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Vol. 14, No. 16, pp. 2028-2045, August 15, 2000
1 Institute of Poliomyelitis and Viral Encephalitides, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, Moscow 142782, Russia; 2 Department of Microbiology and Immunology, State University of New York Health Science Center at Brooklyn, Brooklyn, New York 11203 USA; 3 A. N. Belozersky Institute of Physico-Chemical Biology, Moscow State University, Moscow 119899, Russia
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ABSTRACT |
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Cap-independent translation initiation on picornavirus mRNAs is mediated by an internal ribosomal entry site (IRES) in the 5' untranslated region (5' UTR) and requires both eukaryotic initiation factors (eIFs) and IRES-specific cellular trans-acting factors (ITAFs). We show here that the requirements for trans-acting factors differ between related picornavirus IRESs and can account for cell type-specific differences in IRES function. The neurovirulence of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV; GDVII strain) was completely attenuated by substituting its IRES by that of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV). Reconstitution of initiation using fully fractionated translation components indicated that 48S complex formation on both IRESs requires eIF2, eIF3, eIF4A, eIF4B, eIF4F, and the pyrimidine tract-binding protein (PTB) but that the FMDV IRES additionally requires ITAF45, also known as murine proliferation-associated protein (Mpp1), a proliferation-dependent protein that is not expressed in murine brain cells. ITAF45 did not influence assembly of 48S complexes on the TMEV IRES. Specific binding sites for ITAF45, PTB, and a complex of the eIF4G and eIF4A subunits of eIF4F were mapped onto the FMDV IRES, and the cooperative function of PTB and ITAF45 in promoting stable binding of eIF4G/4A to the IRES was characterized by chemical and enzymatic footprinting. Our data indicate that PTB and ITAF45 act as RNA chaperones that control the functional state of a particular IRES and that their cell-specific distribution may constitute a basis for cell-specific translational control of certain mRNAs.
[Key Words: IRES; ITAF45; picornavirus; RNA-binding proteins; translation initiation]
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Introduction |
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The control of mRNA translation is an important component of the
regulation of gene expression, and various cellular
processes are regulated by enhancement or repression of translation
initiation. Message-specific translational control relies on structural
elements in either 5' or 3' nontranslated regions of mRNAs that
may bind regulatory proteins, determine the affinity of binding of
canonical translation initiation factors, or enable mRNAs to utilize
variants of the canonical initiation mechanism (Standart and Jackson 1994
).
Most examples of mRNA-specific translational control involve repression
by RNA-binding proteins. Repression of initiation is exemplified by
ferritin mRNA, one of a group of mRNAs that contain a cap-proximal
5' UTR iron-responsive element (IRE; Hentze and Kühn 1996
).
Binding of the iron regulatory protein to the IRE sterically prevents
recruitment by eIF4F of the 43S ribosomal complex to the cap-proximal
region of the 5' UTR before scanning to the initiation codon and
thus represses translation (Muckenthaler et al. 1998
). RNA protein
interactions can also direct patterns of expression that are spatially
restricted within cells or organisms, for example, during development
or differentiation, and commonly involve repression of translation of
specific mRNAs by regulatory 3' UTR-binding proteins (Gray and
Wickens 1998
). Translational enhancement of specific mRNAs is less
common. All mRNAs that are translated following conventional
cap-mediated initiation require the full set of canonical eIFs, and
variations in initiation factor levels have not been associated with
translational enhancement of specific mRNAs that use this mechanism.
Cell type-specific translational regulation is more likely to affect
those mRNAs that require noncanonical protein factors for initiation in
addition to the canonical set of eIFs.
Picornavirus 5' NTRs contain a ~ 400-nt-long internal ribosomal
entry site (IRES) that mediates cap-independent translation initiation
(Jackson and Kaminski 1995
). These IRESs are divided into major groups
on the basis of structural properties. One group includes poliovirus
and rhinovirus and the other contains encephalomyocarditis virus
(EMCV), foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV), and Theiler's murine
encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV). There is significant genetic evidence
that IRESs contain determinants of cell specificity. A mutant
poliovirus in which the IRES had been substituted by the rhinovirus
IRES replicated as well as wild-type poliovirus in HeLa cells, but
replication of the mutant (but not wild-type) viruses was completely
restricted in neuronal cells (Gromeier et al. 1996
). Single
substitutions in the IRESs of poliovirus vaccine strains are important
determinants of their attenuated neurovirulence and impaired function
in translation initiation, particularly in neural cells (Svitkin et al.
1985
, 1988
). Mutations in the IRES also attenuate TMEV neurovirulence
in mice while having only minor effects on viral growth in cell culture
(Pritchard et al. 1992
; Pilipenko et al. 1995
, 1999
). Although such
noncoding determinants of IRES function have been characterized in
detail, the molecular basis for their cell-specific influence is not known.
IRES-mediated initiation may require both canonical initiation factors
and message-specific cellular IRES trans-acting factors (ITAFs) that are not involved in cap-mediated initiation. EMCV, TMEV,
and FMDV IRESs are all active in rabbit reticulocyte lysate (RRL),
where translation mediated by poliovirus and rhinovirus IRESs is
inefficient unless the lysate is supplemented by HeLa cell extracts
(Brown and Ehrenfeld 1979
; Dorner et al. 1984
; Borman et al. 1993
).
Biochemical analyses led to the identification of the ITAFs present in
these extracts as the pyrimidine tract-binding protein (PTB; Borman et
al. 1993
; Hellen et al. 1993
), the La autoantigen (Meerovitch et al.
1993
; Svitkin et al. 1994
), the poly(rC)-binding protein 2 (PCBP2; Blyn
et al. 1996
, 1997
), and unr and a unr-interacting protein (Hunt et al.
1999
). All of these proteins except for the unr-interacting protein are
RNA-binding proteins that bind specifically to structural elements in
different IRESs and are thought to maintain these RNAs in an active
conformation (Kaminski and Jackson 1998
; Kolupaeva et al. 1998
;
Gamarnik and Andino 2000
). A reasonable hypothesis is therefore that
tissue-specific differences in the expression of an essential ITAF
could determine those cells in which the IRES is active.
