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1.
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   

2.
GTP hydrolysis by elongation factor G (EF-G) is essential for the translocation step in protein elongation. The low intrinsic GTPase activity of EF-G is strongly stimulated by the ribosome. Here we show that a conserved arginine, R29, of Escherichia coli EF-G is crucial for GTP hydrolysis on the ribosome, but not for GTP binding or ribosome interaction, suggesting that it may be directly involved in catalysis. Another conserved arginine, R59, which is homologous to the catalytic arginine of G(alpha) proteins, is not essential for GTP hydrolysis, but influences ribosome binding and translocation. These results indicate that EF-G is similar to other GTPases in that an arginine residue is required for GTP hydrolysis, although the structural changes leading to GTPase activation are different.  相似文献   

3.
Ribotoxins are potent inhibitors of protein biosynthesis and inactivate ribosomes from a variety of organisms. The ribotoxin α-sarcin cleaves the large 23S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) at the universally conserved sarcin–ricin loop (SRL) leading to complete inactivation of the ribosome and cellular death. The SRL interacts with translation factors that hydrolyze GTP, and it is important for their binding to the ribosome, but its precise role is not yet understood. We studied the effect of α-sarcin on defined steps of translation by the bacterial ribosome. α-Sarcin-treated ribosomes showed no defects in mRNA and tRNA binding, peptide-bond formation and sparsomycin-dependent translocation. Cleavage of SRL slightly affected binding of elongation factor Tu ternary complex (EF-Tu•GTP•tRNA) to the ribosome. In contrast, the activity of elongation factor G (EF-G) was strongly impaired in α-sarcin-treated ribosomes. Importantly, cleavage of SRL inhibited EF-G binding, and consequently GTP hydrolysis and mRNA–tRNA translocation. These results suggest that the SRL is more critical in EF-G than ternary complex binding to the ribosome implicating different requirements in this region of the ribosome during protein elongation.  相似文献   

4.
The elongation cycle of protein synthesis is completed by translocation, a rearrangement during which two tRNAs bound to the mRNA move on the ribosome. The reaction is promoted by elongation factor G (EF-G) and accelerated by GTP hydrolysis. Here we report a pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of translocation. The kinetic model suggests that GTP hydrolysis drives a conformational rearrangement of the ribosome that precedes and limits the rates of tRNA-mRNA translocation and Pi release from EF-G.GDP.Pi. The latter two steps are intrinsically rapid and take place at random. These results indicate that the energy of GTP hydrolysis is utilized to promote the ribosome rearrangement and to bias spontaneous fluctuations within the ribosome-EF-G complex toward unidirectional movement of mRNA and tRNA.  相似文献   

5.
核糖体是蛋白质的"合成工厂",也是临床上多种抗菌药物的作用靶点,因此,深入理解细菌核糖体的蛋白质翻译机制意义重大.蛋白质翻译是通过多步骤相互协调、多组分精细配合来实现高保真和精确调控.核糖体在mRNA上的移位作为翻译过程中最重要的事件之一,需要核糖体大规模的构象重排以及tRNA2-mRNA沿着核糖体的精确移动.在细菌中,移位是由延伸因子EF-G催化GTP水解来驱动的.近年来,单分子荧光共振能量技术(smFRET)的发展使得人们可以探究单个tRNA分子移位的动力学过程并实时观测核糖体的构象变化.本文首先介绍了smFRET技术的原理及特点,对其在核糖体结构动态及tRNA移位研究中的应用进行了较为系统的总结,并对其应用前景进行了展望.  相似文献   

6.
Translation of polyphenylalanine from a polyuridine template by the ribosome in the absence of the elongation factors EFG and EFTu (and the energy derived from GTP hydrolysis) is promoted by modification of the ribosome with thiol-specific reagents such as para-chloromercuribenzoate (pCMB). Here, we examine the translational cycle of modified ribosomes and show that peptide bond formation and tRNA binding are largely unaffected, whereas translocation of the mRNA:tRNA complex is substantially promoted by pCMB modification. The translocation movements that we observe are authentic by multiple criteria including the processivity of translation, accuracy of movement (three-nucleotide) along a defined mRNA template and sensitivity to antibiotics. Characterization of the modified ribosomes reveals that the protein content of the ribosomes is not depleted but that their subunit association properties are severely compromised. These data suggest that molecular targets (ribosomal proteins) in the interface region of the ribosome are critical barriers that influence the translocation of the mRNA:tRNA complex.  相似文献   

