AI Article Synopsis

  • Translation involves various proteins and factors, with the elongation factor eEF3 being essential in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), while a related protein called New1 is non-essential but shows knock-out defects.
  • Researchers utilized yeast genetics, cryo-electron microscopy, and ribosome profiling to study New1's function, finding that overexpressing New1 can help yeast lacking eEF3 to survive.
  • The study reveals that New1 binds to the ribosome similarly to eEF3 and suggests it plays a role in improving the efficiency of translation termination or ribosome recycling, especially affecting ribosome behavior with certain codons.

Article Abstract

Translation is controlled by numerous accessory proteins and translation factors. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, translation elongation requires an essential elongation factor, the ABCF ATPase eEF3. A closely related protein, New1, is encoded by a non-essential gene with cold sensitivity and ribosome assembly defect knock-out phenotypes. Since the exact molecular function of New1 is unknown, it is unclear if the ribosome assembly defect is direct, i.e. New1 is a bona fide assembly factor, or indirect, for instance due to a defect in protein synthesis. To investigate this, we employed yeast genetics, cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) and ribosome profiling (Ribo-Seq) to interrogate the molecular function of New1. Overexpression of New1 rescues the inviability of a yeast strain lacking the otherwise strictly essential translation factor eEF3. The structure of the ATPase-deficient (EQ2) New1 mutant locked on the 80S ribosome reveals that New1 binds analogously to the ribosome as eEF3. Finally, Ribo-Seq analysis revealed that loss of New1 leads to ribosome queuing upstream of 3'-terminal lysine and arginine codons, including those genes encoding proteins of the cytoplasmic translational machinery. Our results suggest that New1 is a translation factor that fine-tunes the efficiency of translation termination or ribosome recycling.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7145556PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkz600DOI Listing

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