View Featured Offers >>

Translational Control

© Cell Signaling Technology. All Rights Reserved.
Translational Control

Pathway Description:

The synthesis of new proteins is a highly regulated process that allows rapid cellular responses to diverse stimuli at the post-transcriptional level. Nine key eukaryotic translation initiation factors (eIFs) catalyze the assembly of a functional ribosomal complex in two steps - first, the formation of the 48S complex from the 43S initiation complex and mRNA followed by its subsequent joining with the 60S subunit, enabling polypeptide chain formation. Of the many steps in translation, the rate-limiting step, initiation, is subjected to the most regulatory control. Many stimuli, such as growth factors and stress, either stimulate or inhibit specific eIFs. Aside from initiation, translation can also be attenuated during elongation. For instance, elevated levels of Ca2+ or cAMP can block the action of eukaryotic elongation factor 2 (eEF2) via AMPK. Finally, upon recognition of a stop codon, eRF1 and eRF3 mediate termination of translation and ribosome disassembly and recycling

Selected Reviews:

We would like to thank Rachel Wolfson for reviewing this diagram.

created January 2002

revised June 2014

Acetylase
Acetylase
Metabolic Enzyme
Metabolic Enzyme
Adaptor
Adaptor
Methyltransferase or G-protein
Methyltransferase or G-protein
Adaptor
Apoptosis/Autophagy Regulator
Phosphatase
Phosphatase
Cell Cycle Regulator
Cell Cycle Regulator
Protein Complex
Protein Complex
Deacetylase or Cytoskeletal Protein
Deacetylase or Cytoskeletal Protein
Ubiquitin/SUMO Ligase or Deubiquitinase
Ubiquitin/SUMO Ligase or Deubiquitinase
Growth Factor/Cytokine/Development Protein
Growth Factor/Cytokine/Development Protein
Transcription Factor or Translation Factor
Transcription Factor or Translation Factor
GTPase/GAP/GEF
GTPase/GAP/GEF
Receptor
Receptor
Kinase
Kinase
Other
Other
 
Direct Process
Direct Process
Tentative Process
Tentative Process
Translocation Process
Translocation Process
Stimulatory Modification
Stimulatory Modification
Inhibitory Modification
Inhibitory Modification
Transcriptional Modification
Transcriptional Modification