From the Oral and Pharyngeal Cancer Branch, NIDR, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-4340
![]() |
ABSTRACT |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Deoxyhypusine synthase catalyzes the first step
in the posttranslational synthesis of an unusual amino acid, hypusine
(N-(4-amino-2-hydroxybutyl)lysine),
in the eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF-5A) precursor
protein. The null mutation in the single copy gene, yDHS,
encoding deoxyhypusine synthase results in the loss of viability in the
yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Upon depletion of
deoxyhypusine synthase, and consequently of eIF-5A, cessation of growth
was accompanied by a marked enlargement of cells, suggesting a defect
in cell cycle progression or in cell division. Two residues of the
yeast enzyme, Lys308 and Lys350, corresponding
to Lys287 and Lys329, respectively, known to be
critical for the activity of the human enzyme, were targeted for
site-directed mutagenesis. The chromosomal ydhs null
mutation was complemented by the plasmid-borne yDHS wild-type gene, but not by mutated genes encoding inactive proteins, including that with Lys350
Arg substitution or with
substitutions at both Lys308 and Lys350. The
mutated gene ydhs(K308R) encoding a protein with diminished activities (<1% of wild type) could support growth but only to a very
limited extent. These findings provide strong evidence that the
hypusine modification is indeed essential for the survival of S. cerevisiae and imply a vital function for eIF-5A in all eukaryotes.
![]() |
INTRODUCTION |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
The biosynthesis of the unusual amino acid, hypusine
(N-(4-amino-2-hydroxybutyl)lysine),
represents a novel posttranslational modification that occurs
exclusively in one cellular protein, the precursor of eukaryotic
translation initiation factor 5A
(eIF-5A)1 (1, 2). In the
first step of hypusine synthesis, deoxyhypusine synthase catalyzes
transfer of the butylamine moiety of the polyamine spermidine to the
-amino group of a specific lysine residue of eIF-5A precursor
(Lys51 in the yeast proteins) to form a deoxyhypusine
(N
-(4-aminobutyl)lysine) residue (3,
4). Hydroxylation of the side chain of this intermediate by
deoxyhypusine hydroxylase completes hypusine biosynthesis and eIF-5A
maturation (5).
Deoxyhypusine synthase has been purified from rat testis (4),
Neurospora crassa (6), HeLa cells (7), and yeast (8). Human
(9, 10) and N. crassa (11) cDNAs for the enzyme have been cloned, and its gene has been identified (7, 11, 12) and cloned
(8) in yeast. The amino acid sequence of deoxyhypusine synthase is
highly conserved and enzymes from different species exist as
homotetramers of 40 to 43-kDa subunits. In recent studies with human
deoxyhypusine synthase, we have identified an active site lysine
residue, Lys329, that is involved in enzyme-substrate
intermediate formation (13). Replacement of all the conserved lysine
residues of the human enzyme (with Lys Arg or Lys
Ala) by
site-directed mutagenesis revealed that Lys329 and
Lys287 are critical for enzyme activity (43).
Hypusine is ubiquitous in eukaryotes, occurring at one highly conserved residue of eIF-5A. The assignment of this protein as a putative translation initiation factor was based on its in vitro ability to stimulate methionyl puromycin synthesis (14). However, its true physiological function is as yet unknown. An increasing body of evidence supports the notion that eIF-5A and its hypusine modification play a pivotal role in eukaryotic cell proliferation (1, 2). In mammalian cells, inhibitors of either deoxyhypusine synthase (15) or deoxyhypusine hydroxylase (16) exert anti-proliferative effects. The arrest in cell proliferation by inhibitors of polyamine biosynthetic enzymes has been attributed to depletion of eIF-5A following deprivation of spermidine (17). The ability of spermidine analogues to support the growth of polyamine-deficient cells correlated with their competency to act as a substrate for deoxyhypusine synthesis (17, 18). Schnier et al. (19) and Wöhl et al. (20) independently demonstrated that expression of either one of the two eIF-5A genes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is vital for yeast survival. Schnier et al. further showed that a yeast mutant protein, eIF-5A precursor(K51R), which cannot be modified to the hypusine form due to the substitution of Arg51 for Lys, did not support the growth of yeast. Although suggesting the importance of the preservation of Lys51 for hypusine synthesis, these results do not provide direct evidence of the essential requirement of the hypusine modification for yeast growth.
