Crystal structure of yeast initiation factor 4A, a DEAD-box RNA helicase
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Communicated by Manuel F. Morales, University of the Pacific, San Francisco, CA (received for review August 24, 2000)
Abstract
The eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4A (eIF4A) is a member of the DEA(D/H)-box RNA helicase family, a diverse group of proteins that couples an ATPase activity to RNA binding and unwinding. Previous work has provided the structure of the amino-terminal, ATP-binding domain of eIF4A. Extending those results, we have solved the structure of the carboxyl-terminal domain of eIF4A with data to 1.75 Å resolution; it has a parallel α-β topology that superimposes, with minor variations, on the structures and conserved motifs of the equivalent domain in other, distantly related helicases. Using data to 2.8 Å resolution and molecular replacement with the refined model of the carboxyl-terminal domain, we have completed the structure of full-length eIF4A; it is a “dumbbell” structure consisting of two compact domains connected by an extended linker. By using the structures of other helicases as a template, compact structures can be modeled for eIF4A that suggest (i) helicase motif IV binds RNA; (ii) Arg-298, which is conserved in the DEA(D/H)-box RNA helicase family but is absent from many other helicases, also binds RNA; and (iii) motifs V and VI “link” the carboxyl-terminal domain to the amino-terminal domain through interactions with ATP and the DEA(D/H) motif, providing a mechanism for coupling ATP binding and hydrolysis with conformational changes that modulate RNA binding.
Footnotes
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↵ * To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: Dave.McKay{at}Stanford.edu.
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Data Deposition: The atomic coordinates and structure factors have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank, www.rcsb.org (PDB ID codes 1FUU and 1FUK for full-length eIF4a and its carboxyl-terminal domain, respectively).
- Abbreviations:
- eIF4A,
- eukaryotic initiation factor 4A;
- HCV,
- hepatitis C virus;
- SF-1,
- helicase superfamily 1;
- SF-2,
- helicase superfamily 2
- Copyright © 2000, The National Academy of Sciences





