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Dive into the research topics where Jinsheng Dong is active.

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Featured researches published by Jinsheng Dong.


Molecular Cell | 2000

Uncharged tRNA Activates GCN2 by Displacing the Protein Kinase Moiety from a Bipartite tRNA-Binding Domain

Jinsheng Dong; Hongfang Qiu; Minerva T. Garcia-Barrio; James T. Anderson; Alan G. Hinnebusch

Protein kinase GCN2 regulates translation in amino acid-starved cells by phosphorylating elF2. GCN2 contains a regulatory domain related to histidyl-tRNA synthetase (HisRS) postulated to bind multiple deacylated tRNAs as a general sensor of starvation. In accordance with this model, GCN2 bound several deacylated tRNAs with similar affinities, and aminoacylation of tRNAphe weakened its interaction with GCN2. Unexpectedly, the C-terminal ribosome binding segment of GCN2 (C-term) was required in addition to the HisRS domain for strong tRNA binding. A combined HisRS+ C-term segment bound to the isolated protein kinase (PK) domain in vitro, and tRNA impeded this interaction. An activating mutation (GCN2c-E803V) that weakens PK-C-term association greatly enhanced tRNA binding by GCN2. These results provide strong evidence that tRNA stimulates the GCN2 kinase moiety by preventing an inhibitory interaction with the bipartite tRNA binding domain.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

The Essential Vertebrate ABCE1 Protein Interacts with Eukaryotic Initiation Factors

Zhang-qun Chen; Jinsheng Dong; Akihiko Ishimura; Ira O. Daar; Alan G. Hinnebusch; Michael Dean

The ABCE1 gene is a member of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) multigene family and is composed of two nucleotide binding domains and an N-terminal Fe-S binding domain. The ABCE1 gene encodes a protein originally identified for its inhibition of ribonuclease L, a nuclease induced by interferon in mammalian cells. The protein is also required for the assembly of the HIV and SIV gag polypeptides. However, ABCE1 is one of the most highly conserved proteins and is found in one or two copies in all characterized eukaryotes and archaea. Yeast ABCE1/RLI1 is essential to cell division and interacts with translation initiation factors in the assembly of the pre-initiation complex. We show here that the human ABCE1 protein is essential for in vitro and in vivo translation of mRNA and that it binds to eIF2α and eIF5. Inhibition of the Xenopus ABCE1 arrests growth at the gastrula stage of development, consistent with a block in translation. The human ABCE1 gene contains 16 introns, and the extremely high degree of amino acid identity allows the evolution of its introns to be examined throughout eukaryotes. The demonstration that ABCE1 plays a role in vertebrate translation initiation extends the known functions of this highly conserved protein. Translation is a highly regulated process important to development and pathologies such as cancer, making ABCE1 a potential target for therapeutics. The evolutionary analysis supports a model in which an ancestral eukaryote had large number of introns and that many of these introns were lost in non-vertebrate lineages.


The EMBO Journal | 2000

Association of GCN1–GCN20 regulatory complex with the N-terminus of eIF2α kinase GCN2 is required for GCN2 activation

Minerva T. Garcia-Barrio; Jinsheng Dong; Sandra Ufano; Alan G. Hinnebusch

Stimulation of GCN4 mRNA translation due to phosphorylation of the α‐subunit of initiation factor 2 (eIF2) by its specific kinase, GCN2, requires binding of uncharged tRNA to a histidyl‐tRNA synthetase (HisRS)‐like domain in GCN2. GCN2 function in vivo also requires GCN1 and GCN20, but it was unknown whether these latter proteins act directly to promote the stimulation of GCN2 by uncharged tRNA. We found that the GCN1–GCN20 complex physically interacts with GCN2, binding to the N‐terminus of the protein. Overexpression of N‐terminal GCN2 segments had a dominant‐negative phenotype that correlated with their ability to interact with GCN1–GCN20 and impede association between GCN1 and native GCN2. Consistently, this Gcn− phenotype was suppressed by overexpressing GCN2, GCN1–GCN20 or tRNAHis. The requirement for GCN1 was also reduced by overexpressing tRNAHis in a gcn1Δ strain. We conclude that binding of GCN1–GCN20 to GCN2 is required for its activation by uncharged tRNA. The homologous N‐terminus of Drosophila GCN2 interacted with yeast GCN1–GCN20 and had a dominant Gcn− phenotype, suggesting evolutionary conservation of this interaction.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

The tRNA‐binding moiety in GCN2 contains a dimerization domain that interacts with the kinase domain and is required for tRNA binding and kinase activation

Hongfang Qiu; Jinsheng Dong; Cuihua Hu; Christopher S. Francklyn; Alan G. Hinnebusch

