Reference: Matsuda R, et al. (2014) Protein quality control systems associated with no-go and nonstop mRNA surveillance in yeast. Genes Cells 19(1):1-12

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Abstract


Quality control systems eliminate aberrant proteins derived from aberrant mRNAs. Two E3 ubiquitin ligases, Ltn1 and Not4, are involved in proteasomal protein degradation coupled to translation arrest. Here, we evaluated nonstop and translation arrest products degraded in a poly(A) tail-independent manner. Ltn1 was found to degrade aberrant nonstop polypeptides derived from nonstop mRNA lacking a termination codon, but not peptidyl-tRNA, even in the absence of the ribosome dissociation complex Dom34:Hbs1. The receptor for activated C kinase (RACK1/ASC1) was identified as a factor required for nascent peptide-dependent translation arrest as well as Ltn1-dependent protein degradation. Both Not4 and Ltn1 were involved in the degradation of various arrest products in a poly(A) tail-independent manner. Furthermore, carboxyl terminus-truncated degradation intermediates of arrest products were stabilized in a cdc48-3 mutant defective in unfolding or the disassembly related to proteasomal degradation. Thus, we propose that stalled ribosomes may be dissociated into subunits and that peptidyl-tRNA on the 60S subunit is ubiquitinated by Ltn1 and Cdc48 is required for the degradation following release from tRNA.

Reference Type
Journal Article | Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Authors
Matsuda R, Ikeuchi K, Nomura S, Inada T
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