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1.
Elongation factor G (EF-G) is rapidly inactivated when irradiated at 253.7 nm. The inactivation follows first-order single-hit kinetics with a quantum efficiency of 3.15 × 10?5 μmol/μE. Inclusion of either GTP or GDP in the irradiation mixture does not alter the kinetics of inactivation, but does result in the covalent attachment of nucleotide to between 10 and 20% of the EF-G. This relatively low percentage of cross-linking is due to the rapid rate of photoinactivation as compared to the slower rate of covalent attachment. If EF-G is reacted before irradiation with N-ethylmaleimide, a modification known to block the nucleotide binding site [Rohrbach and Bodley (1976) J. Biol. Chem.251, 930], essentially no nucleotide can be photo-cross-linked to EF-G. Treatment of the photo-cross-linked GTP-EF-G with Raney nickel led to the liberation of the nucleotide moiety, indicating that the photo-cross-link to EF-G occurred through a sulfur atom. Although the formation of the EF-G nucleotide complex has been shown to be an obligatory first step in the formation of the EF-G nucleotide ribosome complex [Rohrbach and Bodley (1976) Biochemistry15, 4565], the covalent EF-G-nucleotide adduct cannot form a ternary complex with the ribosome. The presence of both nucleotide and ribosomes during irradiation drastically alters the kinetics of inactivation. The inactivation under these conditions follows multiple-hit kinetics with an initial period during which no EF-G activity is lost. Following this lag period, EF-G is inactivated at the same rate at which ribosomes lose their ability to bind EF-G. No nucleotide is cross-linked to EF-G or the ribosome under these conditions.  相似文献   

2.
Genes encoding two proteins corresponding to elongation factor G (EF-G) were cloned from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The proteins encoded by these genes are both members of the EFG I subfamily. The gene encoding one of the forms of EF-G is located in the str operon and the resulting protein is referred to as EF-G1A while the gene encoding the other form of EF-G is located in another part of the genome and the resulting protein is referred to as EF-G1B. These proteins were expressed and purified to 98% homogeneity. Sequence analysis indicated the two proteins are 90/84% similar/identical. In other organisms containing multiple forms of EF-G a lower degree of similarity is seen. When assayed in a poly(U)-directed poly-phenylalanine translation system, EF-G1B was 75-fold more active than EF-G1A. EF-G1A pre-incubate with ribosomes in the presence of the ribosome recycling factor (RRF) decreased polymerization of poly-phenylalanine upon addition of EF-G1B in poly(U)-directed translation suggesting a role for EF-G1A in uncoupling of the ribosome into its constituent subunits. Both forms of P. aeruginosa EF-G were active in ribosome dependent GTPase activity. The kinetic parameters (K M) for the interaction of EF-G1A and EF-G1B with GTP were 85 and 70 μM, respectively. However, EF-G1B exhibited a 5-fold greater turnover number (observed k cat) for the hydrolysis of GTP than EF-G1A; 0.2 s-1 vs. 0.04 s-1. These values resulted in specificity constants (k cat obs/K M) for EF-G1A and EF-G1B of 0.5 x 103 s-1 M-1 and 3.0 x 103 s-1 M-1, respectively. The antibiotic fusidic acid (FA) completely inhibited poly(U)-dependent protein synthesis containing P. aeruginosa EF-G1B, but the same protein synthesis system containing EF-G1A was not affected. Likewise, the activity of EF-G1B in ribosome dependent GTPase assays was completely inhibited by FA, while the activity of EF-G1A was not affected.  相似文献   

