Role of Elongation Factor 1 in the Translational Control of Rodent Brain Protein Synthesis

Abstract
The translational control of protein synthesis during early postnatal neural development and aging was examined in the mouse and the rat. The activity of brain elongation factor 1 (bEF-1) decreased exponentially with age and declined parallel to the age-dependent decrease in total protein synthesis in both rodents. This decrement in bEF-1 activity fell within the range of reported age-related decreases in protein synthesis in in vitro systems. The factor was present in multiple forms; the lighter species predominated in older animals, whereas the young light form apparently disappeared with increasing age, and was replaced by others arising from the heavy form. Elongation factor 1 derived from young brains functioned as a rate-limiting component in polypeptide synthesis in previously saturated adult systems. The data suggest that bEF-1 has an important modulatory effect on total brain protein synthesis.