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An in vivo control map for the eukaryotic mRNA translation machinery

Firczuk H, Kannambath S, Pahle J, Claydon A, Beynon R, Duncan J, Westerhoff H, Mendes P, McCarthy JEG

Molecular Systems Biology. 2013;9:635.

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Abstract

Rate control analysis defines the in vivo control map governing yeast protein synthesis and generates an extensively parameterized digital model of the translation pathway. Among other non-intuitive outcomes, translation demonstrates a high degree of functional modularity and comprises a non-stoichiometric combination of proteins manifesting functional convergence on a shared maximal translation rate. In exponentially growing cells, polypeptide elongation (eEF1A, eEF2, and eEF3) exerts the strongest control. The two other strong control points are recruitment of mRNA and tRNAi to the 40S ribosomal subunit (eIF4F and eIF2) and termination (eRF1; Dbp5). In contrast, factors that are found to promote mRNA scanning efficiency on a longer than-average 5′untranslated region (eIF1, eIF1A, Ded1, eIF2B, eIF3, and eIF5) exceed the levels required for maximal control. This is expected to allow the cell to minimize scanning transition times, particularly for longer 5′UTRs. The analysis reveals these and other collective adaptations of control shared across the factors, as well as features that reflect functional modularity and system robustness. Remarkably, gene duplication is implicated in the fine control of cellular protein synthesis.

Keyword(s)

eukaryotic translation machinery gene duplication in vivo rate control post-transcriptional gene expression system modularity

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Publication type:
Publication form:
Published date:
Language:
eng
Journal title:
Volume:
9
Start page:
635
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1038/msb.2012.73
Funder acknowledgement:
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:186878
Created by:
Pedrosa Mendes, Pedro
Created:
5th February, 2013, 12:22:57
Last modified by:
Pedrosa Mendes, Pedro
Last modified:
5th February, 2013, 12:22:57

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