their differential translation; and finally (iv) to discuss the perspectives of discovering the specific structural features of plant mRNA that mediate differential translation control by the combination of computational and experimental approaches.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 2658-2658
Author(s):  
Klaske A.M.H. Thiadens ◽  
Eleonora de Klerk ◽  
Ivo F.A.C. Fokkema ◽  
Peter A.C. ‘t Hoen ◽  
Marieke von Lindern

Abstract The erythroid progenitor compartment possesses a large expansion capacity, both in vivo and in vitro, which enables a rapid restoration of peripheral erythrocytes following severe blood loss. This expansion is tightly regulated to maintain erythrocyte numbers between narrow boundaries, and to balance expansion of the erythroid compartment against the availability of iron for heme and haemoglobin production. We previously observed that control of mRNA translation is crucial for expansion of the erythroid compartment. We also showed that translation of specific transcripts is impaired in Diamond Blackfan Anemia (DBA), a severe congenital anemia due to defective ribosome biosynthesis. Transcripts can be subject to translational control through domains in the 5’- or 3’UTR, including secondary structures, protein binding sequences and upstream open reading frames (uORFs). The presence of uORFs, including those starting at non-AUG codons in the 5’UTR, may alter the level of mRNA translation, but may also result in the expression of alternative protein isoforms because translation initiation may be redirected to more downstream start codons. The aim of our current studies is to provide a genome wide map of mRNA translation efficiency during erythropoiesis that can be used to investigate defective mRNA translation in, for instance, DBA. Ribosome profiling is a genome wide high-throughput sequencing technology for global mapping of translation initiation sites that allows translation analysis with codon resolution at the genome wide level. We first investigated translational changes occurring during differentiation of mouse erythroblasts. We used p53-deficient, growth factor dependent and differentiation competent immortalized erythroblast cultures that were expanded in presence of erythropoietin (Epo), stem cell factor (SCF) and glucocorticoids as T0, and subsequently differentiated the cells in presence of Epo for 17 and 46 hours (T17, and T46 samples). To obtain ribosome footprints, the cells were treated for 7 minutes with harringtonin or solvent, and subsequently for 5 minutes with cycloheximide, which arrests translation by stabilizing the ribosomes at translation initiation codons, or on all codons, respectively. We used optimized protocols for ribosome footprinting and data analysis, and focused the analysis on transcripts containing uORFs. First we performed a qualitative analysis of start codon usage. The ribosome footprint data proved to be superior to previously used polyribosome recruitment. In some cases polysome recruitment appeared to represent translation of an uORFs while the protein coding ORF is hardly translated (e.g. Csf2rb2, Puma). In another set of transcripts, we found uORFs that are differentially translated during differentiation, and thereby regulate differential translation from a downstream start codon (e.g. Klf3, Use1, CD47, Kell). Finally, comparison of ribosome footprints determined in erythroblasts and in myoblasts/myotubes revealed tissue specific translation regulation of otherwise ubiquitously expressed transcripts among which transcripts encoding ribosomal proteins. Second, we will perform quantitative analysis of mRNA translation in erythropoiesis through the comparison of ribosome footprint reads in an ORF with total mRNA reads obtained from total mRNA sequencing of the same sample. The obtained insight in transcript specific translation at codon resolution is of great value to understand many cellular processes during erythropoiesis, and will be of particular interest to understand responses to iron availability and reactive oxygen species that particularly affect translation of transcripts harboring uORFs. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2001 ◽  
Vol 114 (10) ◽  
pp. 1797-1798
Author(s):  
L.C. Kuhn

