ABSTRACT
Recent evidence supports the notion that the eukaryotic polypeptide chain initiation factor (eIF)4G plays a critical bridging role in coordinating other eIF involved in eukaryotic translation initiation. Here we report the isolation and characterization of a 5621-bp cDNA encoding Drosophila eIF4G. The longest ORF predicts a polypeptide of 1666 amino acids with a molecular mass of 183,940 Da and shares 25% amino acid identity with other eIF4G. The 5' untranslated region is 386 nucleotides long and contains seven AUG codons out of frame. The in vitro transcription/translation of the cDNA yielded a major polypeptide, which was specifically immunoprecipitated with an antibody against Drosophila eIF4G. This polypeptide has the same electrophoretic mobility as eIF4G purified from Drosophila melanogaster embryos. A conserved eIF4E-binding motif was found in Drosophila eIF4G. The gene maps at the 102E region of chromosome 4 and spans a genomic region of approximately 16 kb. It was found to contain 15 introns. A single RNA transcript of approximately 5.9 kb was detected by northern blotting of poly(A)-rich RNA prepared from Drosophila adults. The sequence upstream of the transcription initiation site lacks the consensus TATA box, but contains several sequences possibly involved in the regulation of transcription.