We report here the identification of a novel cellular mRNA-specific
ITAF. We found that the activities of TMEV and FMDV IRESs were similar
in RRL and in transfected BHK-21 cells but that replacement of the IRES
of the neurotropic TMEV by the IRES of the epitheliotropic FMDV yielded
viable but completely attenuated viruses that fail to replicate in
mouse neurons. To identify the factor that is required for FMDV IRES
function, we compared the factor requirements for initiation on TMEV
and FMDV IRESs by biochemical reconstitution to the stage of 48S
complex formation using fully fractionated components. Using this
approach, we have previously found that initiation on the EMCV IRES up
to the stage of 48S complex formation requires the canonical factors
eIF2, eIF3, eIF4A, eIF4B, and eIF4F, and is enhanced less than twofold
by PTB (Pestova et al. 1996a
, 1996b
). We also report that 48S complex
formation on FMDV and TMEV IRESs requires the same set of canonical
factors and that initiation on all three IRESs involves specific
binding of a complex made up of the eIF4A and eIF4G components of eIF4F
to the IRES. However, initiation on the TMEV IRES depended strongly on
PTB, where initiation on the FMDV IRES required both PTB and a second protein, ITAF45, that is not required for TMEV initiation.
ITAF45 bound specifically to a central domain of the FMDV
IRES and acted synergistically with PTB to enhance binding of eIF4F to
an adjacent domain. ITAF45 is a proliferation-dependent
protein that is not detectable in murine brain cells and may thus
function as a tissue-specific factor that controls translation of
particular mRNAs.
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Results |
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In vitro properties of TMEV GDVII/FMDV chimeras
TMEV GDVII causes rapid fatal encephalitis in mice following
intracerebral inoculation due to lytic infection of neurons (Theiler 1937
). FMDV replicates in epithelial cells, causing an acute systemic infection, but does not replicate in the central nervous system (CNS;
Bachrach 1968
). We used FMDV and TMEV IRESs to investigate the
molecular basis for cell-specific differences in IRES function. Chimeric GD68 and GD80 variants of TMEV GDVII were made by substituting its IRES by the FMDV IRES. IRES-mediated translation was assessed using
constructs in which the luciferase coding region had been fused to TMEV
nt 1-1124 in frame and downstream of the initiation codon
AUG1068-70 (Fig. 1A). In the pLGF-68 and
pLGF-80 chimeras, TMEV sequences from nt 628 (upstream of domain H) to
either nt 1047 (the pyrimidine tract) or nt 1124 (past
AUG1068-70) were replaced by equivalent FMDV sequences (nt
280-693 or nt 280-740, respectively; Forss et al. 1984
). These
substitutions had little effect on the efficiency of translation in
RRL, and both caused a small reduction in IRES-mediated translation in
BHK-21 cells (Fig. 1B). TMEV containing these substitutions was viable
and genetically stable in BHK-21 cells, yielding plaques that were slightly reduced in diameter relative to wt TMEV GDVII (Fig. 1C).
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Attenuation of neurovirulence of TMEV GDVII/FMDV chimeric viruses
Several picornavirus IRESs have restricted activity in some cells
and therefore contain determinants of the pattern and severity of host
viral infection. We assayed the neurovirulence of the chimeric GD68 and
GD80 viruses in mice. No clinical signs were observed 6 wk after
intracerebral inoculation with up to 108 TCD50 of
GD68 and up to 107.5 TCD50 of GD80 (Fig. 1C). For
comparison, the PD50 of wt TMEV GDVII was
102.5 TCD50. Thus, GD68 and GD80 were completely
attenuated as a consequence of replacing the TMEV IRES by that of FMDV.
The sequences of these IRESs are ~ 40% homologous (Kühn et
al. 1990
). Virus-specific PCR fragments were easily detected 1 day
postinfection (p.i.) in all CNS samples from three mice inoculated with
GD68 and from four mice inoculated with GD80. This result confirms that
all mice were properly inoculated. Significantly, no virus-specific fragments were PCR-amplified from CNS samples prepared from the same
number of mice 7 and 14 day p.i. Previously, we readily detected moderately attenuated TMEV mutant genomes up to 33 day p.i. (Pilipenko et al. 1995
). TMEV GDVII replicates almost exclusively in neurons (Aubert and Brahic 1995
). The results reported here imply that GD68 and
GD80 did not replicate in the CNS and, more specifically, may be unable
to interact functionally with the translational apparatus in neurons.
These results indicated that cell-specific differences in the factors
required for translation initiation could be analyzed using FMDV and
TMEV IRESs.
Factor requirements for initiation on the TMEV GDVII IRES
IRES-mediated initiation involves recruitment of the 40S ribosomal
subunit, Met-tRNAMeti, and eIFs to an internal site
on an mRNA, leading to 48S complex formation at the initiation codon.
We identified the factors required for 48S complex formation on the
TMEV GDVII IRES by reconstituting this process in vitro, using purified
translation components. The position of 48S complexes on this mRNA was
determined by toeprinting, which involves cDNA synthesis by reverse
transcriptase on a template RNA to which a ribosome or protein is
bound. cDNA synthesis is arrested by the bound complex, yielding
toeprints at its leading edge. Eukaryotic 48S complexes inhibit primer
extension at positions that can vary from 14-21 nt 3' to the A of
the initiation codon depending on the mRNA on which the 48S complexes
have assembled (Pestova et al. 1996a
, 1998a
,b
). The positions of
toeprints described here are shown on a structural model of an
appropriate segment of the TMEV IRES (Fig. 2A).
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48S complexes accumulate when GMPPNP (a nonhydrolyzable GTP analog) is included with mRNA in RRL. Primer extension done on 48S complexes assembled on wt TMEV GDVII mRNA in RRL in the presence of 1mM GMPPNP yielded prominent toeprints 17 and 18 nt and weaker toeprints 19 and 20 nt 3' to the A of AUG1068-70 (Fig. 3, lane 3).
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We next assayed formation of 48S complexes in vitro on this mRNA, using
purified translation components. Incubation of TMEV GDVII mRNA with
eIF2, eIF3, eIF4A, eIF4B, and eIF4F, PTB, 40S subunits, and
Met-tRNAMeti resulted in formation of 48S complexes
that yielded toeprints similar to those detected in RRL (Fig.
4A, lanes 5,9). Each translation component was then
individually omitted. PTB enhanced 48S complex formation fivefold
(average of six assays) (Fig. 4A, lanes 8,9). 48S complex formation was
absolutely dependent on 40S subunits, Met-tRNAMeti,
eIF2, eIF3, and eIF4F (Fig. 4A, lanes 3,4; data not shown). eIF4A was
present as a subunit of eIF4F, and these experiments therefore did not
enable us to determine the requirement for eIF4A. Neither eIF1 nor
eIF1A were required for 48S complex formation (data not shown). This
observation is consistent with reports that initiation on the TMEV IRES
does not involve scanning (Pilipenko et al. 1994
) for which these two
factors are absolutely required (Pestova et al. 1998a
). Taken together,
these results indicate that eIF2, eIF3, eIF4F, and possibly eIF4A and
eIF4B constitute a minimum set of factors that are sufficient for 48S
complex formation on the TMEV IRES and that this process is strongly
enhanced by PTB. We have previously found that eIF2, eIF3, eIF4A,
eIF4B, and eIF4F constitute the minimum set of factors required for 48S
complex formation on the EMCV IRES and that this process is enhanced
less than twofold by PTB (Pestova et al. 1996a
).