7.
Two truncated variants of elongation factor G from Thermus thermophilus with deletion of its domain IV have been constructed and the mutated genes were expressed in Escherichia coli. The truncated factors were produced in a soluble form and retained a high thermostability. It was demonstrated that mutated factors possessed (1) a reduced affinity to the ribosomes with an uncleavable GTP analog and (2) a specific ribosome-dependent GTPase activity. At the same time, in contrast to the wild-type elongation factor G, they were incapable to promote translocation. The conclusions are drawn that (1) domain IV is not involved in the GTPase activity of elongation factor G, (2) it contributes to the binding of elongation factor G with the ribosome and (3) is strictly required for translocation. These results suggest that domain IV might be directly involved in translocation and GTPase activity of the factor is not directly coupled with translocation.  相似文献   

8.
The antineoplastic cyclic depsipeptide didemnin B (DB) inhibits protein synthesis in cells and in vitro. The stage at which DB inhibits protein synthesis in cells is not known, although dehydrodidemnin B arrests translation at the stage of polypeptide elongation. Inhibition of protein synthesis by DB in vitro also occurs at the elongation stage, and it was shown previously that DB prevents EF-2-dependent translocation in partial reaction models of protein synthesis. This inhibition of translocation displays an absolute requirement for EF-1alpha; however, the dependence upon EF-1alpha was previously unexplained. It is shown here that DB binds only weakly to EF-1alpha/GTP in solution, but binds to ribosome. EF-1alpha complexes with a dissociation constant K(d) = 4 microM. Thus, the inhibition of protein synthesis by DB appears to involve an interaction with both EF-1alpha and ribosomes in which all three components are required. Using diphtheria toxin-mediated ADP-ribosylation to assay for EF-2, it is demonstrated that DB blocks EF-2 binding to pre-translocative ribosome.EF-1alpha complexes, thus preventing ribosomal translocation. Based on this model for protein synthesis inhibition by DB, and the proposed mechanism of action of fusidic acid, evidence is presented in support of the Grasmuk model for EF-1alpha function in which this elongation factor does not fully depart the ribosome during polypeptide elongation.  相似文献   

9.
Eukaryotic polypeptide elongation factor EF-1 is not only a major translational factor, but also one of the most important multifunctional (moonlighting) proteins. EF-1 consists of four different subunits collectively termed EF-1alphabeta beta'gamma and EF-1alphabeta gammadelta in plants and animals, respectively. EF-1alpha x GTP catalyzes the binding of aminoacyl-tRNA to the A-site of the ribosome. EF-1beta beta'gamma (EF-1beta and EF-1beta'), catalyzes GDP/GTP exchange on EF-1alpha x GDP to regenerate EF-1alpha x GTP. EF-1gamma has recently been shown to have glutathione S-transferase activity. EF-2 catalyzes the translocation of peptidyl-tRNA from the A-site to the P-site on the ribosome. Recently, molecular mimicry among tRNA, elongation factors, releasing factor (RF), and ribosome recycling factor (RRF) has been demonstrated and greatly improved our understanding of the mechanism of translation. Moreover, eukaryotic elongation factors have been shown to be concerned or likely to be concerned in various important cellular processes or serious diseases, including translational control, signal transduction, cytoskeletal organization, apoptosis, adult atopic dermatitis, oncogenic transformation, nutrition, and nuclear processes such as RNA synthesis and mitosis. This article aims to overview the recent advances in protein biosynthesis, concentrating on the moonlighting functions of EF-1.  相似文献   

10.
The translocation step of protein elongation entails a large-scale rearrangement of the tRNA-mRNA-ribosome complex. Recent years have seen major advances in unraveling the mechanism of the process on the molecular level. A number of intermediate states have been defined and, in part, characterized structurally. The article reviews the recent evidence that suggests a dynamic role of the ribosome and its ligands during translocation. The focus is on dynamic aspects of tRNA movement and on the role of elongation factor G and GTP hydrolysis in translocation catalysis. The significance of structural changes of the ribosome induced by elongation factor G as well the role of ribosomal RNA are addressed. A functional model of elongation factor G as a motor protein driven by GTP hydrolysis is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Protein biosynthesis is a complex biochemical process involving a number of stages at which different translation factors specifically interact with ribosome. Some of these factors belong to GTP-binding proteins, or G-proteins. Due to their functioning, GTP is hydrolyzed to yield GDP and the inorganic phosphate ion Pi. Interaction with ribosome enhances GTPase activity of translation factors; i.e., ribosome plays a role of GTPase-activating protein (GAP). GTPases involved in translation interact with ribosome at every stage of protein biosynthesis. Initiation factor 2 (IF2) catalyzes initiator tRNA binding to the ribosome P site and subsequent binding of the 50S subunit to the initiation complex of the 30S subunit. Elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) controls aminoacyl-tRNA delivery to the ribosome A site, while elongation factor G (EF-G) catalyzes translocation of the mRNA-tRNA complex by one codon on the ribosome. Release factor 3 (RF3) catalyzes the release of termination factors 1 or 2 (RF1 or RF2) from the ribosomal complex after completion of protein synthesis and peptidyl-tRNA hydrolysis. The functional properties of translational GTPases as related to other G-proteins, the putative mechanism of GTP hydrolysis, structural features, and the functional cycles of translational GTPases are considered.  相似文献   