3.
After termination of protein synthesis, the bacterial ribosome is split into its 30S and 50S subunits by the action of ribosome recycling factor (RRF) and elongation factor G (EF-G) in a guanosine 5′-triphosphate (GTP)-hydrolysis-dependent manner. Based on a previous cryo-electron microscopy study of ribosomal complexes, we have proposed that the binding of EF-G to an RRF-containing posttermination ribosome triggers an interdomain rotation of RRF, which destabilizes two strong intersubunit bridges (B2a and B3) and, ultimately, separates the two subunits. Here, we present a 9-Å (Fourier shell correlation cutoff of 0.5) cryo-electron microscopy map of a 50S·EF-G·guanosine 5′-[(βγ)-imido]triphosphate·RRF complex and a quasi-atomic model derived from it, showing the interaction between EF-G and RRF on the 50S subunit in the presence of the noncleavable GTP analogue guanosine 5′-[(βγ)-imido]triphosphate. The detailed information in this model and a comparative analysis of EF-G structures in various nucleotide- and ribosome-bound states show how rotation of the RRF head domain may be triggered by various domains of EF-G. For validation of our structural model, all known mutations in EF-G and RRF that relate to ribosome recycling have been taken into account. More importantly, our results indicate a substantial conformational change in the Switch I region of EF-G, suggesting that a conformational signal transduction mechanism, similar to that employed in transfer RNA translocation on the ribosome by EF-G, translates a large-scale movement of EF-G's domain IV, induced by GTP hydrolysis, into the domain rotation of RRF that eventually splits the ribosome into subunits.  相似文献   

4.
Experiments dedicated to gaining an understanding of the mechanism underlying the orderly, sequential association of elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) and elongation factor G (EF-G) with the ribosome during protein synthesis were undertaken. The binding of one EF is always followed by the binding of the other, despite the two sharing the same—or a largely overlapping—site and despite the two having isosteric structures. Aminoacyl-tRNA, peptidyl-tRNA, and deacylated-tRNA were bound in various combinations to the A-site, P-site, or E-site of ribosomes, and their effect on conformation in the peptidyl transferase center, the GTPase-associated center, and the sarcin/ricin domain (SRD) was determined. In addition, the effect of the ribosome complexes on sensitivity to the ribotoxins sarcin and pokeweed antiviral protein and on the binding of EF-G•GTP were assessed. The results support the following conclusions: the EF-Tu ternary complex binds to the A-site whenever it is vacant and the P-site has peptidyl-tRNA; and association of the EF-Tu ternary complex is prevented, simply by steric hindrance, when the A-site is occupied by peptidyl-tRNA. On the other hand, the affinity of the ribosome for EF-G•GTP is increased when peptidyl-tRNA is in the A-site, and the increase is the result of a conformational change in the SRD. We propose that peptidyl-tRNA in the A-site is an effector that initiates a series of changes in tertiary interactions between nucleotides in the peptidyl transferase center, the SRD, and the GTPase-associated center of 23S rRNA; and that the signal, transmitted through a transduction pathway, informs the ribosome of the position of peptidyl-tRNA and leads to a conformational change in the SRD that favors binding of EF-G.  相似文献   

5.
The affinity of the auxin-transport inhibitor N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) for membrane particles as well as for solubilized binding sites from Cucurbita pepo L. hypocotyls was reduced by low concentrations of bisulfite (half-maximal inhibition at 2·10-3–3·10-3 M). Two membrane fractions obtained by sedimentation aided with polyethylene glycol showed differential sensitivity to bisulfite. Other oxidizing or reducing substances tested at 1 mM had no effect, except for N-ethylmaleimide (80% inhibition) and iodine (complete inhibition), both of which reduced the number of binding sites but not their affinity. Addition of bisulfite to either the isoalloxane ring of flavoproteins or to pyridoxal phosphate or quinones is proposed as a possible mechanism of action. Sulfur dioxide, at concentrations measured in polluted air, can lead to bisulfite concentrations in plant tissue sufficient to interfere with NPA-binding sites and hence with auxin transport.Abbreviations DTE dithioerythritol - DTT dithiothreitol - IC50 concentration of half-maximal inhibition - NAA 1-naphthylacetic acid - NEM N-ethylmaleimide - NPA N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid - PEG polyethylene glycol, 6000 molecular weight  相似文献   