We undertook a study to determine the role of deoxyhypusine synthase in the yeast S. cerevisiae through inactivation of its gene. Our data as well as those of Sasaki et al. (8), recently reported while this work was in progress, indicate that this gene is essential for cell viability in yeast. We extended the yDHS gene disruption studies by employing site-directed mutagenesis and plasmid shuffle techniques to compare the capabilities of wild type and mutated yDHS genes to support yeast growth. Single or double mutations were introduced into yDHS at the sites encoding Lys308 and Lys350 (corresponding to Lys287 and Lys329, respectively, of the human enzyme). Our results presented here show that the activity of deoxyhypusine synthase, as well as the gene product, is required for yeast viability and thus provide strong evidence of an essential role for eIF-5A and its hypusine modification in eukaryotic cell proliferation. Furthermore, the marked increase in the size of the cells at the cessation of growth upon depletion of deoxyhypusine synthase, and consequently of eIF-5A, invites speculation on the possible role of eIF-5A in the cell division phase of the cell cycle.
![]() |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Strains and Plasmids-- The genotypes and sources of the S. cerevisiae strains used in this work are listed in Table I. S. cerevisiae strain JS10 (19), plasmid YEp13 (21), and plasmid YEp352 (22) were kindly supplied by Dr. John W. B. Hershey (University of California, Davis, CA). Plasmid pRS316 (23) was a generous gift from Drs. Nobuko Hamasaki, Celia Tabor, and Herbert Tabor (NIDDK, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD), and plasmid pJJ246 (24) from Dr. Reed Wickner (NIDDK, National Institutes of Health). Plasmid YRp7 (25) was purchased from American Type Culture Collection (Rockville, MD), and plasmid pOCUS-2 from Novagen (Madison, WI). Plasmid YEp352T was generated by inserting 0.85-kb EcoRI-BglII fragment (TRP1 gene) from pJJ246 into the StuI-NdeI site of YEp352 by blunt end ligation.
|
Disruption and Replacement of yDHS Gene in Yeast--
A 1.2-kb
DNA fragment encompassing the whole open reading frame (ORF) (1164 bp)
of yeast deoxyhypusine synthase gene (yDHS) with two
PstI sites near the 5 and 3
termini was prepared by PCR
using yeast quick clone cDNA (CLONTECH) as a
template and a primer set of D5-1 and D3-1 (Table II). After
digestion with PstI, the 1.2-kb fragment was inserted into
the PstI site of pUC19 to generate pYS1 (Scheme
IA). pYS1 was digested with StyI to remove a
700-bp fragment from the middle coding region of yDHS. Into this linearized plasmid, a LEU2 marker gene (2 kb), obtained
from YEp13 by digestion with HpaI and SalI, was
inserted by blunt end ligation, resulting in pYLS1. A 2.5-kb DNA
fragment with yDHS disrupted by LEU2 was obtained
after digestion of pYLS1 with PstI and was used for
transformation of S. cerevisiae strain JS10 using the
lithium acetate method (26). Leu+ transformants were
isolated from minimal selection media lacking leucine.
Construction of Yeast-Escherichia coli Shuttle Vectors Expressing
Deoxyhypusine Synthase or Mutant Enzymes--
The yDHS gene
with NdeI and BamHI sites introduced at the 5
and 3
termini, respectively, of the ORF was constructed as outlined in
Scheme IB. yDHS-U (400-bp 5
-untranslated region
with SalI and NdeI sites) and yDHS-D
(450-bp 3
-untranslated region with BamHI and
HindIII sites) were generated by PCR of the genomic DNA of
S. cerevisiae strain JS10 using the primer sets D5-3/D3-3 and D5-4/D3-4, respectively. Since 21 bp at the 3
terminus of yDHS-U and the 5
terminus of yDHS-D are
complementary, the two products purified from a gel were used as
templates for the second round of PCR with the primer set D5-3/D3-4
to generate yDHS-UD, a 0.85-kb fusion product. After
digestion with SalI and HindIII, this PCR product
was inserted into theSal I-HindIII site of
pOCUS-2 to generate pOUD-1. pOUD-1 was digested with NdeI
and BamHI and ligated with the yDHS ORF, 1.2-kb
NdeI-BamHI fragment produced from pET11a-yDHS
(12), to generate pOyDHS. The 2.1-kb SalI-HindIII fragment from pOyDHS was inserted into theSal
I-HindIII site of the centromeric plasmid pRS316 to form
pRS316-yDHS, or into the SmaI-SalI site of the
yeast episomal plasmid YEp352T (by blunt end ligation) to generate
YEp352T-yDHS. A 1.5-kb EcoRI fragment of YRp7 containing
ARS1 and TRP1 was inserted to the
EcoRI site of pOyDHS to generate YRp7-yDHS. For the
construction of plasmids expressing mutant enzymes in yeast, the 1.2-kb
NdeI-BamHI fragment of the above recombinant
plasmids containing wild type yDHS gene was replaced with a
1.2-kb NdeI-BamHI fragment of pET-11a recombinant plasmids harboring mutated yDHS sequences.