Translational Control of Gene Expression edited by N. Sonenberg, J. W. B. Hershey and M. B. Matthews Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press (2000) 1020 pages. ISBN 0–87969-568-4 US$115 At the beginning of the 90s most molecular biologists were focusing on transcription and RNA splicing. mRNA translation and its temporal and spatial regulation seemed research topics for insiders at that time. However, all aspects of mRNA fate in the cytoplasm will certainly attract much more attention during the next decade. The field is now flourishing with connections to all disciplines of biology. This book will help you to realize the tremendous variation of translational regulatory mechanisms existing in nature. The evidence for their importance has become so overwhelming that nobody seriously interested in gene expression can ignore it any longer. It is the great merit of the editors of this book that they have brought together an impressive series of first-class reviews written by the most prominent scientists in the field. The new monograph takes a fresh look at the field and is greatly expanded compared with the earlier 1996 version. The book is judiciously divided into two parts. The first part comprises eight broad chapters, giving an overview of the main principles of protein synthesis and its regulation. They serve as a thorough basis for the second part, which comprises twenty-eight chapters, each about 20 pages in length, that present in depth additional exciting areas in which there is strong research activity. Your appetite for this book will be stimulated right at the beginning by the wonderful introductory chapter, which is written jointly by the editors and defines the field in its entire complexity. Given that translation is of course a unifying principle of all living organisms, why are there such a large number of different control mechanisms modulating the use of mRNA templates and making actual protein level not predictable from RNA quantity alone? Are these just remnants of an RNA world or, as the authors seem to believe, effective adaptations for fine-tuning gene expression that have been opportunistically added during evolution? Five broad chapters are devoted to our knowledge of initiation, elongation and termination of translation both in eukaryotes and in prokaryotes. It is amazing how much detail has been added, in just the past five years, to our picture of the biochemistry, structure and function of ribosomes, initiation sites, and translation factors. However, translational control of gene expression is not just a matter of the translation machinery alone. It seems rather that the tremendously versatile mRNA sequences and structures impose the way they are seen by the translation apparatus and its factors. Particularly in eukaryotes, the untranslated parts of mRNAs play a decisive role by providing additional interaction sites for cytoplasmic proteins that modulate mRNA stability, mRNA localization or accessibility of mRNAs to translation. In turn, many of the proteins interacting with mRNA are themselves regulated by metabolites or post-translational modifications. This is beautifully documented in an exciting chapter on the role of translational control in developmental decisions. For example, in Drosophila, a specific cascade of factors acting on RNA localization and translation controls the anterior-posterior body axis. In C. elegans, the fate of germ-line cells is determined by translational repression. And you will find many more such examples. Another important section of the book is devoted to changes in translation that occur during virus infection. Again one is amazed by the variety of ways by which viruses divert the host translation apparatus for their own sake. The shorter chapters give insight into additional exciting areas in the field. For example, research into how heat shock or signal transduction pathways feed into translation, what we know about mRNA degradation of normal and nonsense-containing transcripts, and the evidence that local synaptic protein synthesis represents a molecular hallmark of learning and memory. This book is the most complete and up-to-date review of translational control mechanisms. It is a must for students entering the field, and it will constitute for many years a major reference guide for any investigator who is seriously interested in the full picture of gene expression.


eLife ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florence Caro ◽  
Vida Ahyong ◽  
Miguel Betegon ◽  
Joseph L DeRisi

The characterization of the transcriptome and proteome of Plasmodium falciparum has been a tremendous resource for the understanding of the molecular physiology of this parasite. However, the translational dynamics that link steady-state mRNA with protein levels are not well understood. In this study, we bridge this disconnect by measuring genome-wide translation using ribosome profiling, through five stages of the P. falciparum blood phase developmental cycle. Our findings show that transcription and translation are tightly coupled, with overt translational control occurring for less than 10% of the transcriptome. Translationally regulated genes are predominantly associated with merozoite egress functions. We systematically define mRNA 5′ leader sequences, and 3′ UTRs, as well as antisense transcripts, along with ribosome occupancy for each, and establish that accumulation of ribosomes on 5′ leaders is a common transcript feature. This work represents the highest resolution and broadest portrait of gene expression and translation to date for this medically important parasite.


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