Initiation of protein synthesis in bacteria
Abstract
Valuable information on translation initiation is available from biochemical data and recently solved structures. We present a detailed description of current knowledge about the structure, function, and interactions of the individual components involved in bacterial translation initiation. The first section describes the ribosomal features relevant to the initiation process. Subsequent sections describe the structure, function, and interactions of the mRNA, the initiator tRNA, and the initiation factors IF1, IF2, and IF3. Finally, we provide an overview of mechanisms of regulation of the translation initiation event. Translation occurs on ribonucleoprotein complexes called ribosomes. The ribosome is composed of a large subunit and a small subunit that hold the activities of peptidyltransfer and decode the triplet code of the mRNA, respectively. Translation initiation is promoted by IF1, IF2, and IF3, which mediate base pairing of the initiator tRNA anticodon to the mRNA initiation codon located in the ribosomal P-site. The mechanism of translation initiation differs for canonical and leaderless mRNAs, since the latter is dependent on the relative level of the initiation factors. Regulation of translation occurs primarily in th...Continue Reading
References
Crystal structure of Escherichia coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase highlights species-specific features
Crystal structure of the N-terminal segment of human eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2alpha
Citations
The nucleotide-binding site of bacterial translation initiation factor 2 (IF2) as a metabolic sensor
70S-scanning initiation is a novel and frequent initiation mode of ribosomal translation in bacteria
Noise analysis of genome-scale protein synthesis using a discrete computational model of translation
Translation initiation by the hepatitis C virus IRES requires eIF1A and ribosomal complex remodeling
Msc6p is required for mitochondrial translation initiation in the absence of formylated Met-tRNAfMet
Salmonella serotype assignment by sequencing analysis of intergenic regions of ribosomal RNA operons
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