4.5 Article

Precise Steric Features Control Aminoacyl-tRNA Accommodation on the Ribosome

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 126, Issue 42, Pages 8447-8459

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c05513

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [MCB-1915843, PHY-2019745]
  2. Northeastern University Discovery Cluster

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Protein synthesis involves complex conformational changes in the ribosome, and this study focuses on the final stage of accommodation of aminoacyl-tRNA on the ribosome. By using molecular dynamics simulations, it was discovered that a distinct intermediate is induced by steric confinement of the 3'-CCA tail of aa-tRNA before it completes accommodation. Multiple pathways for the tail accommodation were found, with one pathway involving Helix 89, 90, and 92, and another involving Helix 93 and the P-site tRNA. Additionally, the study identified that C2573 in Helix 90 plays a significant role in the steric barrier of late-stage accommodation.
Protein synthesis involves a complex series of largescale conformational changes in the ribosome. While long-lived intermediate states of these processes can be characterized by experiments, computational methods can be used to identify the interactions that contribute to the rate-limiting free-energy barriers. To this end, we use a simplified energetic model to perform molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of aminoacyl-tRNA (aatRNA) accommodation on the ribosome. While numerous studies have probed the energetics of the early stages of accommodation, we focus on the final stage of accommodation, where the 3 '-CCA tail of aa-tRNA enters the peptidyl transferase center (PTC). These simulations show how a distinct intermediate is induced by steric confinement of the tail, immediately before it completes accommodation. Multiple pathways for 3 '-CCA tail accommodation can be quantitatively distinguished, where the tail enters the PTC by moving past a pocket enclosed by Helix 89, 90, and 92, or through an alternate route formed by Helix 93 and the P-site tRNA. C2573, located within Helix 90, is shown to provide the largest contribution to this late-accommodation steric barrier, such that sub-angstrom perturbations to this residue can alter the time scale of tail accommodation by nearly an order of magnitude. In terms of biological function, these calculations suggest how this late-stage sterically induced barrier may contribute to tRNA proofreading by the ribosome.

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