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Gene Expression

The Phosphorylation State of Eucaryotic Initiation Factor 2 Alters Translational Efficiency of Specific mRNAs

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Pages 946-958 | Received 08 Aug 1988, Accepted 01 Dec 1988, Published online: 31 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Phosphorylation of the alpha subunit of the eucaryotic translation initiation factor (eIF-2α) by the double-stranded RNA-activated inhibitor (DAI) kinase correlates with inhibition of translation initiation. The importance of eIF-2α phosphorylation in regulating translation was studied by expression of specific mutants of eIF-2α in COS-1 cells. DNA transfection of certain plasmids could activate DAI kinase and result in poor translation of plasmid-derived mRNAs. In these cases, translation of the plasmid-derived mRNAs was improved by the presence of DAI kinase inhibitors or by the presence of a nonphosphorylatable mutant (serine to alanine) of eIF-2α. The improved translation mediated by expression of the nonphosphorylatable eIF-2α mutant was specific to plasmid-derived mRNA and did not affect global mRNA translation. Expression of a serine-to-aspartic acid mutant eIF-2α, created to mimic the phosphorylated serine, inhibited translation of the mRNAs derived from the transfected plasmid. These results substantiate the hypothesis that DAI kinase activation reduces translation initiation through phosphorylation of eIF-2α and reinforce the importance of phosphorylation of eIF-2α as a way to control initiation of translation in intact cells.

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