The central role of translation elongation in response to stress.
Protein synthesis is essential to support homeostasis, and thus, must be highly regulated during cellular response to harmful environments. All stages of translation are susceptible to regulation under stress, however, the mechanisms involved in translation regulation beyond initiation have only begun to be elucidated. Methodological advances enabled critical discoveries on the control of translation elongation, highlighting its important role in translation repression and the synthesis of stress-response proteins. In this article, we discuss recent findings on mechanisms of elongation control mediated by ribosome pausing and collisions and the availability of tRNAs and elongation factors. We also discuss how elongation intersects with distinct modes of translation control, further supporting cellular viability and gene expression reprogramming. Finally, we highlight how several of these pathways are reversibly regulated, emphasizing the dynamics of translation control during stress-response progression. A comprehensive understanding of translation regulation under stress will produce fundamental knowledge of protein dynamics while opening new avenues and strategies to overcome dysregulated protein production and cellular sensitivity to stress.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Ribosomes
- RNA, Transfer
- RNA, Messenger
- Proteins
- Peptide Chain Elongation, Translational
- Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
- 3101 Biochemistry and cell biology
- 1101 Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics
- 0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Ribosomes
- RNA, Transfer
- RNA, Messenger
- Proteins
- Peptide Chain Elongation, Translational
- Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
- 3101 Biochemistry and cell biology
- 1101 Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics
- 0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology