Search results for "Polyribosomes"

showing 10 items of 13 documents

Yeast Cth2 protein represses the translation of ARE-containing mRNAs in response to iron deficiency

2018

In response to iron deficiency, the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae undergoes a metabolic remodeling in order to optimize iron utilization. The tandem zinc finger (TZF)-containing protein Cth2 plays a critical role in this adaptation by binding and promoting the degradation of multiple mRNAs that contain AU-rich elements (AREs). Here, we demonstrate that Cth2 also functions as a translational repressor of its target mRNAs. By complementary approaches, we demonstrate that Cth2 protein inhibits the translation of SDH4, which encodes a subunit of succinate dehydrogenase, and CTH2 mRNAs in response to iron depletion. Both the AREs within SDH4 and CTH2 transcripts, and the Cth2 TZF are es…

0301 basic medicineCancer ResearchRNA StabilityAdaptation BiologicalGene ExpressionBiochemistryGene Expression Regulation FungalGene expressionMedicine and Health SciencesExpressió genèticaGenetics (clinical)Regulation of gene expressionZinc fingerbiologyMessenger RNANutritional DeficienciesEukaryotaTranslation (biology)Iron DeficienciesCell biologyNucleic acidsDNA-Binding ProteinsCellular Structures and OrganellesResearch ArticleSaccharomyces cerevisiae Proteinslcsh:QH426-470IronProtein subunitSaccharomyces cerevisiaeSaccharomyces cerevisiaeDNA constructionRegulatory Sequences Ribonucleic Acid03 medical and health sciencesExtraction techniquesTristetraprolinPolysomeGeneticsRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNutritionAU Rich ElementsAU-rich elementBiology and life sciencesOrganismsFungiCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationYeastRNA extractionResearch and analysis methodslcsh:GeneticsMolecular biology techniques030104 developmental biologyPolyribosomesPlasmid ConstructionIron DeficiencyRNAProtein TranslationRibosomesTranscription Factors
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Yeast mRNA cap-binding protein Cbc1/Sto1 is necessary for the rapid reprogramming of translation after hyperosmotic shock.

2011

Global translation is inhibited in Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells under osmotic stress; nonetheless, osmostress-protective proteins are synthesized. We found that translation mediated by the mRNA cap-binding protein Cbc1 is stress-resistant and necessary for the rapid translation of osmostress-protective proteins under osmotic stress.

Cell PhysiologySaccharomyces cerevisiae ProteinsOsmotic shockRNA StabilitySaccharomyces cerevisiaeCycloheximideBiology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundGene Knockout TechniquesEukaryotic translationOsmotic PressureStress PhysiologicalPolysomeGene Expression Regulation FungalProtein biosynthesisRNA MessengerMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyCell Nucleus0303 health sciencesMicrobial ViabilityOsmotic concentration030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyEIF4ENuclear ProteinsTranslation (biology)Cell BiologyArticlesAdaptation PhysiologicalProtein TransportEukaryotic Initiation Factor-4EchemistryBiochemistryRNA Cap-Binding ProteinsPolyribosomesProtein BiosynthesisProtein BindingMolecular biology of the cell
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The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Hot1p regulated gene YHR087W (HGI1) has a role in translation upon high glucose concentration stress.

2012

Abstract Background While growing in natural environments yeasts can be affected by osmotic stress provoked by high glucose concentrations. The response to this adverse condition requires the HOG pathway and involves transcriptional and posttranscriptional mechanisms initiated by the phosphorylation of this protein, its translocation to the nucleus and activation of transcription factors. One of the genes induced to respond to this injury is YHR087W. It encodes for a protein structurally similar to the N-terminal region of human SBDS whose expression is also induced under other forms of stress and whose deletion determines growth defects at high glucose concentrations. Results In this work …

Chromatin ImmunoprecipitationTranslation<it>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</it>Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteinslcsh:QH426-470Monosaccharide Transport ProteinsSaccharomyces cerevisiaeSaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiologyGene YHR087WHog1pTranscripció genèticaEukaryotic translationStress PhysiologicalPolysomeGene Expression Regulation FungalGene expressionProtein biosynthesisHigh glucose osmotic stresslcsh:QH573-671Transcription factorMolecular BiologyRegulation of gene expressionGenetic transcriptionlcsh:CytologyComputational BiologyTranslation (biology)biology.organism_classificationBlotting NorthernExpressió gènicaYeastlcsh:GeneticsGlucoseBiochemistryMicroscopy FluorescencePolyribosomesProtein BiosynthesisPolysomesGene <it>YHR087W</it>Gene expressionLlevatsMitogen-Activated Protein KinasesHot1pTranscription FactorsResearch ArticleBMC molecular biology
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Control of Enzymic Hydrolysis of Polyadenylate Segment of Messenger RNA: Role of Polyadenylate-Associated Proteins

