AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the function of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF5A) and its essential posttranslational modification by the enzyme deoxyhypusine synthase (Dys1), highlighting the creation of a dys1-1 mutant in *Saccharomyces cerevisiae* that exhibits significant deficiencies in hypusine levels and translation elongation.
  • - The dys1-1 mutant shows severe growth defects, with a reliance on osmotic stabilizers like sorbitol, and presents a unique profile suggesting an interaction with Pkc1 and Asc1, indicating that the mutant is partially analogous to cell wall integrity mutants.
  • - The research findings suggest that eIF5A and Asc

Article Abstract

The putative eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF5A) is a highly conserved protein among archaea and eukaryotes that has recently been implicated in the elongation step of translation. eIF5A undergoes an essential and conserved posttranslational modification at a specific lysine to generate the residue hypusine. The enzymes deoxyhypusine synthase (Dys1) and deoxyhypusine hydroxylase (Lia1) catalyze this two-step modification process. Although several Saccharomyces cerevisiae eIF5A mutants have importantly contributed to the study of eIF5A function, no conditional mutant of Dys1 has been described so far. In this study, we generated and characterized the dys1-1 mutant, which showed a strong depletion of mutated Dys1 protein, resulting in more than 2-fold decrease in hypusine levels relative to the wild type. The dys1-1 mutant demonstrated a defect in total protein synthesis, a defect in polysome profile indicative of a translation elongation defect and a reduced association of eIF5A with polysomes. The growth phenotype of dys1-1 mutant is severe, growing only in the presence of 1 M sorbitol, an osmotic stabilizer. Although this phenotype is characteristic of Pkc1 cell wall integrity mutants, the sorbitol requirement from dys1-1 is not associated with cell lysis. We observed that the dys1-1 genetically interacts with the sole yeast protein kinase C (Pkc1) and Asc1, a component of the 40S ribosomal subunit. The dys1-1 mutant was synthetically lethal in combination with asc1Δ and overexpression of TIF51A (eIF5A) or DYS1 is toxic for an asc1Δ strain. Moreover, eIF5A is more associated with translating ribosomes in the absence of Asc1 in the cell. Finally, analysis of the sensitivity to cell wall-perturbing compounds revealed a more similar behavior of the dys1-1 and asc1Δ mutants in comparison with the pkc1Δ mutant. These data suggest a correlated role for eIF5A and Asc1 in coordinating the translational control of a subset of mRNAs associated with cell integrity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3613415PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0060140PLOS

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

dys1-1 mutant
16
eif5a
9
deoxyhypusine synthase
8
dys1-1
8
association eif5a
8
eif5a asc1
8
asc1 cell
8
cell wall
8
wall integrity
8
associated cell
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!