Autism- and epilepsy-associated EEF1A2 mutations lead to translational dysfunction and altered actin bundling.
Muhaned S MohamedEric KlannPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
and demonstrate that they cause decreased protein synthesis via reduced translation elongation, increased tRNA binding, decreased actin bundling activity, as well as altered neuronal morphology. We posit that eEF1A2 serves as a bridge between translation and the actin cytoskeleton, linking these two processes that are essential for neuronal function and plasticity.