The kingdom of fungi contains highly diverse species. However, fundamental processes sustaining life such as RNA metabolism are much less comparatively studied in Fungi than in other kingdoms. A key factor in the regulation of mRNA expression is the cap-binding protein eIF4E, which plays roles in mRNA nuclear export, storage and translation. The advent of massive genomics has unveiled a constellation of eIF4E-family members across eukaryotes. However, how this protein diverged in fungal species remains largely unexplored. Here, we studied the genome of 538 species from six evolutionarily distant phyla and retrieved 1462 eIF4E cognates. The analyzed species contained 1-7 paralogs. We sorted the different cognates in six phylogenetically coherent clades, that we termed Class I-VII (mammalian Class III was absent in Fungi). Proteins from Classes IV-VII did not match the current eIF4Es classification, that is based on variations in the residues equivalent to W43 and W56 of the human protein. eIF4Es from other eukaryotes do not fit into this classification either. Thus, we have updated the eIF4E categorization based on cladistics and the presence of cap-binding amino acids to better fit eIF4E´s diversity across eukaryotes. Finally, we predicted the structure of the global protein and the cap-binding pocket, and experimentally tested the ability to rescue the lack of endogenous eIF4E in Saccharomyces cerevisiae of representative members of each of the six classes of fungal eIF4E.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2024.108129 | DOI Listing |
J Biol Chem
December 2024
mRNA and Cancer Laboratory, Unit of Biomedical Research on Cancer, National Institute of Cancer (INCan), Mexico City 14080, Mexico.
The kingdom of fungi contains highly diverse species. However, fundamental processes sustaining life such as RNA metabolism are much less comparatively studied in Fungi than in other kingdoms. A key factor in the regulation of mRNA expression is the cap-binding protein eIF4E, which plays roles in mRNA nuclear export, storage and translation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Virol
June 2023
Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
Plant viruses depend on a number of host factors for successful infection. Deficiency of critical host factors confers recessively inherited viral resistance in plants. For example, loss of () in Arabidopsis thaliana confers resistance to potexviruses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
February 2023
Laboratory of plant tress tolerance, All-Russia Research Institute of Agricultural Biotechnology, Moscow, Russia.
Potyviruses are the largest group of plant-infecting RNA viruses that affect a wide range of crop plants. Plant resistance genes against potyviruses are often recessive and encode translation initiation factors eIF4E. The inability of potyviruses to use plant eIF4E factors leads to the development of resistance through a loss-of-susceptibility mechanism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroorganisms
May 2022
Institute of Marine and Environmental Technologies, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, 701 E Pratt St., Baltimore, MD 21022, USA.
Dinoflagellates are unicellular protists that display unusual nuclear features such as large genomes, condensed chromosomes and multiple gene copies organized as tandem gene arrays. Genetic regulation is believed to be controlled at the translational rather than transcriptional level. An important player in this process is initiation factor eIF4E which binds the 7-methylguanosine cap structure (m7G) at the 5'-end of mRNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
June 2022
Biotechnology Laboratory, Biotechnology and Agroindustry Division, Department for Sustainability, ENEA, CR Casaccia, Rome, Italy.
Translation initiation factors and, in particular, the eIF4E family are the primary source of recessive resistance to potyviruses in many plant species. However, no eIF4E-mediated resistance to this virus genus has been identified in potato ( L.) germplasm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!