Site-directed Mutagenesis-- Double mutations at Lys308 and Lys350 were carried out by PCR-directed mutagenesis (27). The Lys codon (AAG) corresponding to amino acid residue 308 or 350 was replaced by the Arg codon (AGG), Pro codon (CCG), or Glu codon (GAA). In the first step, replacement of Lys308 with Arg was performed using primer D3-6 (Table II) containing the Arg codon in place of the Lys codon. Two PCR products obtained in the first round of PCR, using pET-11a-yDHS as the template and the primer sets D5-5/D3-6 and D5-6/D3-5, were annealed and amplified in the second round of PCR using the D5-5/D3-5 primer set to produce a full-length 1.2-kb DNA fragment. Introduction of the second mutation was carried out in a similar manner, starting with pET-11a-yDHS(K308R), as the template, and primer sets targeted to change Lys350 to Arg, Glu, or Pro. The yDHS K308R or yDHS K350R single mutation was generated using the QuikChangeTM site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene), with D5-8/D3-10 as the primer set for Lys308 (AAG) to Arg (CGC) substitution and D5-9/D3-11 primer set for Lys350 (AAG) to Arg (CGC) substitution. The introduction of the correct mutation was verified by sequencing of the mutated DNA after insertion into a plasmid.
|
![]() |
RESULTS |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
We and others identified YHR068w in S. cerevisiae chromosome VIII as a candidate gene for yeast deoxyhypusine synthase by searching for sequences in the GenBank data base that matched the partial amino acid sequences determined for the enzymes from rat (4), human (7), or N. crassa cDNA sequences (11). The identity of the deoxyhypusine synthase gene was verified by demonstrating enzymatic activity after expression of its ORF in E. coli (12). Independently, Sasaki et al. purified deoxyhypusine synthase from yeast and cloned the identical gene (8). There appears to be a single gene for this enzyme in yeast. Hybridization of yeast genomic DNA digested with EcoRI or HindIII with the radiolabeled ORF of yDHS displayed one radiolabeled band in each case, of 5.83 or 3.75 kb, respectively (data not shown). Furthermore, no other sequence related to the ORF of yDHS is found in the whole genome of S. cerevisiae (28), when searched by the BLAST network service of NCBI (National Center for Biotechnology Information).
To determine whether the deoxyhypusine synthase gene is essential for
cell viability in yeast, we constructed a plasmid, pYLS1, containing
yDHS with the middle 60% of the ORF deleted and replaced with LEU2, as shown in Scheme
IA. A 2.5-kb PstI
fragment with disrupted yDHS was used to transform the
Leu diploid stain JS10 (Table I). Leu+
transformants were selected; disruption of chromosomal yDHS
by homologous recombination was confirmed by PCR. As shown in Fig. 1, most Leu+ transformants
carried normal yDHS on one allele and a disrupted ydhs::LEU2 on the other allele. No difference in
the pattern of growth and sporulation of JS10 and of the heterozygous
ydhs/yDHS diploids was observed, suggesting that disruption
of one chromosomal allele is not detrimental in yeast cells. One such
transformant, JSD1, was subjected to sporulation followed by tetrad
dissection (Fig. 2A). Only two
of the four spores from each ascus grew to visible colonies (8 out of
18 dissected asci shown) (Fig. 2A). All growing colonies
were Leu
; none was Leu+, an indication that
the haploid with the ydhs::LEU2 genotype is not
viable. Microscopic examination of those spores unable to form visible
colonies revealed that they did in fact germinate but ceased to grow
after ~eight or nine generations (Fig. 2, A and
C, open arrows, 15/16 spores). After 18 h
(day 1) of dissection, the ydhs null mutant showed slowed
growth (30-60 cells, five or six generations) compared with
yDHS wild type (200-400 cells, eight or nine generations).