1978

The role of poly(A)-associated proteins in the breakdown of poly(A) sequences in both mammalian polyribosomes and in isolated poly(A) · protein complexes has been studied on an enzymic level. Two nucleases (alkaline exoribonuclease and endoribonuclease IV; both isolated from eukaryotic tissue), which preferentially hydrolyze poly(A) sequences, have been applied to determine the susceptibility of poly(A) in dependence on the presence of poly(A) · protein(s). Polysomes, isolated from L5178y mouse lymphoma cells, do not contain endogenous poly(A) nuclease activity. The poly(A) segment in polysomes is hydrolyzed by the exoribonuclease, irrespective of the preincubation conditions used. Pretreat…

Exonucleaseschemistry.chemical_classificationNucleaseMessenger RNAbiologyEndonucleasesBiochemistryMolecular biologyCell LineKineticschemistry.chemical_compoundNucleoproteinsRibonucleasesEnzymechemistryBiochemistryPolyribosomesExoribonucleasePolysomebiology.proteinUreaPolyadenylateRNA MessengerRibonucleasePoly AEuropean Journal of Biochemistry
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Proteins from rat liver cytosol which stimulate mRNA transport. Purification and interactions with the nuclear envelope mRNA translocation system.

1986

Two polysome-associated proteins with particular affinities for poly(A) have been purified from rat liver. These proteins stimulate the efflux of mRNA from isolated nuclei in conditions under which such efflux closely stimulates mRNA transport in vivo, and they are therefore considered as mRNA-transport-stimulatory proteins. Their interaction with the mRNA-translocation system in isolated nuclear envelopes has been studied. The results are generally consistent with the most recently proposed kinetic model of mRNA translocation. One protein, P58, has not been described previously. It inhibits the protein kinase that down-regulates the NTPase, it enhances the NTPase activity in both the prese…

MaleNucleocytoplasmic Transport ProteinsNuclear EnvelopeRNA-binding proteinBiologyBiochemistryCytosolPhosphoprotein PhosphatasesMRNA transportAnimalsRNA MessengerProtein kinase AMessenger RNANucleocytoplasmic Transport ProteinsRNARNA-Binding ProteinsBiological TransportRats Inbred StrainsNucleoside-TriphosphatasePhosphoric Monoester HydrolasesCell biologyRatsCytosolBiochemistryLiverPolyribosomesPhosphorylationCarrier ProteinsPoly AProtein KinasesEuropean journal of biochemistry
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Messenger RNA of the large subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase from Chlamydomonas reinhardi. Isolation and properties.

1979

Polysomes specifically synthesizing the large subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase were isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardi cells by the indirect immunoprecipitation method. Electrophoretic analysis showed that the immunoprecipitated polysomes were of chloroplast origin. The mRNA coding for the large subunit which was purified from immunoprecipitated polysomes migrated at the 19-S position on sucrose density gradients, and its molecular weight was estimated to be 7.3 x 10(5) by acid-urea/agarose gel electrophoresis. The mRNA was translated in vivo with a cell-free protein-synthesizing system derived from Escherichia coli to give full-length large-subunit polypeptides.

Messenger RNARibulose 15-bisphosphateImmunoprecipitationCarboxy-LyasesProtein subunitRibulose-Bisphosphate CarboxylaseChlamydomonasChlamydomonasBiologybiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryMolecular biologyPyruvate carboxylaseMolecular Weightchemistry.chemical_compoundBiochemistrychemistryPolysomePolyribosomesProtein BiosynthesisAgarose gel electrophoresisEscherichia coliRNA MessengerEuropean journal of biochemistry
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The 5' Untranslated Region of the

