Bd. Keiper et Re. Rhoads, Translational recruitment of Xenopus maternal mRNAs in response to poly(A)elongation requires initiation factor eIF4G-1, DEVELOP BIO, 206(1), 1999, pp. 1-14
Xenopus oocytes accumulate maternal mRNAs which are then recruited to ribos
omes during meiotic cell cycle progression in response to progesterone and
coincident with poly(A) elongation. Prior to stimulation, most protein synt
hesis (similar to 70%) does not require intact translation factor eIF4G (B.
D. Kelper and R. E. Rhoads, 1997, Nucleic Acids Res. 25, 395-402). In the
present study we have addressed the requirement of eIF4G in the recruitment
of mRNAs during meiosis. Cleavage of eIF4G by coxsackievirus protease 2A i
nhibited progesterone-induced meiotic progression in 88% of the oocytes; pr
evented the recruitment of maternal mRNAs encoding cyclin B1, c-Mos, D7, an
d B9; and disrupted the association of eIF4G with poly(A)-binding protein.
Poly(A) elongation, however, was not inhibited by eIF4G cleavage. Injection
of MPF restored meiotic cell cycle progression to >60% of the oocytes but
not the recruitment of cyclin B1 or B9 mRNA. Previously recruited maternal
mRNAs were removed from polyribosomes following subsequent cleavage of eIF4
G, indicating that eIF4G is required both to recruit and also to maintain m
aternal mRNAs on polyribosomes. The expression of a cleavage-resistant vari
ant of human eIF4G-1 (G486E) significantly restored the ability to synthesi
ze c-Mos in response to progesterone and to translate exogenous beta-globin
mRNA, indicating that the inhibition by protease 2A is due to cleavage of
eIF4G alone. These results indicate that intact eIF4G is required for the p
oly(A)-dependent recruitment of several maternal mRNAs (cyclin B1, c-Mos, D
7, and B9) during meiotic cell cycle progression but not for the synthesis
of most proteins. (C) 1999 Academic Press.