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Assembly reactions done using the TMEV IRES and all translation
components also yielded prominent new toeprints at
UUCCC1019-23 and weaker C1072 and G1075
toeprints (Fig. 4A, lanes 4,5,7-11). Their relative prominence
increased on omission of 40S subunits (Fig. 4A, lanes 4,5), suggesting
that they result from binding of factors to the IRES. Stable complexes
were formed by the binding of eIF4F to the IRES and yielded the same
pattern of toeprints at UUCCC1019-23 at the base of the J-K
domain (Fig. 4B, lane 2). Mutations in the J-K domain that impair
binding of eIF4F also strongly impair the ability of the IRES to
support internal initiation and abrogate virus viability (T.V. Pestova
and E.V. Pilipenko, unpubl.). The toeprints at C1072 and
G1075 were seen only in the presence of eIF4F (Fig. 4A, cf.
lanes 2 and 4), and they appear to be caused by the binding of a
complex of its eIF4A and eIF4G subunits to the IRES because they were
not observed in the presence of either eIF4G or eIF4A alone (E.V.
Pilipenko and T.V. Pestova, unpubl.). These toeprints were strongly
enhanced in reactions that contained PTB (Fig. 4A, cf. lanes 7,9,11 with lanes 8 and 10). This observation suggests that PTB binding
facilitates formation of a specific ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex on
the GDVII IRES. Taken together, these results and previous reports (Pestova 1996a
,b
; Kolupaeva et al. 1998
) suggest that the initiation processes on the related EMCV and TMEV IRESs differ in their
requirement for PTB but that they otherwise occur by similar mechanisms
that involve direct binding of eIF4F to the IRES upstream of the
initiation codon and recruitment of a 43S complex.
TMEV and FMDV IRESs have different factor requirements for translation initiation
Primer extension done on 48S complexes assembled in RRL on the FMDV
IRES yielded toeprints similar to those detected on the wt
TMEV IRES (Fig. 3, lanes 2,3). The FMDV IRES therefore also promotes
48S complex assembly precisely at the initiation codon, and RRL
contains all necessary activities for this process. Factors eIF2, eIF3,
eIF4A, eIF4B, and eIF4F are sufficient for 48S complex formation on the
EMCV IRES (Pestova et al. 1996a
) and to a much lesser extent on the
TMEV IRES (Fig. 4A, lane 8). This minimal set of five eIFs was not
sufficient for 48S complex formation on the FMDV IRES (Fig. 3, lane 1;
Fig. 5A, lane 3; Fig. 6A,B, lanes
3). PTB is a candidate for the missing essential activity because it
binds specifically to the FMDV IRES and enhances its function (Luz and
Beck 1990
; Niepmann 1995
; Kolupaeva et al. 1996
). However, inclusion of
PTB in reactions with the minimal set of factors did not lead to 48S
complex formation on GD68 or GD80 mRNAs (Fig. 5C, lane 4; Fig. 6A,B,
lanes 4). Internal initiation on the FMDV IRES therefore has different
factor requirements than on either EMCV or TMEV IRESs, even though all
three are related.
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ITAF45 is a novel trans-acting factor required for initiation on the FMDV IRES
RRL contains all factors required for FMDV IRES function (Fig. 1; Fig. 3, lane 2) and was therefore used as a source for purification of the additional factor(s) required together with the minimum set of eIFs for 48S complex formation. The 0.5M KCl ribosomal salt wash (RSW) was divided into 0%-40%, 40%-50%, 50%-70%, and 70%-95% ammonium sulfate (AS) fractions. Individually, none of these fractions promoted 48S complex formation on GD68 mRNA when included with 40S subunits and eIF2, eIF3, eIF4A, eIF4B, and eIF4F. However, a combination of 0%-40% and 70%-95% AS fractions together provided the additional activities necessary for efficient 48S complex formation on the FMDV IRES (data not shown).
The active subfractions of the 0%-40% AS fraction were identical to
those that contain PTB (Hellen et al. 1994
). Recombinant PTB replaced
the 0%-40% AS fraction without loss of activity in reactions that
also contained the 70%-95% AS fraction (Fig. 5A, lane 8; data not
shown). PTB is therefore essential for initiation on the FMDV IRES and
was included in all subsequent reactions. The active component of the
70%-95% AS fraction was initially purified by DEAE-cellulose
chromatography (Fig. 7A). The active 100 mM KCl flow-through fraction (Fig. 5A, lane 4) was applied to a phosphocellulose column, and proteins in it were separated by
step-elution. The IRES trans-acting factor was in the
250-400-mM KCl fraction (Fig. 5B, lane 3), which was
dialysed against 50 mM KCl buffer, applied to an FPLC MonoQ
column and eluted with a 50-500 mM KCl gradient. Two
well-resolved major peaks that eluted with 185 mM and 210 mM KCl both contained nearly homogenous 45-kD proteins
(e.g., Fig. 7B). The former peak was half as large as the latter. The
electrophoretic mobility and the activity of these proteins were
identical (Fig. 5B, lanes 4,5). We named this protein IRES
trans-acting factor 45 (ITAF45) on the basis of its
function and apparent molecular weight. ITAF45 and the
minimum set of eIFs without PTB were not sufficient to mediate 48S
complex formation on GD68 mRNA (Fig. 5C, lane 5). Initiation on the
FMDV IRES therefore requires both PTB and ITAF45. Separation
of ITAF45 into two populations suggests that it may be
modified posttranslationally.
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GD68 contains FMDV IRES sequences to the middle of the pyrimidine tract followed by TMEV nucleotides (Fig. 1). To confirm that initiation on the FMDV IRES requires both PTB and ITAF45 in addition to canonical eIFs, 48S complexes were also assembled on GD80 mRNA, which contains FMDV IRES sequences up to and including the initiation codon AUG714-6 and eight additional codons. PTB and ITAF45 were both required, along with the minimum set of eIFs for 48S complex assembly on this mRNA, yielding prominent toeprints at positions 18-22 nt 3' of the A of AUG714 (Fig. 6A, lanes 3-6). 48S complex formation was absolutely dependent on Met-tRNAMeti, eIF2, eIF3, eIF4F, and 40S subunits but did not require eIF1 or eIF1A (data not shown).
