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  • Non-cooperative 4E-BP2 folding with exchange between eIF4E-binding and binding-incompatible states tunes cap-dependent translation inhibition.

Non-cooperative 4E-BP2 folding with exchange between eIF4E-binding and binding-incompatible states tunes cap-dependent translation inhibition.

Nature communications (2020-06-21)
Jennifer E Dawson, Alaji Bah, Zhenfu Zhang, Robert M Vernon, Hong Lin, P Andrew Chong, Manasvi Vanama, Nahum Sonenberg, Claudiu C Gradinaru, Julie D Forman-Kay
ABSTRACT

Phosphorylation of intrinsically disordered eIF4E binding proteins (4E-BPs) regulates cap-dependent translation by weakening their ability to compete with eIF4G for eIF4E binding within the translation initiation complex. We previously showed that phosphorylation of T37 and T46 in 4E-BP2 induces folding of a four-stranded beta-fold domain, partially sequestering the canonical eIF4E-binding helix. The C-terminal intrinsically disordered region (C-IDR), remaining disordered after phosphorylation, contains the secondary eIF4E-binding site and three other phospho-sites, whose mechanisms in inhibiting binding are not understood. Here we report that the domain is non-cooperatively folded, with exchange between beta strands and helical conformations. C-IDR phosphorylation shifts the conformational equilibrium, controlling access to eIF4E binding sites. The hairpin turns formed by pT37/pT46 are remarkably stable and function as transplantable units for phospho-regulation of stability. These results demonstrate how non-cooperative folding and conformational exchange leads to graded inhibition of 4E-BP2:eIF4E binding, shifting 4E-BP2 into an eIF4E binding-incompatible conformation and regulating translation initiation.

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TWEEN® 20, viscous liquid, suitable for cell culture
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Sephadex® G-50, Fine