12.
The translocation step of elongation entails the coordinated movement of tRNA and mRNA on the ribosome. Translocation is promoted by elongation factor G (EF-G) and accompanied by GTP hydrolysis, which affects both translocation and turnover of EF-G. Both reactions are much slower (50-100-fold) when GTP is replaced with non-hydrolyzable GTP analogues or GDP, indicating that the reaction rates are determined by conformational transitions induced by GTP hydrolysis. Compared to the rate of uncatalyzed, spontaneous translocation, ribosome binding of EF-G with any guanine nucleotide reduces the free energy of activation by about 18 kJ/mol, whereas GTP hydrolysis contributes another 10 kJ/mol. The acceleration by GTP hydrolysis is due to large decrease in activation enthalpy by about 30 kJ/mol, compared to the reaction with GTP analogues or GDP, whereas the activation entropy becomes unfavorable and is lowered by about 20 kJ/mol (37 degrees C). The data suggest that GTP hydrolysis induces, by a conformational change of EF-G, a rapid conformational rearrangement of the ribosome ("unlocking") which determines the rates of both tRNA-mRNA translocation and recycling of the factor.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
According to the allosteric three-site model of the elongation cycle the ribosome oscillates between two main-functional states, viz the pre-translocational state with occupied A and P sites (E site with low affinity) and the post-translocational state with occupied P and E sites (A site with low affinity). This proposition could be confirmed by a determination of the thermodynamic parameters. High activation-energy barriers were found between both states, namely about 90 kJ mol-1 at 15 mM Mg2+ for either transition (post----pre transition = A-site binding and pre----post transition = translocation). The various A-site states (binding of ternary complex, EF-Tu dependent GTP cleavage, peptide-bond formation) are not separated by significant activation-energy barriers. The rate-limiting step of the elongation cycle is A-site binding, and not translocation as assumed previously. The principal role of both elongation factors is the reduction of the respective activation-energy barrier, thus accelerating the rate of the elongation cycle by several orders of magnitude. Cleavage of a single phosphodiester bond after G2661 of 23S rRNA by the RNase alpha-sarcin abolishes the functions of both elongation factors on the ribosome. This observation implies that the alpha-sarcin stem-loop structure plays an important role in the ribosomal conformational changes involved in the allosteric transitions. Indeed we could demonstrate that suitable oligodeoxynucleotide probes complementary to the alpha-sarcin region induce a conformational change in the 50S subunits; this conformational change causes an irreversible dissociation of tightly coupled ribosomes upon sucrose-gradient centrifugation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
During the translocation step of the elongation cycle, two tRNAs together with the mRNA move synchronously and rapidly on the ribosome. The movement is catalyzed by the binding of elongation factor G (EF-G) and driven by GTP hydrolysis. Here we study structural changes of the ribosome related to EF-G binding and translocation by monitoring the accessibility of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) for chemical modification by dimethyl sulfate or cleavage by hydroxyl radicals generated by Fe(II)-EDTA. In the state of the ribosome that is formed upon binding of EF-G but before the movement of the tRNAs takes place, residues 1054,1196, and 1201 in helix 34 in 16S rRNA are strongly protected. The protections depend on EF-G binding, but do not require GTP hydrolysis, and are lost upon translocation. Mutants of EF-G, which are active in ribosome binding and GTP hydrolysis but impaired in translocation, do not bring about the protections. According to cryo-electron microscopy (Stark et al., Cell, 2000, 100:301-309), there is no contact of EF-G with the protected residues of helix 34 in the pretranslocation state, suggesting that the observed protections are due to an induced conformational change. Thus, the present results indicate that EF-G binding to the pretranslocation ribosome induces a structural change of the head of the 30S subunit that is essential for subsequent tRNA-mRNA movement in translocation.  相似文献   

16.
A key event in ribosomal protein synthesis is the translocation of deacylated tRNA, peptidyl tRNA and mRNA, which is catalyzed by elongation factor G (EF-G) and requires GTP. To address the molecular mechanism of the reaction we have studied the functional role of a tRNA exit site (E site) for tRNA release during translocation. We show that modifications of the 3' end of tRNAPhe, which considerably decrease the affinity of E-site binding, lower the translocation rate up to 40-fold. Furthermore, 3'-end modifications lower or abolish the stimulation by P site-bound tRNA of the GTPase activity of EF-G on the ribosome. The results suggest that a hydrogen-bonding interaction of the 3'-terminal adenine of the leaving tRNA in the E site, most likely base-pairing with 23S rRNA, is essential for the translocation reaction. Furthermore, this interaction stimulates the GTP hydrolyzing activity of EF-G on the ribosome. We propose the following molecular model of translocation: after the binding of EF-G.GTP, the P site-bound tRNA, by a movement of the 3'-terminal single-stranded ACCA tail, establishes an interaction with 23S rRNA in the adjacent E site, thereby initiating the tRNA transfer from the P site to the E site and promoting GTP hydrolysis. The co-operative interaction between the E site and the EF-G binding site, which are distantly located on the 50S ribosomal subunit, is probably mediated by a conformational change of 23S rRNA.  相似文献   

