T

T. Glen Lawson

Bates College

Publishes on RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms, Cytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research, Viral Infections and Immunology Research. 28 papers and 2k citations.

28Publications
2kTotal Citations

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ATP-dependent unwinding of messenger RNA structure by eukaryotic initiation factors.
Bimal K. Ray, T. Glen Lawson, Judit Krámer et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|1985
Cited by 405Open Access

Interaction of protein synthesis initiation factors with mRNA has been studied in order to characterize early events in the eukaryotic translation pathway. Individual reovirus mRNAs labeled with 32P in the alpha position relative to the m7G cap and eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF)-4A, -4B, and -4F purified from rabbit reticulocytes were employed. It was found that eIF-4A causes a structural change in mRNA, as evidenced by a nuclease sensitivity test: addition of high concentrations of eIF-4A greatly increase the nuclease sensitivity of the mRNA, suggesting that this factor can melt or "unwind" mRNA structure. ATP is required for this reaction. At low concentrations of eIF-4A, addition of eIF-4B is required for maximal unwinding activity. Thus eIF-4B enhances eIF-4A activity. Addition of eIF-4F also makes the mRNA sensitive to nuclease indicating a similar unwinding role to that of eIF-4A. Stoichiometric comparisons indicate that eIF-4F is more than 20-fold more efficient than eIF-4A in catalyzing this reaction. The unwinding activity of eIF-4F is inhibited by m7GDP, while that of eIF-4A is not. This suggests that eIF-4A functions independent of the 5' cap structure. Our results also suggest that the unwinding activity of eIF-4F is located in the 46,000-dalton polypeptide of this complex, which has shown by others to be similar or identical to eIF-4A.

The ATP-dependent interaction of eukaryotic initiation factors with mRNA.
Richard D. Abramson, Thomas Dever, T. Glen Lawson et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|1987
Cited by 212Open Access

The interaction of three protein synthesis initiation factors, eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF)-4A, -4B, and -4F, with mRNA has been examined. Three assays specifically designed to evaluate this interaction are RNA-dependent ATP hydrolysis, retention of mRNAs on nitrocellulose filters, and cross-linking to periodate-oxidized mRNAs. The ATPase activity of eIF-4A is only activated by RNA which is lacking in secondary structure, and the minimal size of an oligonucleotide capable of effecting an optimal activation is 12-18 bases. In the presence of ATP, eIF-4A is capable of binding mRNA. Consistent with the ATPase activity, this binding shows a definite preference for single-stranded RNA. In the absence of ATP, eIF-4F is the only factor to bind capped mRNAs, and this binding, unlike that of eIF-4A, is sensitive to m7GDP inhibition. The activities of both eIF-4A and eIF-4F are stimulated by eIF-4B, which seems to have no specific independent activity in our assays. Evidence from the cross-linking studies indicates that in the absence of ATP, only the 24,000-dalton polypeptide of eIF-4F binds to the 5' cap region of the mRNA. From the data presented in conjunction with the current literature, a suggested sequence of factor binding to mRNA is: eIF-4F is the first initiation factor to bind mRNA ind an ATP-independent fashion; eIF-4B then binds to eIF-4F, if in fact it was not already bound prior to mRNA binding; and finally, eIF-4A binds to the eIF-4F X eIF-4B X mRNA complex and functions in an ATP-dependent manner to allow unwinding of the mRNA.

Influence of 5' proximal secondary structure on the translational efficiency of eukaryotic mRNAs and on their interaction with initiation factors.
T. Glen Lawson, Bimal K. Ray, J T Dodds et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|1986
Cited by 149Open Access

The effects of 5' proximal secondary structure in mRNA molecules on their translation and on their interaction with the eukaryotic initiation factors (eIF)-4F, eIF-4A, and eIF-4B have been examined. Secondary structures were generated in the 5' noncoding region of rabbit globin and reovirus mRNAs by means of hybridization with cDNA molecules. cDNAs hybridized to the first 15 bases downstream from the cap inhibited the translation of the mRNAs in both reticulocyte and wheat germ lysates. The degree of inhibition was directly related to the monovalent ion concentration and inversely related to reaction temperature. These hybrid structures also reduced the competitive ability of the messages. Hybrid structures beginning downstream from the first 15 bases did not inhibit the translation of beta-globin mRNA or reovirus s3 mRNA. None of the hybrid structures were detrimental to the interaction of the mRNAs with the 26-kDa cap binding protein of eIF-4F, as determined by chemical cross-linking assays. However, in the presence of ATP, hybrid structures immediately adjacent to the cap severely inhibited the cross-linking to the p46 subunit of eIF-4F or to additional eIF-4A or eIF-4B. In order to account for these observations, a two-step mechanism is proposed for the interaction of eIF-4F with the 5' end of an mRNA molecule. The first step involves a weak initial interaction of the p26 subunit with the cap. The second step requires the hydrolysis of ATP and results in the formation of a stable initiation factor-mRNA complex, which may involve eIF-4A and eIF-4B. This second step is inhibited by the presence of 5' proximal secondary structure. In any event, our results demonstrate that the effect of mRNA structure on translation rate depends strongly on its position with respect to the 5' end and that this effect is due at least in part to an inhibition of the action of initiation factors normally required for the unwinding of structure.