By the 2nd day, the yDHS spores grew to visible colonies and
kept on growing on consecutive days (Fig. 2, A and
C, solid arrows). In contrast, the
ydhs haploids stopped cell division by day 2, at a colony
size of ~300 cells of slightly enlarged size (open
arrows). It is clear that from day 2 to day 3 a marked
increase in cell size occurred with no change in number. No further
increase in cell number or size was observed upon prolonged incubation
(up to day 10). In the case of the yDHS cells, no such enlargement was seen on any day. The arrest in growth of the
ydhs null mutants after several cell divisions most likely
results from depletion of deoxyhypusine synthase and consequently a
reduction in eIF-5A below the minimum level required to support cell
growth.
|
|
|
The data of Figs. 2B and 3 show that plasmid-borne
yDHS can complement the ydhs null mutation on the
chromosome. JSD1 transformed with the centromeric plasmid pRS316-yDHS
carrying URA3 and yDHS, or a high copy number
episomal plasmid YEp352T-yDHS carrying TRP1 and
yDHS, was sporulated and tetrads were analyzed. Unlike the 2:2 viable/non-viable segregation of JSD1, tetrads from JSD1 carrying either plasmid could yield more than two viable haploid colonies after
dissection. Dissection of 16 asci derived from JSD1[pRS316-yDHS] yielded visible colonies as follows: 1 (1 ascus), 2 (10 asci), 3 (4 asci), 4 (1 ascus). Tetrads from JSD1[YEp352T-yDHS] gave rise to a
higher number of viable colonies, i.e. 4 (6 asci), 3 (1 ascus), 2 (1 ascus) (Fig. 2B). All viable Leu+
haploids derived from JSD1[pRS316-yDHS] were Ura+; all
Leu+ haploids from JSD1[YEp352T-yDHS] were
Trp+, indicating the dependence of growth of
ydhs::LEU2 haploids on the yDHS gene on
the plasmids. Those spores that did not form visible colonies stopped
growth after several cell divisions (similar to those shown in Fig.
2C). 18 Ura+ haploid colonies carrying
pRS316-yDHS (Fig. 3A), derived
from sporulation and tetrad dissection of JSD1[pRS316-yDHS], were
patched onto minimal media containing (Fig. 3A) or lacking
(Fig. 3B) leucine. Half of the colonies were
Leu+ with disrupted chromosomal yDHS and the
other half Leu with intact chromosomal yDHS.
When the same colonies were patched onto minimal media containing
leucine, uracil, and 5-FOA, which selects against Ura+
cells, only Leu
cells grew (Fig. 3C),
indicating that they can lose the URA3 plasmid. In contrast,
no Leu+ colonies could grow on 5-FOA plates, suggesting
that they cannot grow without yDHS from the plasmid.
|
Further evidence for the dependence of the ydhs null haploid
on plasmid-borne yDHS for growth was obtained from
comparison of plasmid retention of the Leu+ haploid
JSH1[pRS316-yDHS] and the Leu haploid
JSH2[pRS316-yDHS], both derived after sporulation and tetrad
dissection of JSD1[pRS316-yDHS], in rich medium. After culture of the
above two haploid strains in YPAD media over 3 days, significant loss
(~90%) of the Ura+ phenotype (pRS316-yDHS plasmid)
occurred for Leu
haploid containing undisrupted
yDHS, but no sign of loss of the plasmid was observed for
the Leu+ haploid, the ydhs::LEU2
strain, suggesting the mandatory nature of yDHS for yeast
survival.
We next addressed the question of whether the role of the yDHS gene in cell growth is, indeed, to provide deoxyhypusine synthesis activity and thereby hypusine modification in eIF-5A. Using mutated yDHS genes, we sought to see if a correlation exists between the deoxyhypusine synthesis activity of the mutant proteins and their ability to support growth in yeast. Since two lysine residues (Lys287 and Lys329 of the human enzyme) have been identified as critical for deoxyhypusine synthase activity (13, 43), we targeted the two corresponding residues in the yeast enzyme (Lys308 and Lys350, respectively) for mutations. The expression of the five mutant proteins with mutations at Lys308 and/or Lys350 were equally high in BL21(DE3) cells (Fig. 4A). Deoxyhypusine synthase activity of each mutant protein was determined after its partial purification using three substrate proteins, the human eIF-5A precursor, and the two yeast eIF-5A precursors, A and B (Fig. 4B). The mutant protein yDHS(K308R) exhibited low but definite activity (less than 1% of the wild type enzyme activity) toward the two yeast eIF-5A precursor proteins, but not with the human precursor protein. No activity was detectable with yDHS(K350R) or with the three double mutant proteins, yDHS(K308R/K350R), yDHS(K308R/K350E), and yDHS(K308R/K350P), with any of the substrate proteins, indicating that Lys350 plays a critical role in catalysis. The mutated genes or the wild type gene were inserted into the YRp7 plasmid carrying TRP1. After transformation of the haploid ydhs::LEU2 strain, JSH1[pRS316-yDHS], with the recombinant YRp7 plasmids, Trp+ Ura+ colonies containing both plasmids were selected and tested for their growth on 5-FOA plates (Fig. 5). Since 5-FOA selects for cells that have lost the Ura+ plasmid, only YRp7-derived plasmids remain in the cells. After 4 days' incubation, thick growth was observed for the ydhs::LEU2 haploid containing YRp7-yDHS encoding the wild-type enzyme. There was no sign of growth for those plasmids containing plasmids encoding inactive proteins, i.e. yDHS(K350R) or any of the double mutant proteins. Only marginal growth was observed under the microscope with the haploids carrying YRp7-yDHS(K308R).