GCN2 stimulates translation of GCN4 mRNA in amino acid‐starved cells by phosphorylating translation initiation factor 2. GCN2 is activated by binding of uncharged tRNA to a domain related to histidyl‐tRNA synthetase (HisRS). The HisRS‐like region contains two dimerization domains (HisRS‐N and HisRS‐C) required for GCN2 function in vivo but dispensable for dimerization by full‐length GCN2. Residues corresponding to amino acids at the dimer interface of Escherichia coli HisRS were required for dimerization of recombinant HisRS‐N and for tRNA binding by full‐length GCN2, suggesting that HisRS‐N dimerization promotes tRNA binding and kinase activation. HisRS‐N also interacted with the protein kinase (PK) domain, and a deletion impairing this interaction destroyed GCN2 function without reducing tRNA binding; thus, HisRS‐N–PK interaction appears to stimulate PK function. The C‐terminal domain of GCN2 (C‐term) interacted with the PK domain in a manner disrupted by an activating PK mutation (E803V). These results suggest that the C‐term is an autoinhibitory domain, counteracted by tRNA binding. We conclude that multiple domain interactions, positive and negative, mediate the activation of GCN2 by uncharged tRNA.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

PKR and GCN2 Kinases and Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factor Eukaryotic Translation Initiation Factor 2B (eIF2B) Recognize Overlapping Surfaces on eIF2

Madhusudan Dey; Bruce Trieselmann; Emily G. Locke; Jingfang Lu; Chune Cao; Arvin C. Dar; Thanuja Krishnamoorthy; Jinsheng Dong; Frank Sicheri; Thomas E. Dever

ABSTRACT Four stress-responsive protein kinases, including GCN2 and PKR, phosphorylate eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2α (eIF2α) on Ser51 to regulate general and gene-specific protein synthesis. Phosphorylated eIF2 is an inhibitor of its guanine nucleotide exchange factor, eIF2B. Mutations that block translational regulation were isolated throughout the N-terminal OB-fold domain in Saccharomyces cerevisiae eIF2α, including those at residues flanking Ser51 and around 20 Å away in the conserved motif K79GYID83. Any mutation at Glu49 or Asp83 blocked translational regulation; however, only a subset of these mutations impaired Ser51 phosphorylation. Substitution of Ala for Asp83 eliminated phosphorylation by GCN2 and PKR both in vivo and in vitro, establishing the critical contributions of remote residues to kinase-substrate recognition. In contrast, mutations that blocked translational regulation but not Ser51 phosphorylation impaired the binding of eIF2B to phosphorylated eIF2α. Thus, two structurally distinct effectors of eIF2 function, eIF2α kinases and eIF2B, have evolved to recognize the same surface and overlapping determinants on eIF2α.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2011

Initiation factor eIF2γ promotes eIF2–GTP–Met-tRNAiMet ternary complex binding to the 40S ribosome

Byung Sik Shin; Joo Ran Kim; Sarah E. Walker; Jinsheng Dong; Jon R. Lorsch; Thomas E. Dever

In contrast to prokaryotic elongation factor EF-Tu, which delivers aminoacyl-tRNAs to the ribosomal A-site, eukaryotic initiation factor eIF2 binds methionyl initiator transfer RNA (Met-tRNAiMet) to the P-site of the 40S ribosomal subunit. The results of directed hydroxyl radical probing experiments to map binding of Saccharomyces cerevisiae eIF2 on the ribosome and on Met-tRNAiMet revealed that eIF2γ primarily contacts the acceptor stem of Met-tRNAiMet and identified a key binding interface between domain III of eIF2γ and 18S rRNA helix h44 on the 40S subunit. Whereas the analogous domain III of EF-Tu contacts the T stem of tRNAs, biochemical analyses demonstrated that eIF2γ domain III is important for ribosome, not Met-tRNAiMet. Thus, despite their structural similarity, eIF2 and EF-Tu bind tRNAs in substantially different manners, and we propose that the tRNA-binding domain III of EF-Tu has acquired a new ribosome-binding function in eIF2γ.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

The Novel ATP-Binding Cassette Protein ARB1 Is a Shuttling Factor That Stimulates 40S and 60S Ribosome Biogenesis

Jinsheng Dong; Ruby Lai; Jennifer L. Jennings; Andrew J. Link; Alan G. Hinnebusch

ABSTRACT ARB1 is an essential yeast protein closely related to members of a subclass of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily of proteins that are known to interact with ribosomes and function in protein synthesis or ribosome biogenesis. We show that depletion of ARB1 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells leads to a deficit in 18S rRNA and 40S subunits that can be attributed to slower cleavage at the A0, A1, and A2 processing sites in 35S pre-rRNA, delayed processing of 20S rRNA to mature 18S rRNA, and a possible defect in nuclear export of pre-40S subunits. Depletion of ARB1 also delays rRNA processing events in the 60S biogenesis pathway. We further demonstrate that ARB1 shuttles from nucleus to cytoplasm, cosediments with 40S, 60S, and 80S/90S ribosomal species, and is physically associated in vivo with TIF6, LSG1, and other proteins implicated previously in different aspects of 60S or 40S biogenesis. Mutations of conserved ARB1 residues expected to function in ATP hydrolysis were lethal. We propose that ARB1 functions as a mechanochemical ATPase to stimulate multiple steps in the 40S and 60S ribosomal biogenesis pathways.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007

Yeast Cap Binding Complex Impedes Recruitment of Cleavage Factor IA to Weak Termination Sites

