Cap-binding activity of an eIF4E homolog from Leishmania

  1. YAEL YOFFE1,
  2. JOANNA ZUBEREK2,
  3. MAGDALENA LEWDOROWICZ2,
  4. ZIV ZEIRA1,
  5. CHEN KEASAR1,
  6. IRIT ORR-DAHAN1,
  7. MARZENA JANKOWSKA-ANYSZKA3,
  8. JANUSZ STEPINSKI2,
  9. EDWARD DARZYNKIEWICZ2, and
  10. MICHAL SHAPIRA1
  1. 1Department of Life Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva 84105, Israel
  2. 2Department of Biophysics, Institute of Experimental Physics, Warsaw University, 02–089 Warsaw, Poland
  3. 3Faculty of Chemistry, Warsaw University, 02–093 Warsaw, Poland

Abstract

All eukaryotic mRNAs possess a 5′-cap (m7GpppN) that is recognized by a family of cap-binding proteins. These participate in various processes, such as RNA transport and stabilization, as well as in assembly of the translation initiation complex. The 5′-cap of trypanosomatids is complex; in addition to 7-methyl guanosine, it includes unique modifications on the first four transcribed nucleotides, and is thus denoted cap-4. Here we analyze a cap-binding protein of Leishmania, in an attempt to understand the structural features that promote its binding to this unusual cap. LeishIF4E-1, a homolog of eIF4E, contains the conserved cap-binding pocket, similar to its mouse counterpart. The mouse eIF4E has a higher Kas for all cap analogs tested, as compared with LeishIF4E-1. However, whereas the mouse eIF4E shows a fivefold higher affinity for m7GTP than for a chemically synthesized cap-4 structure, LeishIF4E-1 shows similar affinities for both ligands. A sequence alignment shows that LeishIF4E-1 lacks the region that parallels the C terminus in the murine eIF4E. Truncation of this region in the mouse protein reduces the difference that is observed between its binding to m7GTP and cap-4, prior to this deletion. We hypothesize that variations in the structure of LeishIF4E-1, possibly also the absence of a region that is homologous to the C terminus of the mouse protein, promote its ability to interact with the cap-4 structure. LeishIF4E-1 is distributed in the cytoplasm, but its function is not clear yet, because it cannot substitute the mammalian eIF4E in a rabbit reticulocyte in vitro translation system.

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