|
|
![]() |
DISCUSSION |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
The present study provides definitive evidence that deoxyhypusine synthesis activity is vital for growth of the yeast S. cerevisiae. The yDHS gene disruption experiments presented here and in an earlier report (8) complement the earlier eIF-5A gene inactivation studies in yeast (19, 20). Considering the functional interchangeability of human and yeast eIF-5A's (31), and the high sequence conservation of eIF-5A (1), these results taken together lead to the conclusion that both the expression of eIF-5A precursor protein and its hypusine modification are required for proliferation of all eukaryotes. Although Sasaki et al. (8) recently reported evidence that the yDHS gene is essential for viability of S. cerevisiae, the possibility could not be ruled out that the yDHS gene itself, or its encoded protein, in addition to contributing deoxyhypusine synthesis activity, may have an independent function vital for yeast cells. To investigate whether yeast growth depends on deoxyhypusine synthase activity, and, if so, how, we generated mutations at Lys308 and Lys350 of the enzyme. Unlike those expressing the wild-type enzyme, no growth was observed for the cells carrying the mutated genes ydhs(K350R), ydhs(K308R/K350R), ydhs(K308R/K350E), or ydhs(K308R/K350P) that encode mutant proteins that are totally inactive in deoxyhypusine synthesis. Only slow growth was observed with the ydhs::LEU2 haploid carrying YRp7-yDHS(K308R) that encodes a defective enzyme with less than 1% of the wild-type enzyme activity. The observed correlation between loss of growth and of enzyme activities strongly suggests that the defects in the growth-supporting functions of the mutant proteins is attributable to loss of deoxyhypusine synthesis activity.
For human deoxyhypusine synthase, which shares ~58% sequence identity and 73% similarity with the yeast enzyme, Lys329 has been identified as the active site residue involved in the enzyme-substrate intermediate formation (13), and Lys287 was found to be another critical residue near the active site (43). The mutant proteins of the human enzyme hDHS(K287R) and hDHS(K329R) appear to retain the ability to form tetramers (43). Thus, it seems reasonable to assume that in the yeast mutant proteins yDHS(K308R) and yDHS(K350R) there is no gross disruption of global structure or of auxiliary function, if any, outside the active site. Judging from the total lack of deoxyhypusine synthetic activity of yDHS(K350R), Lys350 of the yeast enzyme, like the corresponding lysine residue (Lys329) of the human enzyme, appears to be essential for catalysis as the site of enzyme-substrate intermediate formation.2
eIF-5A is the only protein known to contain hypusine. Since eIF-5A is an abundant protein with a long half-life (32), the lack of deoxyhypusine synthase in the ydhs null mutant would be expected to result in the slow depletion of only this protein, i.e. mature eIF-5A, with the concomitant accumulation of the eIF-5A precursor protein.3 The growth of ydhs null spores derived from the yDHS/ydhs diploid, JSD1, ceased gradually (Fig. 2C), presumably as residual deoxyhypusine synthase and eIF-5A inherited from the parent diploid became limiting due to degradation and dilution through 8-9 cell divisions. In the case of disruption of the eIF-5A gene TIF51A, tif51A null spores derived from tetrad dissection appeared to stop multiplying after approximately five generations of growth (20). The fact that a ydhs null haploid can grow for perhaps ~three generations longer than a tif51A null haploid may reflect the extra time required for the depletion of deoxyhypusine synthase before the subsequent reduction in eIF-5A takes place. Judging from this extra time required for enzyme depletion, and the lack of accumulation of eIF-5A precursor protein in normal cells (32), it is probable that deoxyhypusine synthase is also a stable protein present in amounts far exceeding the minimum level necessary to modify all the newly translated eIF-5A precursor molecules. This conjecture may explain the finding that the mutant yDHS(K308R), with enzyme activity less than 1% of the wild-type enzyme, can support growth, albeit at a markedly reduced rate.