Inclusion of ITAF45 in 48S complex assembly reactions on wt TMEV GDVII mRNA confirmed that ITAF45 could not substitute for PTB in this process and did not alter the pattern or intensity of toeprints caused by bound 48S complexes or by bound eIF4F (cf. Fig. 4A, lanes 9-11). These results confirm that initiation on the TMEV IRES requires PTB and show that the additional requirement for ITAF45 is specific for FMDV. This conclusion was supported by the observation that recombinant ITAF45 did not influence initiation on either the EMCV IRES or on capped native globin mRNA (data not shown).
Molecular cloning of ITAF45
The identity of ITAF45 was determined by amino acid
sequence analysis. The amino terminus of ITAF45 was blocked
(data not shown). The sequences of two well-resolved tryptic peptides
from ITAF45 were LVKPGNQNTQVTEAWNK and RRFDAMPFTLR. They
correspond exactly to amino acids 156-172 and 271-281 of murine
proliferation-associated protein (Mpp1; Nakagawa et al. 1997
)
and PAG24, its human homolog (Lamartine et al. 1997
), as well as to
sequences of p38-2G4, a possible smaller (37kD) murine Mpp1
isoform (Radomski and Jost 1995
).
To confirm that ITAF45 and Mpp1 are the same protein
and that it plays a specific role in FMDV IRES-mediated initiation,
cDNA for this protein was amplified by PCR, cloned, and sequenced. The
single long ORF encodes a 394 amino acid protein with a calculated molecular mass of 43,669 Daltons. This value is in agreement with that
estimated for ITAF45 by SDS-PAGE. The ITAF45 cDNA
sequence differed from that of Mpp1 at two nucleotides, both
of which resulted in coding changes (A279 and R311
in ITAF45 in place of T279 and K311 in
Mpp1). As reported previously for Mpp1 and p38-2G4,
homologous proteins of a similar size occur in many eukaryotes. These
range from the closely related PAS1 protein from Fugu
ribripes to a more distantly related DNA-binding protein from
Schizosaccharomyces pombe (Yamada et al. 1994
; Gellner and
Brenner 1999
). Significant sequence homologies also exist between these
proteins, ITAF45, and type II methionine aminopeptidases from
archaea and eukaryotes (Fig. 7C,D). These similarities extend over the
entire ITAF45 coding sequence and include four of the five
signature amino acid residues that coordinate two cobalt ions in these
metallo-enzymes (Tahirov et al. 1998
). This group of enzymes includes
p67, a methionine aminopeptidase that regulates translation by
interacting with the
subunit of eIF2 and inhibiting phosphorylation
of its
subunit (Ray et al. 1993
; Arfin et al. 1995
). ITAFs such as
PTB, PCBP2, and unr are, respectively, RNP-motif, KH-domain, and cold shock domain proteins, but ITAF45 does not belong to any of
these recognized families of RNA-binding proteins.
To confirm that the IRES-trans-activating activity of ITAF45 is not due to a contaminant, recombinant His6-ITAF45 was purified to homogeneity and its activity assayed in assembly reactions done on GD80 mRNA. Inclusion of PTB and His6-ITAF45 or native ITAF45 together with the minimum set of eIFs led to the formation of prominent 48S complexes that yielded identical toeprint patterns (Fig. 6A,B, lane 6). Significant assembly of 48S complexes on this mRNA did not occur unless PTB and ITAF45 were present together (Fig. 6A,B, lanes 3-6). Native and recombinant ITAF45 therefore have identical activities.
Ribosomal complexes assembled in these reactions were also resolved from RNP complexes by sucrose density gradient centrifugation to verify that they correspond to authentic 48S complexes and to confirm the factor requirements for their formation. 48S complexes were formed on GD68 mRNA in reactions that contained eIF2, eIF3, eIF4A, eIF4B, and eIF4F only if both PTB and His6-ITAF45 were present but not if either or both were omitted (Fig. 8). In parallel experiments done using GD80 mRNA, eIF2, eIF3, eIF4A, eIF4B, and eIF4F were not sufficient to mediate efficient 48S complex formation (Fig. 8). Inclusion of either ITAF45 or PTB individually in reactions containing these eIFs yielded small amounts of 48S complex. Inclusion of ITAF45 and PTB together in reactions had a very strong synergistic effect on 48S complex assembly (Fig. 8). These observations are exactly consistent with the results noted previously for assembly reactions on this mRNA assayed by toeprinting. Taken together, the results obtained using recombinant PTB and ITAF45 confirm that these two trans-acting factors both are necessary and are together sufficient for assembly of 48S complexes on the FMDV IRES in the presence of eIF2, eIF3, eIF4A, eIF4B, and eIF4F.
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UV cross-linking of ITAF45
The role of ITAF45 in promoting initiation on the FMDV
IRES could involve specific binding to it. A UV cross-linking assay was
used to investigate whether ITAF45 is a specific RNA-binding protein (Fig. 9A). ITAF45 was labeled
significantly more strongly after UV cross-linking to
[32P]UTP-labeled nt 1-1334 GD80 mRNA (which contains the
FMDV IRES) than to
-globin mRNA (Fig. 9A, lanes 1,5), both in the
presence of a 50-fold molecular weight excess of unlabeled tRNA. Native ITAF45 was as strongly labeled after UV cross-linking to
[32P]UTP-labeled wt TMEV nt 1-1334 RNA as to the
equivalent chimeric GD80 RNA (Fig. 9A, lanes 1,3). The interaction of
ITAF45 with wt TMEV and chimeric GD80 RNAs was
specific since it was not significantly affected by the additional
inclusion in cross-linking assays of a 15-fold molecular weight rRNA
excess, where UV cross-linking of ITAF45 to
-globin RNA
was slightly reduced by this competitor (Fig. 9A, cf. lanes 1,3,5 with
lanes 2,4,6). Labeling of recombinant and native forms of
ITAF45 after UV cross-linking to [32P]UTP-labeled
wt TMEV and chimeric GD80 nt 1-1334 RNAs was comparable and
was equally resistant to challenge by tRNA/rRNA competitors (Fig. 9B).
In parallel experiments, recombinant and native ITAF45 also
became strongly labeled after UV cross-linking to the EMCV IRES (data
not shown). The interaction of ITAF45 with these RNAs is
therefore specific and not caused by contaminants in preparations of
the native protein.
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Interactions of initiation factors with the FMDV IRES assayed by toeprinting
IRES-mediated initiation involves specific interactions between the
IRES and the components of the translation apparatus. We used
toeprinting and footprinting to map the interactions of factors with
the FMDV IRES. The presence of eIF2, eIF3, eIF4A, eIF4B, and eIF4F in
assembly reactions on the FMDV IRES of GD68 mRNA with or without
40S subunits enhanced a toeprint at U664 and led to the
appearance of prominent new toeprints at AA648-9 and
G665 (e.g., Fig. 5C, lanes 1-3). Similar toeprints appeared on GD80 mRNA in the presence of these factors (Fig. 6A,B, lanes 1-3).