6.
In addition to their natural substrates GDP and GTP, the bacterial translational GTPases initiation factor (IF) 2 and elongation factor G (EF-G) interact with the alarmone molecule guanosine tetraphosphate (ppGpp), which leads to GTPase inhibition. We have used isothermal titration calorimetry to determine the affinities of ppGpp for IF2 and EF-G at a temperature interval of 5-25 °C. We find that ppGpp has a higher affinity for IF2 than for EF-G (1.7-2.8 μM Kdversus 9.1-13.9 μM Kd at 10-25 °C), suggesting that during stringent response in vivo, IF2 is more responsive to ppGpp than to EF-G. We investigated the effects of ppGpp, GDP, and GTP on IF2 interactions with fMet-tRNAfMet demonstrating that IF2 binds to initiator tRNA with submicromolar Kd and that affinity is altered by the G nucleotides only slightly. This—in conjunction with earlier reports on IF2 interactions with fMet-tRNAfMet in the context of the 30S initiation complex, where ppGpp was suggested to strongly inhibit fMet-tRNAfMet binding and GTP was suggested to strongly promote fMet-tRNAfMet binding—sheds new light on the mechanisms of the G-nucleotide-regulated fMet-tRNAfMet selection.  相似文献   

7.
It has been found that iodine oxidation of the complex of ribosomes with EF-G2 results in the formation of a disulphide bond between the single exposed sulphydryl group of the factor and each of the ribosomal subunits. It is concluded that this EF-G region is localized on the ribosomal interface.Protein S12 is identified as the ribosomal component crosslinked with EF-G in the oxidation reaction. The possible role of the specific interaction of EF-G with protein S12 for the functioning of the factor as an activator of translocation is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Seo HS  Kiel M  Pan D  Raj VS  Kaji A  Cooperman BS 《Biochemistry》2004,43(40):12728-12740
Ribosome recycling factor (RRF) and elongation factor-G (EF-G) are jointly essential for recycling bacterial ribosomes following termination of protein synthesis. Here we present equilibrium and rapid kinetic measurements permitting formulation of a minimal kinetic scheme that accounts quantitatively for RRF and EF-G interaction on the Escherichia coli ribosome. RRF and EF-G (a) each form a binary complex on binding to a bare ribosome which undergoes isomerization to a more stable complex, (b) form mixed ternary complexes on the ribosome in which the affinity for each factor is considerably lower than its affinity for binding to a bare ribosome, and (c) each bind to two sites per ribosome, with EF-G having considerably higher second-site affinity than RRF. Addition of EF-G to the ribosome-RRF complex induces rapid RRF dissociation, at a rate compatible with the rate of ribosome recycling in vivo, but added RRF does not increase the lability of ribosome-bound EF-G. Added thiostrepton slows the initial binding of EF-G, and prevents both formation of the more stable EF-G complex and EF-G-induced RRF dissociation. These findings are relevant for the mechanism of post-termination complex disassembly.  相似文献   

9.
Fusidic acid (FA) is a bacteriostatic antibiotic that locks elongation factor G (EF-G) to the ribosome after GTP hydrolysis during elongation and ribosome recycling. The plasmid pUB101-encoded protein FusB causes FA resistance in clinical isolates of Staphylococcus aureus through an interaction with EF-G. Here, we report 1.6 and 2.3 Å crystal structures of FusB. We show that FusB is a two-domain protein lacking homology to known structures, where the N-terminal domain is a four-helix bundle and the C-terminal domain has an alpha/beta fold containing a C4 treble clef zinc finger motif and two loop regions with conserved basic residues. Using hybrid constructs between S. aureus EF-G that binds to FusB and Escherichia coli EF-G that does not, we show that the sequence determinants for FusB recognition reside in domain IV and involve the C-terminal helix of S. aureus EF-G. Further, using kinetic assays in a reconstituted translation system, we demonstrate that FusB can rescue FA inhibition of tRNA translocation as well as ribosome recycling. We propose that FusB rescues S. aureus from FA inhibition by preventing formation or facilitating dissociation of the FA-locked EF-G–ribosome complex.  相似文献   

10.
Two elongation factors (EF) EF-Tu and EF-G participate in the elongation phase during protein biosynthesis on the ribosome. Their functional cycles depend on GTP binding and its hydrolysis. The EF-Tu complexed with GTP and aminoacyl-tRNA delivers tRNA to the ribosome, whereas EF-G stimulates translocation, a process in which tRNA and mRNA movements occur in the ribosome. In the present paper we report that: (a) intrinsic GTPase activity of EF-G is influenced by excision of its domain III; (b) the EF-G lacking domain III has a 10(3)-fold decreased GTPase activity on the ribosome, whereas its affinity for GTP is slightly decreased; and (c) the truncated EF-G does not stimulate translocation despite the physical presence of domain IV, which is also very important for translocation. By contrast, the interactions of the truncated factor with GDP and fusidic acid-dependent binding of EF-G.GDP complex to the ribosome are not influenced. These findings indicate an essential contribution of domain III to activation of GTP hydrolysis. These results also suggest conformational changes of the EF-G molecule in the course of its interaction with the ribosome that might be induced by GTP binding and hydrolysis.  相似文献   