The arrest of growth of ydhs null mutants with abnormally enlarged cells (Fig. 2C) with no detectable budding suggests that cessation of growth upon deprivation of deoxyhypusine synthase is caused by specific defects in cell cycle progression or division. Interestingly, growth arrest was accompanied by a similar enlargement of cells in the S. cerevisiae strain UBHY-R upon depletion of a functional but unstable eIF-5A fusion protein, R-eIF-5A (34). Thus, it is reasonable to assume that in both cases the cessation of growth is mediated by common cellular defects resulting from exhaustion of eIF-5A. A striking increase in cell size was also observed in cells whose growth was arrested following depletion of the polyamines, spermidine and spermine, in a S. cerevisiae strain with a null mutation of the SPE2 gene encoding S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (35). In addition to enlargement, decrease in budding, accumulation of vesicles, and abnormal distribution of actin-like and chitin-like materials were observed (35). These characteristics are similar to the abnormalities reported for a cell division cycle (cdc) mutant (36, 37). Polyamine-deficient cells also exhibit several physiological changes, including loss of functional mitochondria (38), increase in +1 ribosomal frameshifting (39), and sensitivity to damage by oxygen (38) and heat (40). Although hypusine has been implicated as a key element of the polyamine requirement in eukaryotic cells (20), it is not known which aspects of these cellular defects are caused by eIF-5A deprivation.
Despite the essential nature of hypusine and eIF-5A in cell proliferation, the true physiological function of eIF-5A remains an enigma. In experiments where a rapid depletion of eIF-5A was achieved in yeast, only a small reduction in overall protein synthesis and a slight change in polysome profile were observed (34). This finding led to the conclusion that eIF-5A is not a general protein synthesis initiation factor but rather that it may act as a factor selective for a subset of specific mRNAs. In line with this idea is the observation that certain metal chelator inhibitors of deoxyhypusine hydroxylase, the enzyme that catalyzes the final step of hypusine synthesis, cause arrest of mammalian cells at the G1/S boundary of the cell cycle (16). Recently, eIF-5A was reported to be a cellular cofactor essential for Rev function in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 replication (41) or Rex function in human T-cell lymphotrophic virus replication (42), thus promoting speculation on its role in the recognition and nuclear export of specific mRNAs. The fact that yeast cells deprived of polyamines and those depleted of eIF-5A or of deoxyhypusine synthase display a similar enlargement suggests the intriguing possibility that eIF-5A may play a role in cell division cycle control. If so, eIF-5A may be either directly involved in this process or it may function indirectly by controlling the expression of a subset of proteins critical for cell division. Dissection and analysis of the molecular events that occur in eIF-5A deficient cells should shed further light on the physiological function of this unique protein.
![]() |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT |
---|
We are indebted to Dr. Nobuko Hamasaki for instruction in tetrad dissection, for sharing of equipment, and for helpful advice.
![]() |
FOOTNOTES |
---|
* The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Bldg. 30, Rm. 211, NIDR, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892-4340. Tel.: 301-496-5056; Fax: 301-402-0823; E-mail: mpark{at}yoda.nidr.nih.gov.
§ Present address: Cancer Research Institute, Catholic Research Institutes of Medical Science, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul 137-040, Korea.
¶ Present address: Dept. of Biochemistry, College of Medicine, Gyeongsang National University, Chinju 660-280, Korea.
1 The abbreviations used are: eIF-5A, eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF-5A defines the fully modified protein containing hypusine; the unmodified protein containing lysine in place of hypusine is termed eIF-5A precursor); ORF, open reading frame; yDHS, yeast deoxyhypusine synthase; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; 5-FOA, 5-fluoroorotic acid; bp, base pair(s); kb, kilobase pair(s).
2 E. C. Wolff and M. H. Park, unpublished results.
3 The eIF-5A precursor also appears to be a stable protein in cells, for its accumulation was detected in yeast overexpressing the eIF-5A gene from a multicopy plasmid (33).
![]() |
REFERENCES |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|