TY - JOUR
T1 - Eukaryotic initiation factor 6 is rate-limiting in translation, growth and transformation
AU - Gandin, Valentina
AU - Miluzio, Annarita
AU - Barbieri, Anna Maria
AU - Beugnet, Anne
AU - Kiyokawa, Hiroaki
AU - Marchisio, Pier Carlo
AU - Biffo, Stefano
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements This work was supported by grants AIRC (S.B., P.C.M.), TELETHON GGB05043, CARIPLO 0578 (S.B.) and NIH-RO1 (H.K.). A.B. is supported by grant AICR 05-360. The manuscript has been improved thanks to suggestions from N. Offenhaeuser and A. Boletta. We are indebted to P. G. Pelicci for anti-NPM antibodies, H. Hirai for preliminary soft agar assays, S. Modina for blastocyst preparation, M. Vidali for hepatocytes preparation, M. Malosio for insulin receptor antibodies, S. Gregori for FACS analysis, D. Bartel for reporter constructs, G. Manfioletti for HMGA2 antibodies and F. Loreni for rpS19 antibodies. We acknowledge L. Magri for preliminary experiments, and V. Volta and S. Grosso for suggestions.
PY - 2008/10/2
Y1 - 2008/10/2
N2 - Cell growth and proliferation require coordinated ribosomal biogenesis and translation. Eukaryotic initiation factors (eIFs) control translation at the rate-limiting step of initiation. So far, only two eIFs connect extracellular stimuli to global translation rates: eIF4E acts in the eIF4F complex and regulates binding of capped messenger RNA to 40S subunits, downstream of growth factors, and eIF2 controls loading of the ternary complex on the 40S subunit and is inhibited on stress stimuli. No eIFs have been found to link extracellular stimuli to the activity of the large 60S ribosomal subunit. eIF6 binds 60S ribosomes precluding ribosome joining in vitro. However, studies in yeasts showed that eIF6 is required for ribosome biogenesis rather than translation. Here we show that mammalian eIF6 is required for efficient initiation of translation, in vivo. eIF6 null embryos are lethal at preimplantation. Heterozygous mice have 50% reduction of eIF6 levels in all tissues, and show reduced mass of hepatic and adipose tissues due to a lower number of cells and to impaired G1/S cell cycle progression. eIF6+/- cells retain sufficient nucleolar eIF6 and normal ribosome biogenesis. The liver of eIF6 +/- mice displays an increase of 80S in polysomal profiles, indicating a defect in initiation of translation. Consistently, isolated hepatocytes have impaired insulin-stimulated translation. Heterozygous mouse embryonic fibroblasts recapitulate the organism phenotype and have normal ribosome biogenesis, reduced insulin-stimulated translation, and delayed G1/S phase progression. Furthermore, eIF6+/- cells are resistant to oncogene-induced transformation. Thus, eIF6 is the first eIF associated with the large 60S subunit that regulates translation in response to extracellular signals.
AB - Cell growth and proliferation require coordinated ribosomal biogenesis and translation. Eukaryotic initiation factors (eIFs) control translation at the rate-limiting step of initiation. So far, only two eIFs connect extracellular stimuli to global translation rates: eIF4E acts in the eIF4F complex and regulates binding of capped messenger RNA to 40S subunits, downstream of growth factors, and eIF2 controls loading of the ternary complex on the 40S subunit and is inhibited on stress stimuli. No eIFs have been found to link extracellular stimuli to the activity of the large 60S ribosomal subunit. eIF6 binds 60S ribosomes precluding ribosome joining in vitro. However, studies in yeasts showed that eIF6 is required for ribosome biogenesis rather than translation. Here we show that mammalian eIF6 is required for efficient initiation of translation, in vivo. eIF6 null embryos are lethal at preimplantation. Heterozygous mice have 50% reduction of eIF6 levels in all tissues, and show reduced mass of hepatic and adipose tissues due to a lower number of cells and to impaired G1/S cell cycle progression. eIF6+/- cells retain sufficient nucleolar eIF6 and normal ribosome biogenesis. The liver of eIF6 +/- mice displays an increase of 80S in polysomal profiles, indicating a defect in initiation of translation. Consistently, isolated hepatocytes have impaired insulin-stimulated translation. Heterozygous mouse embryonic fibroblasts recapitulate the organism phenotype and have normal ribosome biogenesis, reduced insulin-stimulated translation, and delayed G1/S phase progression. Furthermore, eIF6+/- cells are resistant to oncogene-induced transformation. Thus, eIF6 is the first eIF associated with the large 60S subunit that regulates translation in response to extracellular signals.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=53349147033&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/nature07267
DO - 10.1038/nature07267
M3 - Article
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 455
SP - 684
EP - 688
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 7213
ER -