Translation termination in eukaryotes: Polypeptide release factor eRF1 is composed of functionally and structurally distinct domains
- 1 March 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in RNA
- Vol. 6 (3) , 381-390
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s135583820099143x
Abstract
Class-1 polypeptide chain release factors (RFs) trigger hydrolysis of peptidyl-tRNA at the ribosomal peptidyl transferase center mediated by one of the three termination codons. In eukaryotes, apart from catalyzing the translation termination reaction, eRF1 binds to and activates another factor, eRF3, which is a ribosome-dependent and eRF1-dependent GTPase. Because peptidyl-tRNA hydrolysis and GTP hydrolysis could be uncoupled in vitro, we suggest that the two main functions of eRF1 are associated with different domains of the eRF1 protein. We show here by deletion analysis that human eRF1 is composed of two physically separated and functionally distinct domains. The “core” domain is fully competent in ribosome binding and termination-codon-dependent peptidyl-tRNA hydrolysis, and encompasses the N-terminal and middle parts of the polypeptide chain. The C-terminal one-third of eRF1 binds to eRF3 in vivo in the absence of the core domain, but both domains are required to activate eRF3 GTPase in the ribosome. The calculated isoelectric points of the core and C domains are 9.74 and 4.23, respectively. This highly uneven charge distribution between the two domains implies that electrostatic interdomain interaction may affect the eRF1 binding to the ribosome and eRF3, its activity in the termination reaction and activation of eRF3 GTPase. The positively charged core of eRF1 may interact with negatively charged rRNA and peptidyl-tRNA phosphate backbones at the ribosomal eRF1 binding site and exhibit RNA-binding ability. The structural and functional dissimilarity of the core and eRF3-binding domains implies that evolutionarily eRF1 originated as a product of gene fusion.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- C-terminal interaction of translational release factors eRF1 and eRF3 of fission yeast: G-domain uncoupled binding and the role of conserved amino acidsRNA, 1999
- Conserved motifs in prokaryotic and eukaryotic polypeptide release factors: tRNA-protein mimicry hypothesis.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- Eukaryotic polypeptide chain release factor eRF3 is an eRF1- and ribosome-dependent guanosine triphosphatase.1996
- The end in sight: terminating translation in eukaryotesTrends in Biochemical Sciences, 1995
- Regulation of translation termination: conserved structural motifs in bacterial and eukaryotic polypeptide release factorsBiochemistry and Cell Biology, 1995
- Bridging Ral GTPase to Rho PathwaysPublished by Elsevier ,1995
- Direct recognition of mRNA stop signals by Escherichia coli polypeptide chain release factor twoJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1994
- A single proteolytic cleavage in release factor 2 stabilizes ribosome binding and abolishes peptidyl-tRNA hydrolysis activity.1994
- Localization and characterization of the gene encoding release factor RF3 in Escherichia coli.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
- Translational termination: "stop" for protein synthesis or "pause" for regulation of gene expressionBiochemistry, 1992