UG664-5 and AA648-9 map to the base of the
J1 and K1 helices of the J-K domain,
respectively (Fig. 2B), and correspond to the binding site for the
eIF4G subunit of eIF4F on EMCV and TMEV IRESs (Figs. 4B, 2A; Pestova et
al. 1996a
,b
; Kolupaeva et al. 1998
). The prominence of the
AA648-9 toeprints was reduced on GD68 and more strongly on
GD80 mRNA on inclusion of PTB in assembly reactions, and more strongly
on inclusion of ITAF45 with PTB (Fig. 5C, lanes 3-6; Fig.
6A,B, lanes 3-6), implying some changes in the conformation of the
IRES or in the character of its interaction with eIF4F as a result of
binding PTB and ITAF45. Binding of eIFs to GD68 mRNA yielded
weak toeprints at C1072 and G1075 (e.g., Fig. 5C,
lane 3) that were previously detected on GDVII RNA (Fig. 4A). These
toeprints resulting from binding of the eIF4A/eIF4G complex to the IRES
are markedly enhanced in the presence of PTB or ITAF45
individually and are enhanced to an even greater extent on inclusion of
PTB and ITAF45 together (Fig. 5C, lanes 2,6). We do not
know whether these toeprints are indicative of conformational changes
in the IRES or whether they represent additional contacts of the IRES
with the eIF4G/4A complex. In any case, enhancement of these
toeprints in the presence of PTB and ITAF45 indicates that
these two proteins may facilitate binding of the eIF4G/4A complex to
the IRES, which might in turn enhance 48S complex formation.
Toeprint analysis of RNP complexes formed with different combinations
of factors indicated that eIF4F bound specifically to the FMDV IRES,
yielding toeprints at UG664-5 in the J-K domain (data
not shown). More detailed analysis indicated that the central
domain of eIF4G (residues 607-1076) bound specifically but
weakly to the FMDV IRES, yielding a toeprint at G665 (Fig. 10A, lanes 1,2). Inclusion of eIF4A with
eIF4G607-1076 resulted in the appearance of an additional
toeprint at U664 (Fig. 10A, lanes 2,3). eIF4A alone did
not lead to the appearance of toeprints anywhere on the IRES (data
not shown). The intensity of the G665 toeprint due to bound
eIF4G607-1076 and of the UG664-5 toeprints due to
the bound eIF4A/eIF4G607-1076 complex were enhanced by
PTB and ITAF45 individually and together (Fig. 10A, lanes
1-9). Inclusion of PTB in these reactions led to the appearance of
toeprints at GCCG681-4 and UUU690-2 that did not depend on the presence of other factors, including eIF4G, eIF4A, eIF4B,
and ITAF45 (Fig. 2; Fig. 10A, lanes 1,4,6,7,9,10; Fig. 10B, lanes 1,4). The toeprints at UUU690-2 correspond to residues that are protected by PTB from chemical modification (Kolupaeva et al.
1996
). Toeprints appeared at GU671-2 on inclusion of PTB and
ITAF45 in binding reactions only in the presence of eIF4G607-1076 (cf. Fig. 10A, lane 6 and Fig. 10B, lane 4). Taken together, these observations indicate that the specific binding
of eIF4G to the FMDV J-K domain is enhanced by eIF4A, PTB, and
ITAF45.
|
Localization of factor-binding sites on the FMDV IRES by footprinting
Footprinting was used to map binding sites for eIFs, PTB, and
ITAF45 on the FMDV IRES and to identify structural changes in it caused by their binding. In these experiments we used RNase T1 (which cleaves RNA specifically after unpaired G residues) and 1-cyclohexyl-3-(2-morpholinoethyl)-carbodiimide metho-p-toluene sulphate (CMCT), which reacts with N-3 of unpaired uracil and N-1 of
unpaired guanine residues (Ehresmann et al. 1987
). Chemical modification or strand scission both arrest reverse transcriptase and
can thus be analyzed by primer extension. CMCT modification causes
primer extension arrest at the nucleotide immediately 3' to the
modified position, and enzymatic cleavage results in arrest of primer
extension at the nucleotide on the 3'-side of the cleaved bond.
Some residues in the FMDV IRES at which cleavage or modification patterns appear to be altered in the presence of factors such as
G401 coincide with strong stops formed during primer
extension on this highly structured RNA. Altered cleavage or
modification of such residues is therefore equivocal and is not
discussed below. Results of this analysis are summarized in Fig. 12
(see below).
Individually, neither eIF4A nor eIF4G607-1076 protected any part of the IRES from cleavage or modification (Fig. 11A, lanes 4,7; data not shown). However, together they specifically protected the IRES from cleavage at G569, G611, and G653 in the J-K domain and at GG670-1 and G673 in domain L (Fig. 11A, lane 5). These results are consistent with the results of toeprinting (Fig. 10A) and with the identification of eIF4G binding sites at identical locations in EMCV and TMEV IRESs.
|
PTB alone protected the FMDV IRES from cleavage at G317 in
domain H (Fig. 11C, lane 3) and at GG670-1 and
G673 in domain L (Fig. 11A, lane 3). The protected site in
domain H is very close to residues in its apical loop that are
protected by PTB from CMCT modification (Kolupaeva et al. 1996
; Fig.
12). PTB alone also enhanced cleavage at
GG680-1 at the apex of domain L and, weakly, at
G569 at the junction of domains J and K (Fig. 11A, line 3).
Binding of ITAF45 alone to the IRES protected it from
cleavage at G351 in the basal part of domain I (Fig. 11C,
lanes 2,5; Fig. 12) and enhanced CMCT modification at G491 in
the apical half of domain I and at U554, U672,
G678, and G685 near and within domain L (Fig. 11D,
lane 2). Taken together, the data indicate that PTB and
ITAF45 interact functionally with the IRES at several
specific sites and may therefore act as RNA chaperones that foster
correct IRES folding. Importantly, the footprint pattern caused by
binding of PTB and ITAF45 together to the IRES differed
somewhat from the summation of the footprints caused by binding of
these two proteins individually. Thus, PTB alone enhanced RNase
T1 cleavage at G355, near the base of domain I, and
this enhanced cleavage was suppressed by ITAF45 (Fig. 11C,
lanes 3,4). A combination of PTB and ITAF45 enhanced cleavage
at G491, G553, and G555 and exposed a
cleavage site at G665 (Fig. 11B, lane 2). These results are
indicative of a cooperative chaperone-like action of PTB and
ITAF45 in RNA recognition and folding, and are consistent
with and can account for the synergistic enhancement by these two
proteins of 48S complex formation on the FMDV IRES.
|
The strong protection of the FMDV IRES from cleavage at nt 670-673 caused by the binding of eIF4G607-1076, eIF4A, PTB, and ITAF45 is consistent with the appearance of additional toeprints at GU671-2 on the IRES on inclusion of both PTB and ITAF45 with either eIF4G607-1076 or, to a greater extent, with both eIF4G607-1076 and eIF4A (Fig. 10A, lanes 2,4-6,10).
