Many viruses and certain cellular mRNAs initiate
protein synthesis from a highly structured RNA sequence
in the 5′ untranslated region, called the internal
ribosome entry site (IRES). In hepatitis C virus (HCV),
the IRES RNA functionally replaces several large initiation
factor proteins by directly recruiting the 43S particle.
Using quantitative binding assays, modification interference
of binding, and chemical and enzymatic footprinting experiments,
we show that three independently folded tertiary structural
domains in the IRES RNA make intimate contacts to two purified
components of the 43S particle: the 40S ribosomal subunit
and eukaryotic initiation factor 3 (eIF3). We measure the
affinity and demonstrate the specificity of these interactions
for the first time and show that the high affinity interaction
of IRES RNA with the 40S subunit drives formation of the
IRES RNA[bull ]40S[bull ]eIF3 ternary complex. Thus, the
HCV IRES RNA recruits 43S particles in a mode distinct
from both eukaryotic cap-dependent and prokaryotic ribosome
recruitment strategies, and is architecturally and functionally
unique from other large folded RNAs that have been characterized
to date.