International audienceIn eukaryotes, translation termination is performed by eRF1, which recognizes stop codons via its N-terminal domain. Many previous studies based on point mutagenesis, cross-linking experiments or eRF1 chimeras have investigated the mechanism by which the stop signal is decoded by eRF1. Conserved motifs, such as GTS and YxCxxxF, were found to be important for termination efficiency, but the recognition mechanism remains unclear. We characterized a region of the eRF1 N-terminal domain, the P1 pocket, that we had previously shown to be involved in termination efficiency. We performed alanine scanning mutagenesis of this region, and we quantified in vivo readthrough efficiency for each alanine mutant. We identified two res...
Class 1 release factor in eukaryotes (eRF1) recognizes stop codons and promotes peptide release from...
SummaryTermination and ribosome recycling are essential processes in translation. In eukaryotes, a s...
The termination of translation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is controlled by two interacting polypept...
International audienceIn eukaryotes, translation termination is performed by eRF1, which recognizes ...
In eukaryotes, translation termination is performed by eRF1, which recognizes stop codons via its N-...
Eukarya translation termination requires the stop codon recognizing protein eRF1. In contrast to the...
Translation termination occurs when one of three stop-codons (UAA, UGA, or UAG) in mRNA reaches the ...
Translation termination in eukaryotes typically requires the decoding of one of three stop codons UA...
Organisms that use the standard genetic code rec-ognize UAA, UAG, andUGA as stop codons, whereas var...
In contrast to bacteria that have two release factors, RF1 and RF2, eukaryotes only possess one unre...
In contrast to bacteria that have two release factors, RF1 and RF2, eukaryotes only possess one unre...
AbstractWe propose that the amino acid residues 57/58 and 60/61 of eukaryotic release factors (eRF1s...
Translation termination is critical. Many diseases are caused by nonsense mutation. Hence, understan...
In translation termination, the eukaryotic release factor (eRF1) recognizes mRNA stop codons (UAA, U...
The termination of translation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is controlled by two interacting polypept...
Class 1 release factor in eukaryotes (eRF1) recognizes stop codons and promotes peptide release from...
SummaryTermination and ribosome recycling are essential processes in translation. In eukaryotes, a s...
The termination of translation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is controlled by two interacting polypept...
International audienceIn eukaryotes, translation termination is performed by eRF1, which recognizes ...
In eukaryotes, translation termination is performed by eRF1, which recognizes stop codons via its N-...
Eukarya translation termination requires the stop codon recognizing protein eRF1. In contrast to the...
Translation termination occurs when one of three stop-codons (UAA, UGA, or UAG) in mRNA reaches the ...
Translation termination in eukaryotes typically requires the decoding of one of three stop codons UA...
Organisms that use the standard genetic code rec-ognize UAA, UAG, andUGA as stop codons, whereas var...
In contrast to bacteria that have two release factors, RF1 and RF2, eukaryotes only possess one unre...
In contrast to bacteria that have two release factors, RF1 and RF2, eukaryotes only possess one unre...
AbstractWe propose that the amino acid residues 57/58 and 60/61 of eukaryotic release factors (eRF1s...
Translation termination is critical. Many diseases are caused by nonsense mutation. Hence, understan...
In translation termination, the eukaryotic release factor (eRF1) recognizes mRNA stop codons (UAA, U...
The termination of translation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is controlled by two interacting polypept...
Class 1 release factor in eukaryotes (eRF1) recognizes stop codons and promotes peptide release from...
SummaryTermination and ribosome recycling are essential processes in translation. In eukaryotes, a s...
The termination of translation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is controlled by two interacting polypept...