11.
The β-adrenergic receptors of turkey erythrocyte membranes have been identified by the specific binding of the radiolabeled antagonist (?)-|3H|-dihydroalprenolol. Pretreatment of these membranes with either the alkylating agent N-ethylmaleimide or with β-adrenergic agonists does not affect (?)-|3H|-dihydroalprenolol binding to the receptor sites. However, the simultaneous presence of both types of products causes a 50% decline in the number of binding sites. A less pronounced decline occurs when the membranes are pretreated with N-ethylmaleimide in presence of the partial agonist (?)-phenylephrine, and no decline in the presence of the antagonist (?)-|3H|-dihydroalprenolol. β-adrenergic agonists thus appear to induce a conformational change of their receptor, with results in an increased susceptibility to inactivation by N-ethylmaleimide.  相似文献   

12.
Elongation factor-dependent affinity labeling of Escherichia coli ribosomes was obtained using a functional analogue of aminoacyl-tRNA. Since elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) screens both the modified aminoacyl-tRNAs and the ribosomal complexes for active particles, only functional macromolecular complexes are examined. This approach also provides an unequivocal identification of the transfer RNA binding site from which affinity labeling occurs. Nε-bromoacetyl-Lys-tRNA was prepared by covalently attaching an electrophilic group to the side-chain of the amino acid. This chemical modification did not interfere with function, since the ?BrAcLys-tRNA participated successfully in EF-Tu and poly(rA)-dependent binding to ribosomes, peptide bond formation, and elongation factor G (EF-G)-mediated translocation. Affinity labeling of ribosomal RNA was observed only in those incubations which contained both EF-Tu and EF-G. The crosslinking of ?BrAcLys-tRNA to 23 S rRNA was found even if fusidic acid was added to the incubation before EF-G. The dependence of the covalent reaction on EF-G demonstrates, unambiguously, that a reactive residue of 23 S rRNA is located adjacent to the 3′ end of the functionally defined P site. Similarly, the affinity labeling of proteins L13/14/15, L2, L32/33, and L24 required EF-G-dependent translocation of ?BrAcLys-tRNA into the P site. Protein L27 was alkylated following the EF-Tu-dependent binding of ?BrAcLys-tRNA to the ribosome, and the extent of affinity labeling was stimulated by the addition of EF-G to the incubation. Double-label dipeptide experiments confirmed that affinity labeling occurred from functional tRNA binding sites by demonstrating that the same ?BrAcLys-tRNA which reacted covalently with 23 S rRNA or a ribosomal protein could also participate in peptide bond formation. Finally, the ribosome affinity labeling obtained with ?BrAcLys-tRNA · EF-Tu · guanylylimidodiphosphate differed little from that obtained with ?BrAcLys-tRNA · EF-Tu · GTP. This work constitutes the first direct examination of the aminoacyl ends of the EF-Tu-dependent conformational states of the ribosomal complex, and demonstrates the potential value of functional Lys-tRNA analogues with different probes attached to the lysine side-chain.  相似文献   

13.
In contrast to (+)5,10-methylenetetrahydropteroylmonoglutamate which does not bind to Lactobacilluscasei thymidylate synthetase, the corresponding tetraglutamate analog binds to a single site with a KD = 2 × 10?5 M. Alkylation of one of the enzyme's four cysteines with N-ethylmaleimide or iodoacetate prevented the binding of dUMP, but did not affect the binding of the pteroyltetraglutamate. Inactivation of the synthetase with carboxypeptidase A, however, prevented the binding of (+)5,10-methylenetetrahydropteroyltetraglutamate but not that of dUMP. The binding of (+)5,10-methylenetetrahydropteroyltetraglutamate to native enzyme was associated with the appearance of a positive circular dichroic band at 303 nm ([θ] = 7 × 104 deg·cm2dmol?1). The latter effect was not impaired by the inhibition of the enzyme with N-ethylmaleimide, whereas formation of the ternary complex, coenzyme-synthetase-FdUMP, was prevented by alkylation. These studies reveal that thymidylate synthetase can be inactivated in a manner that does not prevent the binding of the substrates individually.  相似文献   