Chi-Ming Wong; Hongfang Qiu; Cuihua Hu; Jinsheng Dong; Alan G. Hinnebusch

ABSTRACT Nuclear cap binding complex (CBC) is recruited cotranscriptionally and stimulates spliceosome assembly on nascent mRNAs; however, its possible functions in regulating transcription elongation or termination were not well understood. We show that, while CBC appears to be dispensable for normal rates and processivity of elongation by RNA polymerase II (Pol II), it plays a direct role in preventing polyadenylation at weak termination sites. Similarly to Npl3p, with which it interacts, CBC suppresses the weak terminator of the gal10-Δ56 mutant allele by impeding recruitment of termination factors Pcf11p and Rna15p (subunits of cleavage factor IA [CF IA]) and does so without influencing Npl3p occupancy at the termination site. Importantly, deletion of CBC subunits or NPL3 also increases termination at a naturally occurring weak poly(A) site in the RNA14 coding sequences. We also show that CBC is most likely recruited directly to the cap of nascent transcripts rather than interacting first with transcriptional activators or the phosphorylated C-terminal domain of Pol II. Thus, our findings illuminate the mechanism of CBC recruitment and extend its function in Saccharomyces cerevisiae beyond mRNA splicing and degradation of aberrant nuclear mRNAs to include regulation of CF IA recruitment at poly(A) selection sites.


Genes & Development | 2008

Genetic identification of yeast 18S rRNA residues required for efficient recruitment of initiator tRNAMet and AUG selection

Jinsheng Dong; Jagpreet S. Nanda; Hafsa Rahman; Margaret Pruitt; Byung Sik Shin; Chi-Ming Wong; Jon R. Lorsch; Alan G. Hinnebusch

High-resolution structures of bacterial 70S ribosomes have provided atomic details about mRNA and tRNA binding to the decoding center during elongation, but such information is lacking for preinitiation complexes (PICs). We identified residues in yeast 18S rRNA critical in vivo for recruiting methionyl tRNA(i)(Met) to 40S subunits during initiation by isolating mutations that derepress GCN4 mRNA translation. Several such Gcd(-) mutations alter the A928:U1389 base pair in helix 28 (h28) and allow PICs to scan through the start codons of upstream ORFs that normally repress GCN4 translation. The A928U substitution also impairs TC binding to PICs in a reconstituted system in vitro. Mutation of the bulge G926 in h28 and certain other residues corresponding to direct contacts with the P-site codon or tRNA in bacterial 70S complexes confer Gcd(-) phenotypes that (like A928 substitutions) are suppressed by overexpressing tRNA(i)(Met). Hence, the nonconserved 928:1389 base pair in h28, plus conserved 18S rRNA residues corresponding to P-site contacts in bacterial ribosomes, are critical for efficient Met-tRNA(i)(Met) binding and AUG selection in eukaryotes.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2010

The β/Gcd7 Subunit of Eukaryotic Translation Initiation Factor 2B (eIF2B), a Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factor, Is Crucial for Binding eIF2 In Vivo

Kamal Dev; Hongfang Qiu; Jinsheng Dong; Fan Zhang; Dominik Barthlme; Alan G. Hinnebusch

ABSTRACT Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2B (eIF2B) is the guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) for eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2, which stimulates formation of the eIF2-GTP-Met-tRNA iMet ternary complex (TC) in a manner inhibited by phosphorylated eIF2 [eIF2(αP)]. While eIF2B contains five subunits, the ε/Gcd6 subunit is sufficient for GEF activity in vitro. The δ/Gcd2 and β/Gcd7 subunits function with α/Gcn3 in the eIF2B regulatory subcomplex that mediates tight, inhibitory binding of eIF2(αP)-GDP, but the essential functions of δ/Gcd2 and β/Gcd7 are not well understood. We show that the depletion of wild-type β/Gcd7, three lethal β/Gcd7 amino acid substitutions, and a synthetically lethal combination of substitutions in β/Gcd7 and eIF2α all impair eIF2 binding to eIF2B without reducing ε/Gcd6 abundance in the native eIF2B-eIF2 holocomplex. Additionally, β/Gcd7 mutations that impair eIF2B function display extensive allele-specific interactions with mutations in the S1 domain of eIF2α (harboring the phosphorylation site), which binds to eIF2B directly. Consistent with this, β/Gcd7 can overcome the toxicity of eIF2(αP) and rescue native eIF2B function when overexpressed with δ/Gcd2 or γ/Gcd1. In aggregate, these findings provide compelling evidence that β/Gcd7 is crucial for binding of substrate by eIF2B in vivo, beyond its dispensable regulatory role in the inhibition of eIF2B by eIF (αP).

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Alan G. Hinnebusch

National Institutes of Health

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Hongfang Qiu

National Institutes of Health

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Jon R. Lorsch

National Institutes of Health

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Fan Zhang

National Institutes of Health

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Jagpreet S. Nanda

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Ruby Lai

National Institutes of Health

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Adesh K. Saini

National Institutes of Health

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Cuihua Hu

National Institutes of Health

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Pilar Martin-Marcos

National Institutes of Health

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