Scientific background: |
EIF6 (Eukaryotic Translation Initiation Factor 6), also called EIF3A or ITGB4BP, is a human gene. By fluorescence in situ hybridization, Sanvito et al. (1998) mapped the ITGB4BP gene to 20q11.2. Ceci et al. (2003) demonstrated that the ribosomal 60S subunit is activated by release of EIF6. In the cytoplasm, EIF6 is bound to free 60S but not to 80S subunits. Furthermore, EIF6 interacts in the cytoplasm with RACK1, a receptor for activated protein kinase C. Gandin et al. (2008) demonstrated that mammalian eIF6 is required for efficient initiation of translation in vivo. Eif6-null mouse embryos were lethal at preimplantation. Heterozygous mice had 50% reduction of eIF6 levels in all tissues, and showed reduced mass of hepatic and adipose tissues due to a lower number of cells and to impaired G1/S cell cycle progression. |
References: |
1. Ceci, M., Gaviraghi, C., Gorrini, C., Sala, L. A., Offenhauser, N., Marchisio, P. C., Biffo, S. Release of eIF6 (p27-BBP) from the 60S subunit allows 80S ribosome assembly. Nature 426: 579-584, 2003.
2. Gandin, V., Miluzio, A., Barbieri, A. M., Beugnet, A., Kiyokawa, H., Marchisio, P. C., Biffo, S. Eukaryotic initiation factor 6 is rate-limiting in translation, growth and transformation. Nature 455: 684-688, 2008.
3. Sanvito, F., Arrigo, G., Zuffardi, O., Agnelli, M., Marchisio, P. C., Biffo, S. Localization of p27 beta-4 binding protein gene (ITGB4BP) to human chromosome region 20q11.2. Genomics 52: 111-112, 1998.
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