14.
Ribosomal “stalk” protein L12 is known to activate translational GTPases EF-G and EF-Tu, but not much is known about its role in relation to other two translational G factors, IF2 and RF3. Here, we have clarified the role of L12 in IF2-mediated initiation of bacterial protein synthesis. With fast kinetics measurements, we have compared L12-depleted 50S subunits with the native ones in subunit association, GTP hydrolysis, Pi (inorganic phosphate) release and IF2 release assays. L12 depletion from 50S subunit slows the subunit association step significantly (∼ 40 fold) only when IF2·GTP is present on the 30S preinitiation complex. This demonstrates that rapid subunit association depends on a specific interaction between the L12 stalk on the 50S subunit and IF2·GTP on the 30S subunit. L12 depletion, however, did not affect the individual rates of the subsequent steps including GTP hydrolysis on IF2 and Pi release. Thus, L12 is not a GTPase activating protein (GAP) for IF2 unlike as suggested for EF-G and EF-Tu.  相似文献   

15.
Elongation factor G (EF-G) and ribosome recycling factor (RRF) disassemble post-termination complexes of ribosome, mRNA, and tRNA. RRF forms stable complexes with 70 S ribosomes and 50 S ribosomal subunits. Here, we show that EF-G releases RRF from 70 S ribosomal and model post-termination complexes but not from 50 S ribosomal subunit complexes. The release of bound RRF by EF-G is stimulated by GTP analogues. The EF-G-dependent release occurs in the presence of fusidic acid and viomycin. However, thiostrepton inhibits the release. RRF was shown to bind to EF-G-ribosome complexes in the presence of GTP with much weaker affinity, suggesting that EF-G may move RRF to this position during the release of RRF. On the other hand, RRF did not bind to EF-G-ribosome complexes with fusidic acid, suggesting that EF-G stabilized by fusidic acid does not represent the natural post-termination complex. In contrast, the complexes of ribosome, EF-G and thiostrepton could bind RRF, although with lower affinity. These results suggest that thiostrepton traps an intermediate complex having RRF on a position that clashes with the P/E site bound tRNA. Mutants of EF-G that are impaired for translocation fail to disassemble post-termination complexes and exhibit lower activity in releasing RRF. We propose that the release of ribosome-bound RRF by EF-G is required for post-termination complex disassembly. Before release from the ribosome, the position of RRF on the ribosome will change from the original A/P site to a new location that clashes with tRNA on the P/E site.  相似文献   

16.
Ribosome recycling factor (RRF) disassembles post-termination ribosomal complexes in concert with elongation factor EF-G freeing the ribosome for a new round of polypeptide synthesis. How RRF interacts with EF-G and disassembles post-termination ribosomes is unknown. RRF is structurally similar to tRNA and is therefore thought to bind to the ribosomal A site and be translocated by EF-G during ribosome disassembly as a mimic of tRNA. However, EF-G variants that remain active in GTP hydrolysis but are defective in tRNA translocation fully activate RRF function in vivo and in vitro. Furthermore, RRF and the GTP form of EF-G do not co-occupy the terminating ribosome in vitro; RRF is ejected by EF-G from the preformed complex. These findings suggest that RRF is not a functional mimic of tRNA and disassembles the post-termination ribosomal complex independently of the translocation activity of EF-G.  相似文献   

