4.6 Article

Systematic genetic identification of functional domains on collided di-ribosomes responsible for rescue pathways upon translation arrest in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Journal

FEBS JOURNAL
Volume 290, Issue 15, Pages 3748-3763

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/febs.16781

Keywords

collided di-ribosome; functional domain; ribosomal proteins; ribosome rescue

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Translation elongation is hindered by obstacles like rare codons or RNA structures, causing ribosomal stalling. Ribosome rescue pathways resolve persistent stalling states. The study identified the critical regions in ribosomal proteins S20 and Asc1 required for ribosome rescue, and revealed their interaction with the E3 ubiquitin ligase Hel2 and their crucial role at the collided ribosome interface.
Translation elongation becomes arrested when various obstacles arise, such as a series of inefficient rare codons or stable RNA secondary structures, thus causing ribosomal stalling along the mRNA. Certain wasteful and persistent stalling states are resolved by ribosome rescue pathways. For instance, collisions between stalled and subsequent ribosomes are thought to induce ubiquitination of ribosomal S20 protein by the E3 ubiquitin ligase Hel2, which triggers subsequent rescue reactions. Although structural studies have revealed specific contact sites between collided ribosomes, the ribosomal regions crucial for the rescue reaction remain uncharacterized. In this study, we performed a systematic genetic analysis to identify the molecular regions required for ribosome rescue in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A series of dominant negative mutations capable of abolishing the rescue reaction were isolated in ribosomal proteins S20 and Asc1. Moreover, mutations in both proteins clustered on the surface of ribosomes between the collided ribosome interfaces, aligned in such a way that they seemingly faced each other. Further analysis via the application of the split-TRP1 protein assay revealed that the mutation of either protein distinctively affected the functional interaction between Hel2 and Asc1, suggesting the development of differential functionality at the interface between collided ribosomes. Our results provide novel and complementary insights into the detailed molecular mechanisms of ribosomal rescue pathways.

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