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Polypyrimidine tract‐binding protein stimulates the poliovirus IRES by modulating eIF4G binding
Author(s) -
Kafasla Panagiota,
Morgner Nina,
Robinson Carol V,
Jackson Richard J
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
the embo journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.484
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1460-2075
pISSN - 0261-4189
DOI - 10.1038/emboj.2010.231
Subject(s) - biology , polypyrimidine tract binding protein , eif4g , internal ribosome entry site , poliovirus , picornavirus , poly(a) binding protein , virology , plasma protein binding , polypyrimidine tract , microbiology and biotechnology , rna binding protein , translation (biology) , biochemistry , rna , virus , messenger rna , gene
Tethered hydroxyl‐radical probing has been used to determine the orientation of binding of polypyrimidine tract‐binding protein (PTB) to the poliovirus type 1 (Mahoney) (PV‐1(M)) internal ribosome entry site/segment (IRES)—the question of which RNA‐binding domain (RBD) binds to which sites on the IRES. The results show that under conditions in which PTB strongly stimulates IRES activity, a single PTB is binding to the IRES, a finding which was confirmed by mass spectrometry of PTB/IRES complexes. RBDs1 and 2 interact with the basal part of the Domain V irregular stem loop, very close to the binding site of eIF4G, and RBDs3 and 4 interact with the single‐stranded regions flanking Domain V. The binding of PTB is subtly altered in the presence of the central domain (p50) of eIF4G, and p50 binding is likewise modified if PTB is present. This suggests that PTB stimulates PV‐1(M) IRES activity by inducing eIF4G to bind in the optimal position and orientation to promote internal ribosome entry, which, in PV‐1(M), is at an AUG triplet 30 nt downstream of the base of Domain V.