17.
An inhibitor of elongation factor G (EF-G) GTPase isolated from the ribosome wash of Escherichia coli was shown to stimulate the poly(A,U,G)- and initiation factor 2 (IF2)-dependent binding of N-formyl-[35S]Met-tRNAfMet to ribosomes. In the presence of saturating amounts of the EF-G GTPase inhibitor, neither addition of initiation factor 1 (IF1) nor addition of initiation factor 3 (IF3) caused a further stimulation of the formation of N-formyl-[35S]Met-tRNAfMET/poly(A,U,G)/ribosome complexes. Both IF1 and IF3 were shown to inhibit ribosome-dependent EF-G GTPase, especially when both initiation factors were added either in absence or in the presence of initiation factor 2 (IF2), poly(A,U,G) and N-formyl-Met-tRNAfMet. Therefore, we conclude that the EF-G GTPase inhibitor consisting of two polypeptide subunits with apparent molecular masses of 23,000 and 10,000 Da is a complex of initiation factors IF1 and IF3. The inhibition of EF-G GTPAse by IF3, but not the effects of IF1 in the presence or absence of IF3 could be reversed by increasing the Mg(2+)-concentration as already shown for the EF-G GTPase inhibitor. Therefore, IF1 as well as the EF-G GTPase inhibitor do not influence the ribosome-dependent EF-G GTPase by affecting the association of ribosomal subunits.  相似文献   

18.
Ribosome recycling factor (RRF) together with elongation factor G (EF-G) disassembles the post- termination ribosomal complex. Inhibitors of translocation, thiostrepton, viomycin and aminoglycosides, inhibited the release of tRNA and mRNA from the post-termination complex. In contrast, fusidic acid and a GTP analog that fix EF-G to the ribosome, allowing one round of tRNA translocation, inhibited mRNA but not tRNA release from the complex. The release of tRNA is a prerequisite for mRNA release but partially takes place with EF-G alone. The data are consistent with the notion that RRF binds to the A-site and is translocated to the P-site, releasing deacylated tRNA from the P- and E-sites. The final step, the release of mRNA, is accompanied by the release of RRF and EF-G from the ribosome. With the model post-termination complex, 70S ribosomes were released from the post-termination complex by the RRF reaction and were then dissociated into subunits by IF3.  相似文献   

19.
In this work we have investigated the reaction for the obtention of an uncommon complex salt of the organotellurium bromide class. The reaction was carried out without the isolation of the synthetic intermediates in one-pot procedure. The complex salt obtained presents the tellurium atoms with mixed oxidation states (TeII and TeIV). The cationic unit [5-Br-2-CH3O-C6H3Te(ETU)]+ presents the TeII atom with a “T” shape coordination geometry, and the anionic unit [4-CH3O-C6H4TeBr4] presents the TeIV atom with an octahedral coordination geometry considering the Te···Br interaction of 3.600(6) Å from the dimeric arrangement presented in the solid state. Intermolecular (Te···Br) secondary bonds, built up the crystalline/molecular structure. Solution NMR data are presented and discussed in the light of the X-ray structure.  相似文献   

20.
Membrane skeletal protein 4.1R80 plays a key role in regulation of erythrocyte plasticity. Protein 4.1R80 interactions with transmembrane proteins, such as glycophorin C (GPC), are regulated by Ca2+-saturated calmodulin (Ca2+/CaM) through simultaneous binding to a short peptide (pep11; A264KKLWKVCVEHHTFFRL) and a serine residue (Ser185), both located in the N-terminal 30 kDa FERM domain of 4.1R80 (H·R30). We have previously demonstrated that CaM binding to H·R30 is Ca2+-independent and that CaM binding to H·R30 is responsible for the maintenance of H·R30 β-sheet structure. However, the mechanisms responsible for the regulation of CaM binding to H·R30 are still unknown. To investigate this, we took advantage of similarities and differences in the structure of Coracle, the Drosophila sp. homologue of human 4.1R80, i.e. conservation of the pep11 sequence but substitution of the Ser185 residue with an alanine residue. We show that the H·R30 homologue domain of Coracle, Cor30, also binds to CaM in a Ca2+-independent manner and that the Ca2+/CaM complex does not affect Cor30 binding to the transmembrane protein GPC. We also document that both H·R30 and Cor30 bind to phosphatidylinositol-4,5 bisphosphate (PIP2) and other phospholipid species and that that PIP2 inhibits Ca2+-free CaM but not Ca2+-saturated CaM binding to Cor30. We conclude that PIP2 may play an important role as a modulator of apo-CaM binding to 4.1R80 throughout evolution.  相似文献   

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