The results of footprinting and toeprinting are thus wholly consistent. They indicate that ITAF45 binds at the base of domain I; that PTB makes multiple contacts with the IRES in domain H, domain K, and downstream of domain L; and that the eIF4G/eIF4A binary complex binds to the J-K domain. eIF4A does not bind specifically or stably to the IRES except in the presence of eIF4G. PTB and ITAF45 also increase the susceptibility of the IRES to cleavage at several positions by inducing conformational changes in it and synergistically enhance binding of the eIF4G/eIF4A complex in a manner that may account for the dependence of FMDV IRES function on PTB and ITAF45.
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
We report here that we have identified a cellular RNA-binding protein, ITAF45, that mediates mRNA-selective translation initiation. We identified ITAF45 by reconstituting 48S complex formation in vitro on FMDV and TMEV IRESs, using fully fractionated translation components. Initiation on these IRESs and the related EMCV IRES required the same set of canonical eIFs, but they had strikingly different ITAF requirements. TMEV IRES function was enhanced fivefold by PTB, but initiation on the FMDV IRES was dependent on ITAF45 as well as on PTB. EMCV IRES function did not depend on either of these ITAFs.
The role of canonical initiation factors in internal ribosomal entry
The canonical factors eIF2, eIF3, eIF4A, eIF4B, and eIF4F are
required for 48S complex formation on TMEV and FMDV IRESs just as for
initiation on the EMCV IRES (Pestova et al. 1996a
). Significantly, we
found that eIF4F binds specifically to an analagous site in the J-K
domains of each of these IRESs (Fig. 4; Pestova et al. 1996a
,b
;
Kolupaeva et al. 1998
). The specificity of binding to each of these
IRESs is due to its eIF4G subunit. We noted that inclusion of eIF4A
with eIF4G in toeprinting assays strongly enhanced its binding to the
FMDV IRES and led to the appearance of a new toeprint at
U664. Moreover, individually neither eIF4A nor eIF4G protected any part of the IRES from cleavage or chemical modification in footprinting assays. Taken together, these results indicate that the
eIF4G/4A complex rather than eIF4G alone is responsible for recognition
of the FMDV IRES. This conclusion is consistent with our finding that
the affinity of eIF4G for the EMCV IRES is enhanced by up to two orders
of magnitude by eIF4A (Lomakin et al. 2000
). There is no eIF4E
requirement for this interaction or for 48S complex formation. The
IRES-eIF4G/4A interaction is essential for initiation; mutations in
either the J-K domain of these IRESs or in the IRES-binding domain of
eIF4G that abrogate this interaction also abrogate IRES function
(Pestova et al. 1996a
; T.V. Pestova and E.V. Pilipenko, unpubl.). The
central domain of eIF4G contains binding sites for eIF4A and eIF3
(Morino et al. 2000
) and is presumed to coordinate their activities. In
the context of these picornavirus IRESs, the role of the eIF4G/4A complex may be to prepare the IRES for attachment of a 43S complex in
the vicinity of the initiation codon, for example, by interaction with
associated factors such as eIF3 and eIF4B or by causing conformational changes in the IRES/factor RNP complex.
The role of IRES trans-acting factors in internal ribosomal entry
The requirement for PTB in FMDV IRES-mediated initiation is
consistent with previous reports that it binds specifically to this
IRES (Luz and Beck 1990
; Kolupaeva et al. 1996
) and is involved in FMDV
translation (Niepman 1995
). However, PTB alone is not sufficient to
enhance 48S complex formation above background levels on GD68 and GD80
mRNAs, and its activity is dependent on a second factor,
ITAF45. ITAF45 and PTB bind specifically to
nonoverlapping sites on the FMDV IRES and individually and together
cause localized structural changes in adjacent regions of it (Figs.
10-12). These two ITAFs enhance binding of the eIF4G/4A complex to the
IRES and likely promote their assembly into a stable RNP complex (Fig. 10). The binding sites for protein components of this RNP complex include all IRES domains except for the apical region of domain I and
extend from the 5' border of the IRES to within 15 nt of the
initiation codon. The latter distance is only slightly greater than the
number of residues upstream of the initiation codon of an mRNA that are
covered by the 40S ribosomal subunit (Legon 1976
; Kozak 1977
).
Ribosomes are recruited to the FMDV IRES at or immediately upstream of
the initiation codon at the 3' border of the IRES without scanning
from an upstream position (Belsham 1992
; Lopez de Quinto and
Martinez-Salas 1999
). The function of ITAFs on the FMDV IRES may
therefore be to prepare an RNP complex that contains RNA and protein
binding determinants for components of the 43S complex oriented in
three dimensions in such a way that it can be recruited and loaded onto
the mRNA precisely, placing the initiation codon at the ribosomal P site.
A robust model for IRES-mediated initiation should be able to account
for the significant differences between closely related IRESs in their
requirement for ITAFs. For example, ribosomal attachment to the
initiation codon without scanning is also characteristic of EMCV and
TMEV IRES (Kaminski et al. 1990
; Pilipenko et al. 1994
). There is
significant conservation of sequence and structure between EMCV, TMEV,
and FMDV IRESs (Pilipenko et al. 1989
; Jackson and Kaminski 1995
), and
as described above, initiation on each of them requires the same set of
canonical factors and involves the same interaction between the
eIF4G/4A complex and the IRES J-K domain. EMCV, FMDV, and TMEV IRESs
all bind PTB with high affinity (Jang and Wimmer 1990
; Luz and Beck
1990
; Witherell et al. 1993
; Kaminski et al. 1995
), and the location of
PTB binding sites on them appears to be similar, although not identical
(Kolupaeva et al. 1996
). We have reported here that ITAF45
can be strongly UV cross-linked to both TMEV and FMDV IRESs (Fig. 9).
Despite these many similarities, initiation on the EMCV IRES is only
weakly dependent on PTB, initiation on the TMEV IRES is strongly
dependent on PTB, and initiation on the FMDV IRES is strongly dependent both on PTB and on a second protein, ITAF45, that has no
influence on EMCV or TMEV IRESs. Differences in the ITAF requirement
for these three IRESs must therefore be related to the small sequence and structural differences between them.
