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Eukaryotic elongation factors From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
eEF-1 are two eukaryotic elongation factors. It forms two complexes, the EF-Tu homolog EF-1A and the EF-Ts homolog EF-1B, the former's guanide exchange factor.[1] Both are also found in archaea.[2]
The nomenclature for the eEF-1 subunits have somewhat shifted around circa 2001, as it was recognized that the EF-1A and EF-1B complexes are to some extent independent of each other.[1] Components as currently recognized and named include:[3]
Current Nomenclature | Old Nomenclature | Human Genes | Canonical Function |
---|---|---|---|
eEF1A | eEF1α | EEF1A1, EEF1A2 EEF1A1P43 | aa-tRNA delivery to the ribosome; associates with aa-tRNA synthase complex. |
eEF1Bα | eEF1β (animal, fungi) eEF1β' (plant) | EEF1B2 EEF1B2P1, EEF1B2P2, EEF1B2P3 | GEF for eEF1A. |
eEF1Bβ | eEF1β (plant) | (None) | Additional GEF for eEF1A in plants with CDF-kinase-controlled activity.[3] |
eEF1Bγ | eEF1γ | EEF1G | Structural component. |
eEF1Bδ | eEF1δ | EEF1D | Additional GEF for eEF1A in animals. |
eEF1ε | eEF1ε | EEF1E1 | Not really an elongation factor. Scaffolding for the aa-tRNA synthase complex.[4] |
Val-RS | Val-RS | VARS | Valyl-tRNA synthetase, binds eEF1Bδ in rabbits.[3] |
The precise manner eEF1B subunit attaches onto eEF1A varies by organ and species.[3] eEF1A also binds actin.[3]
Various species of green algae, red algae, chromalveolates, and fungi lack the EF-1α gene but instead possess a related gene called EFL (elongation factor-like). Although its function has not been studied in depth, it appears to be similar to EF-1α.
As of 2009[update], only two organisms are known to have both EF-1α and EFL: the fungus Basidiobolus and the diatom Thalassiosira. The evolutionary history of EFL is unclear. It may have arisen one or more times followed by loss of EFL or EF-1α. The presence in three diverse eukaryotic groups (fungi, chromalveolates, and archaeplastida) is supposed to be the result of two or more horizontal gene transfer events, according to a 2009 review.[5] A 2013 report finds 11 more species with both genes, and provided an alternative hypothesis that an ancestor eukaryote may have both genes. In all known organisms where both genes are present, EF-1α tends to be transcriptionally repressed. If the hypothesis holds true, scientists would expect to find an organism that has a repressed EFL and a fully-functioning EF-1α.[6]
A 2014 review of EF-1α/EFL possessing eukaryotes considers both explanations insufficient on their own to explain the complex distribution of these two proteins in Eukaryotes.[7]
In eukaryotes, a related GTPase called eRF3 participates in translation termination. The archaeal EF-1α, on the other hand, performs all functions carried by these subfunctionalized variants.[8]
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