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Independent overexpression of the subunits of translation elongation factor complex eEF1H in human lung cancer

BACKGROUND: The constituents of stable multiprotein complexes are known to dissociate from the complex to play independent regulatory roles. The components of translation elongation complex eEF1H (eEF1A, eEF1Bα, eEF1Bβ, eEF1Bγ) were found overexpressed in different cancers. To gain the knowledge abo...

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Autores principales: Veremieva, Maryna, Kapustian, Liudmyla, Khoruzhenko, Antonina, Zakharychev, Valery, Negrutskii, Boris, El’skaya, Anna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4265501/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25472873
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-913
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author Veremieva, Maryna
Kapustian, Liudmyla
Khoruzhenko, Antonina
Zakharychev, Valery
Negrutskii, Boris
El’skaya, Anna
author_facet Veremieva, Maryna
Kapustian, Liudmyla
Khoruzhenko, Antonina
Zakharychev, Valery
Negrutskii, Boris
El’skaya, Anna
author_sort Veremieva, Maryna
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The constituents of stable multiprotein complexes are known to dissociate from the complex to play independent regulatory roles. The components of translation elongation complex eEF1H (eEF1A, eEF1Bα, eEF1Bβ, eEF1Bγ) were found overexpressed in different cancers. To gain the knowledge about novel cancer-related translational mechanisms we intended to reveal whether eEF1H exists as a single unit or independent subunits in different human cancers. METHODS: The changes in the expression level of every subunit of eEF1H in the human non-small-cell lung cancer tissues were examined. The localization of eEF1H subunits was assessed by immunohistochemistry methods, subcellular fractionation and confocal microscopy. The possibility of the interaction between the subunits was estimated by co-immunoprecipitation. RESULTS: The level of eEF1Bβ expression was increased more than two-fold in 36%, eEF1Bγ in 28%, eEF1A in 20% and eEF1Bα in 8% of tumor specimens. The cancer-induced alterations in the subunits level were found to be uncoordinated, therefore the increase in the level of at least one subunit of eEF1H was observed in 52% of samples. Nuclear localization of eEF1Bβ in the cancer rather than distal normal looking tissues was found. In cancer tissue, eEF1A and eEF1Bα were not found in nuclei while all four subunits of eEF1H demonstrated both cytoplasmic and nuclear appearance in the lung carcinoma cell line A549. Unexpectedly, in the A549 nuclear fraction eEF1A lost the ability to interact with the eEF1B complex. CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest independent functioning of some fraction of the eEF1H subunits in human tumors. The absence of eEF1A and eEF1B interplay in nuclei of A549 cells is a first evidence for non-translational role of nuclear-localized subunits of eEF1B. We conclude the appearance of the individual eEF1B subunits in tumors is a more general phenomenon than appreciated before and thus is a novel signal of cancer-related changes in translation apparatus.
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spelling pubmed-42655012014-12-15 Independent overexpression of the subunits of translation elongation factor complex eEF1H in human lung cancer Veremieva, Maryna Kapustian, Liudmyla Khoruzhenko, Antonina Zakharychev, Valery Negrutskii, Boris El’skaya, Anna BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: The constituents of stable multiprotein complexes are known to dissociate from the complex to play independent regulatory roles. The components of translation elongation complex eEF1H (eEF1A, eEF1Bα, eEF1Bβ, eEF1Bγ) were found overexpressed in different cancers. To gain the knowledge about novel cancer-related translational mechanisms we intended to reveal whether eEF1H exists as a single unit or independent subunits in different human cancers. METHODS: The changes in the expression level of every subunit of eEF1H in the human non-small-cell lung cancer tissues were examined. The localization of eEF1H subunits was assessed by immunohistochemistry methods, subcellular fractionation and confocal microscopy. The possibility of the interaction between the subunits was estimated by co-immunoprecipitation. RESULTS: The level of eEF1Bβ expression was increased more than two-fold in 36%, eEF1Bγ in 28%, eEF1A in 20% and eEF1Bα in 8% of tumor specimens. The cancer-induced alterations in the subunits level were found to be uncoordinated, therefore the increase in the level of at least one subunit of eEF1H was observed in 52% of samples. Nuclear localization of eEF1Bβ in the cancer rather than distal normal looking tissues was found. In cancer tissue, eEF1A and eEF1Bα were not found in nuclei while all four subunits of eEF1H demonstrated both cytoplasmic and nuclear appearance in the lung carcinoma cell line A549. Unexpectedly, in the A549 nuclear fraction eEF1A lost the ability to interact with the eEF1B complex. CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest independent functioning of some fraction of the eEF1H subunits in human tumors. The absence of eEF1A and eEF1B interplay in nuclei of A549 cells is a first evidence for non-translational role of nuclear-localized subunits of eEF1B. We conclude the appearance of the individual eEF1B subunits in tumors is a more general phenomenon than appreciated before and thus is a novel signal of cancer-related changes in translation apparatus. BioMed Central 2014-12-03 /pmc/articles/PMC4265501/ /pubmed/25472873 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-913 Text en © Veremieva et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2014 This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Veremieva, Maryna
Kapustian, Liudmyla
Khoruzhenko, Antonina
Zakharychev, Valery
Negrutskii, Boris
El’skaya, Anna
Independent overexpression of the subunits of translation elongation factor complex eEF1H in human lung cancer
title Independent overexpression of the subunits of translation elongation factor complex eEF1H in human lung cancer
title_full Independent overexpression of the subunits of translation elongation factor complex eEF1H in human lung cancer
title_fullStr Independent overexpression of the subunits of translation elongation factor complex eEF1H in human lung cancer
title_full_unstemmed Independent overexpression of the subunits of translation elongation factor complex eEF1H in human lung cancer
title_short Independent overexpression of the subunits of translation elongation factor complex eEF1H in human lung cancer
title_sort independent overexpression of the subunits of translation elongation factor complex eef1h in human lung cancer
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4265501/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25472873
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-913
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