One hypothesis is that ITAFs have a chaperone activity (cf. Herschlag
1995
) that functions in IRES-mediated initiation to remodel aberrantly
folded IRESs so that they achieve and maintain an active conformation.
This hypothesis is supported by the finding that EMCV IRES-mediated
translation (which does not require PTB) became strongly PTB dependent
following insertion of a single extra residue into the A-rich loop
between J and K domains (Kaminski and Jackson 1998
). The presence of an
additional A residue in this same loop in the IRES of the TMEV GDVII
strain relative to the equivalent loop of the TMEV DA strain IRES may
account for the apparent difference in their PTB-dependence for
activity (Kaminski et al. 1995
; this paper). This hypothesis is also
consistent with the conclusion that it is the requirement for, rather
than the binding of per se, PTB and ITAF45 to EMCV, FMDV, and
TMEV IRESs that is altered as a consequence of nucleotide differences
between them.
We suggest that the observation that FMDV IRES requires
ITAF45 in addition to PTB, where the TMEV IRES requires only
PTB for activity may reflect sequence differences between these IRESs that lead to differences between them in the mode of binding PTB. For
example, cardiovirus (EMCV, TMEV) IRESs contain pyrimidine residues in
the bulge between the two helices of domain K that are specifically
bound by PTB (Kolupaeva et al. 1996
), whereas analogous residues are
not present in the FMDV IRES. We hypothesize that PTB alone cannot fold
the FMDV IRES into a functionally competent structure because of such
differences in PTB binding sites and that this IRES only achieves an
active conformation in the presence of both RNA chaperones, PTB and
ITAF45.
It is interesting to note that members of the second major group of
picornavirus IRESs are also closely related yet also appear to have
different ITAF requirements. Initiation on the poliovirus IRES is
strongly dependent on PTB and PCBP2 and does not respond to unr, where
in contrast to the poliovirus IRES, initiation on the rhinovirus IRES
is strongly dependent on unr and is enhanced by PTB but is
less responsive to PCBP2 (Blyn et al. 1997
; Hunt and Jackson 1999
; Hunt
et al. 1999
; Walter et al. 1999
). Nevertheless, PTB, PCBP2, and
unr all bind to both poliovirus and rhinovirus IRESs (Borman
et al. 1993
; Hellen et al. 1993
, 1994
; Hunt et al. 1999
; Walter et al.
1999
; T.V. Pestova, unpubl.).
ITAF45 is a proliferation-dependent protein that is
distributed throughout the cytoplasm from metaphase through to
telophase (Radomski and Jost 1995
; Lamartine et al. 1997
; Nakagawa et
al. 1997
). Its expression is up-regulated in response to mitogen
stimulation, and it is not detectable in nonproliferating
differentiated cells such as murine brain cells (Radomski and Jost
1995
). The strict difference in factor requirements for initiation of
translation on TMEV and FMDV IRESs is sufficient to limit the activity
of the latter, and it is thus tempting to speculate that the
requirement for ITAF45 may be a cell-specific determinant
that limits replication of the chimeric GD68 and GD80 viruses as well
as FMDV. An attractive hypothesis is that ITAF45 may function
as a tissue-specific and cell-cycle-dependent factor that specifically
binds and controls translation on a particular set of mRNAs during cell
proliferation and/or specific phases of the cell cycle. Indeed,
IRES-mediated translation of a number of cellular proteins, including
ornithine decarboxylase, c-myc, the p58PITSLRE protein kinase,
and platelet-derived growth factor B, is specifically activated in a
cell-cycle or proliferation-dependent manner (Bernstein et al. 1997
;
Cornelis et al. 2000
; Pyronnet et al. 2000
).
| |
Materials and methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Plasmids
Plasmids pET(His6-eIF4A), pET(His6-eIF4B)
(Pestova et al. 1996a
), pBS-(
-globin), and pE15 (Hellen et al.
1993
) have been described. Mouse embryo cDNA (Clontech) corresponding
to the ITAF45 coding region (Nakagawa et al. 1997
) was
amplified by PCR using the primers
5'-CGGGATCCGATGTCGGGCGAAGACGAGC-3' and
5'CTCCGCTCGAGTTATCAGTCCCCAGCTCCATTCTC-3', digested with
BamH1 and XhoI and inserted into pET28b (Novagen) to
yield pET(His6-ITAF45).
Chimeric TMDV/FMDV IRES-luciferase reporter constructs were derived
from TMEV GDVII plasmids pUGD (Pilipenko et al. 1994
), pGLV and pLG
(Pilipenko et al. 1999
), and the FMDV 01K plasmid pSP449 (Luz
and Beck 1990
). pLG contains TMEV GDVII nt 1-1124 (corresponding to
the entire 5' UTR, the initiation codon, and 18 codons) fused
in-frame to the luciferase gene and downstream of a T7
promoter. pLGF-68 and pLGF-80 were derived from pLG by replacing TMEV
nt 628-1047 with FMDV 01K nt 280-693 and TMEV nt 628-1124
with FMDV 01K nt 280-740, respectively. FMDV nucleotides are
numbered starting after the poly(C) tract (Forss et al. 1984
). Chimeric
full-length TMEV clones GD68 and GD80 were derived from an infectious
full-length wt TMEV GDVII clone GD18 by replacing TMEV nt
628-1047 with FMDV 01K nt 280-693 and TMEV nt 628-1124 with FMDV 01K nt 280-740, respectively.
Translation of luciferase expressing plasmids
Plasmids pLG, pLGF-68, and pLGF-80 were linearized with
SalI, and mRNA was transcribed, purified, and translated in
RRL at 30°C for 1 hr (Pilipenko et al. 1994
). Template activity was
quantified by measurement of [35S]methionine incorporation
into the luciferase band separated by SDS-PAGE. For in vivo
translation, 1-day-old quadruplicate cultures of BHK-21 cells grown in
50-mm plastic dishes were each transfected with 2 µg of mRNA using
DEAE-dextran (Pilipenko et al. 1999
). Cells were removed after 3 hr
incubation at 37°C, and luciferase activity was determined using the
Promega Luciferase Assay System according to the manufacturer's
protocol. The signals were normalized to 106 cells by
determining protein concentration in the lysates using the Lowry
method. The signal variation in quadruplicate cultures did not exceed
15% of the average value for a given template. The saturating amount
of RNA in this assay corresponded to 1µg/dish.
Preparation and characterization of chimeric viruses
Viruses were recovered from transcript RNA-transfected
BHK-21 cells, accumulated, and characterized (Pilipenko et al. 1994
,
1995
). A region of the viral RNA (between nt 579 and 1214 of the
wt TMEV GDVII sequence) was amplified by RT-PCR and sequenced as described (Pilipenko et al. 1995
). No additional sequence changes were detected.
