Publication details

Translation control and co-translational processes in health and disease

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Authors

TĚŠINA Petr SÝKORA Michal

Year of publication 2024
Type Appeared in Conference without Proceedings
MU Faculty or unit

Central European Institute of Technology

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Description Co-translational quality control is triggered as aresponse to translational stalling events. Yet, different molecular mechanisms are employed for the recognition of these stalls and to trigger downstream rescue and quality control pathways. While the recognition of individual stalled ribosomes is poorly understood, the use of collided ribosomes as a proxy for the recognition of translation problems in the cell is conserved from bacteria to humans1–3. In eukaryotes, co-translational quality-control processes triggered by ribosome collisions accomplish several tasks and eventually trigger stress response signalling pathways. grated stress response (ISR) is a highly conserved eukaryotic mechanism for integrating multiple signals to reprogram gene expression. These signals are conveyed by protein kinases that phosphorylate the ? subunit of the initiation factor 2 (eIF2). Mammals have four known eIF2? kinases: GCN2, PERK, HRI, and PKR, which are activated in response to amino-acid starvation, ER stress, cytoplasmic protein misfolding and viral infection, respectively.
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