17.
The translocation of tRNA coupled with mRNA in the ribosome is one of important steps during protein synthesis. Despite extensive experimental studies, the detailed mechanism of the translocation remains undetermined. Here, based on previous biochemical, cryo-electron microscopic and X-ray crystallographic studies, a thermal ratchet model is presented for this translocation. In the model, during one elongation cycle of the protein synthesis, two large conformational transitions of the ribosome are involved, with one being the relative rotation between the two ribosomal subunits following the peptide transfer, which is facilitated by the EF-G.GTP binding, and the other one being the reverse relative rotation between the two ribosomal subunits upon EF-G.GTP hydrolysis. The former conformational change plays an important role in ensuring the completion of the release of the deacylated tRNA from the ribosome before tRNA–mRNA translocation. The latter reverse conformational change upon GTP hydrolysis is followed by rapid tRNA–mRNA translocation and Pi release, both of which take place independently of each other. This is consistent with the previous biochemical experimental data. Also, the model is consistent with other available experimental results such as the suppression of EF-G-dependent translocation in cross-linked ribosomes and frameshifting under some conditions.  相似文献   

18.
The ribosome is a complex macromolecular assembly capable of translating mRNA sequence into amino acid sequence. The adaptor molecule of translation is tRNA, but the delivery of aminoacyl-tRNAs--the primary substrate of the ribosome--relies on the formation of a ternary complex with elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) and GTP. Likewise, elongation factor G (EF-G) is required to reset the elongation cycle through the translocation of tRNAs. Recent structures and biochemical data on ribosomes in complex with the ternary complex or EF-G have shed light on the mode of action of the elongation factors, and how this interplays with the state of tRNAs and the ribosome. A model emerges of the specific routes of conformational changes mediated by tRNA and the ribosome that trigger the GTPase activity of the elongation factors on the ribosome.  相似文献   

19.
The elongation factors (EF) Tu and G and initiation factor 2 (IF2) from bacteria are multidomain GTPases with essential functions in the elongation and initiation phases of translation. They bind to the same site on the ribosome where their low intrinsic GTPase activities are strongly stimulated. The factors differ fundamentally from each other, and from the majority of GTPases, in the mechanisms of GTPase control, the timing of Pi release, and the functional role of GTP hydrolysis. EF-Tu x GTP forms a ternary complex with aminoacyl-tRNA, which binds to the ribosome. Only when a matching codon is recognized, the GTPase of EF-Tu is stimulated, rapid GTP hydrolysis and Pi release take place, EF-Tu rearranges to the GDP form, and aminoacyl-tRNA is released into the peptidyltransferase center. In contrast, EF-G hydrolyzes GTP immediately upon binding to the ribosome, stimulated by ribosomal protein L7/12. Subsequent translocation is driven by the slow dissociation of Pi, suggesting a mechano-chemical function of EF-G. Accordingly, different conformations of EF-G on the ribosome are revealed by cryo-electron microscopy. GTP hydrolysis by IF2 is triggered upon formation of the 70S initiation complex, and the dissociation of Pi and/or IF2 follows a rearrangement of the ribosome into the elongation-competent state.  相似文献   

20.
Rodnina  M. V.  Semenkov  Yu. P.  Savelsbergh  A.  Katunin  V. I.  Peske  F.  Wilden  B.  Wintermeyer  W. 《Molecular Biology》2001,35(4):559-568
During the translocation step of the elongation cycle of peptide synthesis two tRNAs together with the mRNA move synchronously and rapidly on the ribosome. Translocation is catalyzed by the elongation factor G (EF-G) and requires GTP hydrolysis. The fundamental biochemical features of the process were worked out in the 1970–80s, to a large part by A.S. Spirin and his colleagues. Recent results from pre-steady-state kinetic analysis and cryoelectron microscopy suggest that translocation is a multistep dynamic process that entails large-scale structural rearrangements of both ribosome and EF-G. Kinetic and thermodynamic data, together with the structural information on the conformational changes in the ribosome and EF-G, provide a detailed mechanistic model of translocation and suggest a mechanism of translocation catalysis by EF-G.  相似文献   

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