Neurovirulence assay and detection of replicating virus in mouse CNS
BALB/C mice (10-12 g) were inoculated intracerebrally with tenfold virus dilutions and monitored for clinical signs for 6 week p.i. Thirty mice were inoculated with 108 TCD50 (50% tissue culture infective dose) of GD68 virus, and 10 mice were each infected with 107 TCD50-103 TCD50 doses. For GD80 virus, 25 mice were inoculated with 107.5 TCD50, and 12 mice each with 106.5 TCD50 and 105.5 TCD50 doses. The paralytogenic activity was expressed as the viral dose causing paralysis in 50% of animals (PD50). The presence of the viral genome in the CNS was detected by RT-PCR amplification of the appropriate region of the viral RNA (nt 579-1214), as described above. Four mice for GD80 and three mice for GD68 were sacrificed at 1-, 7- and 14-day time-points p.i. Forty cycles of PCR amplification were performed with RNA samples extracted from CNS at days 7 and 14 p.i.
Purification of factors and 40S ribosomal subunits
Ribosomal subunits, eIF2, eIF3, and eIF4F were purified from RRL as
described (Pestova et al. 1996a
, 1998b
). ITAF45 was purified from the ribosomal salt wash (RSW) 70%-95% ammonium sulfate (AS) precipitation fraction from RRL. This fraction was applied in buffer A
(20 mM Tris at pH 7.5, 1 mM DTT, 0.1 mM EDTA, 10% glycerol) containing 100 mM KCl
to a DEAE cellulose column. The flow-through fraction was applied to a
phosphocellulose column and fractionated by step-elution using buffer A
with 100 mM and then 250 mM, 400 mM, 600 mM and finally 800 mM KCl.
The active 250-400-mM KCl elution fraction was dialyzed
against buffer A with 50 mM KCl and applied in this buffer
to an FPLC MonoQ HR 5/5 column. Fractions were collected across a
50-500 mM KCl gradient. Peaks of active, apparently homogenous ITAF45 eluted with 185 and 210 mM KCl.
Recombinant PTB-1 and eIFs eIF1, eIF1A, eIF4A, and eIF4B were purified
as described (Pestova et al. 1996a
, 1998a
). Recombinant
ITAF45 was expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3)
and purified by Ni2+-NTA (Qiagen) and MonoQ HR 5/5 column chromatography.
Sequencing of ITAF45
Purified ITAF45 was resolved by gel electrophoresis.
Sequencing of two well-resolved ITAF45 tryptic peptides was
done as described (Pestova et al. 1998a
,b
).
Assembly and analysis of ribosomal and ribonucleoprotein complexes
For toeprinting analysis, ribosomal complexes were assembled
essentially as described (Pestova et al. 1998a
). For 5 min, 0.5 µg
of GD18, GD68, or GD80 mRNA were incubated at 30°C in a 40-µl reaction volume that contained buffer B (2 mM DTT, 100 mM KAc, 20 mM Tris at pH 7.6, 2.5 mM MgAc, 1 mM ATP, 0.1 mM GMPPNP,
0.25 mM spermidine), eIF2 (3 µg), eIF3 (6 µg),
eIF4A (2 µg), eIF4B (0.3 µg), eIF4F (1.5 µg), 6 pmole of
40S subunits, and 6 pmole of Met-tRNAMeti and with
or without PTB (0.5 µg), ITAF45 (1 µg), eIF1 (0.3 µg), eIF1A (0.3 µg), or different RSW fractions (4-8 µg
protein), as indicated. Incubation was continued for 3 min at 30°C
following addition of 4 pmole of primer
5'-CCAGAAGACGTCATCGTCCA-3' (complementary to TMEV nt
1195-1214). Ribosomal and RNP complexes were analyzed by primer
extension (Pestova et al. 1996a
) using avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV)
reverse transcriptase (Promega) in the presence of [
-32P]dATP (~ 6000 Ci/mmole; ICN Radiochemicals). cDNA
products were compared with appropriate dideoxynucleotide sequence ladders.
For toeprinting analysis of 48S complexes assembled in RRL, 0.5 µg of RNA was incubated in 15 µl of RRL in the presence of 1 mM GMPPNP for 5 min at 30°C. The reaction mixture was diluted with buffer B to 40 µl final volume before the addition of 4 pmole of primer 5'-CCAGAAGACGTCATCGTCCA-3' complementary to TMEV nt 1195-1214. Toeprint analysis was done as described above.
Ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes were formed by incubating eIFs and
FMDV IRES mRNA for 5 min at 30°C in buffer (100 mM
KAc, 2 mM MgAc, 2 mM Tris-HCl at pH 7.5, 1mM DTT). Reactions contained 1 µg of RNA (4 pmole), 1 µg of eIF4G607-1076 (10 pmole), 1 µg of eIF4A (22 pmole), 1.5 µg (21 pmole) of eIF4B, and 0.75 µg (12 pmole) of
PTB and ATP (1mM), as indicated in the text, in a 20-µl
volume. Toeprint analysis of FMDV mRNA/factor complexes was done
essentially as described (Pestova et al. 1996a
,b
), using the primer
5'-CCAGAAGACGTCATCGTCCA-3' (complementary to TMEV nt 1214-1195).
Ribosomal complexes were assembled for analysis by sucrose-density
gradient centrifugation essentially as described above for toeprinting
analysis, except that the reaction volume was increased to 100 µl
and mRNAs were labeled during transcription with [32P]UTP
(~ 3000 Ci/mmole; ICN Radiochemicals) to a specific activity of
200,000 cpm/µg. Reaction mixtures containing translation components as indicated in the text were incubated for 5 min at 30°C. 48S and
RNP complexes were resolved by centrifugation through 10%-30% sucrose-density gradients as described (Pestova et al. 1996a
).
UV cross-linking of ITAF45 to RNA
The UV cross-linking reaction was done using a UV-Stratalinker
(Stratagene) essentially as described (Pestova et al. 1996b
). Purified
wt TMEV RNA, chimeric GD80 RNA, or
-globin RNA (100 ng)
that had been labeled with [32P]UTP during transcription
with T7 polymerase were incubated for 10 min at 30°C in a
20 µl reaction volume containing buffer B and ITAF45 (3 µg) either with or without competitor RNAs, as indicated in the
text. Samples were digested with cobra venom nuclease and RNAse A. Proteins were separated by 12% SDS-PAGE.
Chemical and enzymatic footprinting
RNP complexes were probed with RNase T1 and CMCT as
described (Kolupaeva et al. 1996
, 1998
). Cleaved or modified sites were identified by primer extension, using