2018

Many of the virulence traits that make Candida albicans an important human fungal pathogen are regulated on a transcriptional level. Here, we report an important regulatory contribution of translation, which is exerted by the extensive 5′ untranslated regulatory sequence (5′ UTR) of the transcript for the protein Efg1, which determines growth, metabolism, and filamentation in the fungus. The presence of the 5′ UTR is required for efficient translation of Efg1, to promote filamentation. Because transcripts for many relevant regulators contain extensive 5′ UTR sequences, it appears that the virulence of C. albicans depends on the combination of transcriptional and translational regulatory mec…

Molecular Biology and PhysiologyDNA Mutational AnalysisEFG1Hyphaehyphal morphogenesisGene Expressiontranslationposttranscriptional regulationDNA-Binding ProteinsFungal Proteinsfilamentation5′ UTRGenes ReporterPolyribosomesProtein BiosynthesisCandida albicansMorphogenesisHumans5' Untranslated RegionsTranscription FactorsResearch ArticlemSphere
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Reversion of 7-methylguanosine 5′-phosphate inhibition of mRNA translation by polysomal and soluble factors isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae

1987

Abstract Protein fractions that overcome m7GMP inhibition of mRNA translation have been purified from the yeast S. cerevisiae . An active fraction isolated from polysomes contains two polypeptides of 220- and 190-kDa. The active fraction isolated from postribosomal supernatant contains a major polypeptide of 28-kDa and other species of 32-, 24-, 22- and 21-kDa, and sediments in sucrose gradients as a high molecular weight complex of about 200000. This fraction restored yeast mRNA translation in reticulocyte lysates under conditions of yeast and globin mRNA competition; however, this effect was not observed with the 220- and 190-kDa polypeptides from polysomes. Nevertheless, translation of y…

RNA CapsSucroseSaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiophysicsReversionSaccharomyces cerevisiaeRNA Cap AnalogsBiochemistryFungal Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundReticulocytePolysomemedicineRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyMessenger RNAbiologyTranslation (biology)Cell Biologybiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyYeastKineticsmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryBiochemistryPolyribosomesProtein BiosynthesisBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
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A tRNA half modulates translation as stress response in Trypanosoma brucei

2019

In the absence of extensive transcription control mechanisms the pathogenic parasite Trypanosoma brucei crucially depends on translation regulation to orchestrate gene expression. However, molecular insight into regulating protein biosynthesis is sparse. Here we analyze the small non-coding RNA (ncRNA) interactome of ribosomes in T. brucei during different growth conditions and life stages. Ribosome-associated ncRNAs have recently been recognized as unprecedented regulators of ribosome functions. Our data show that the tRNAThr 3´half is produced during nutrient deprivation and becomes one of the most abundant tRNA-derived RNA fragments (tdRs). tRNAThr halves associate with ribosomes and pol…

RNA Transfer ThrScienceTrypanosoma brucei bruceiQProtozoan ProteinsArticleRNA TransferStress PhysiologicalPolyribosomesProtein Biosynthesis540 Chemistryparasitic diseases570 Life sciences; biologyRNA Small Untranslatedlcsh:QRNA Messengerlcsh:ScienceRibosomesRNA ProtozoanNature Communications
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The Lsm1-7/Pat1 complex binds to stress-activated mRNAs and modulates the response to hyperosmotic shock.

2018

RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) establish the cellular fate of a transcript, but an understanding of these processes has been limited by a lack of identified specific interactions between RNA and protein molecules. Using MS2 RNA tagging, we have purified proteins associated with individual mRNA species induced by osmotic stress, STL1 and GPD1. We found members of the Lsm1-7/Pat1 RBP complex to preferentially bind these mRNAs, relative to the non-stress induced mRNAs, HYP2 and ASH1. To assess the functional importance, we mutated components of the Lsm1-7/Pat1 RBP complex and analyzed the impact on expression of osmostress gene products. We observed a defect in global translation inhibition under…

Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteinslcsh:QH426-470Gene ExpressionSaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiochemistryOsmotic PressureOsmotic ShockGeneticsRNA MessengerCellular Stress ResponsesGlycerol-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenase (NAD+)Biology and life sciencesMessenger RNAMembrane Transport ProteinsRNA-Binding ProteinsProteinsCell BiologyRepressor ProteinsNucleic acidslcsh:GeneticsRibonucleoproteinsRNA Cap-Binding ProteinsCell ProcessesProtein BiosynthesisPolyribosomesRNAProtein TranslationCellular Structures and OrganellesRibosomesProtein BindingResearch ArticlePLoS genetics
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