The Scanning Mechanism of Eukaryotic Translation Initiation
National Institutes of Health · Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Abstract
In eukaryotes, the translation initiation codon is generally identified by the scanning mechanism, wherein every triplet in the messenger RNA leader is inspected for complementarity to the anticodon of methionyl initiator transfer RNA (Met-tRNAi). Binding of Met-tRNAi to the small (40S) ribosomal subunit, in a ternary complex (TC) with eIF2-GTP, is stimulated by eukaryotic initiation factor 1 (eIF1), eIF1A, eIF3, and eIF5, and the resulting preinitiation complex (PIC) joins the 5' end of mRNA preactivated by eIF4F and poly(A)-binding protein. RNA helicases remove secondary structures that impede ribosome attachment and subsequent scanning. Hydrolysis of eIF2-bound GTP is stimulated by eIF5 in the scanning PIC,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 32.15
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 250
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- eIF2
- Eukaryotic initiation factor
- Eukaryotic translation
- Biology
- Start codon
- Initiation factor
- P-site
- Eukaryotic Small Ribosomal Subunit