4.8 Article

A steric gate controls P/E hybrid-state formation of tRNA on the ribosome

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-19450-0

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Funding

  1. NSF [MCB-1915843, MCB-1350312, PHY2019745]
  2. Office of Northeastern University Program In Multicultural Engineering (NUPRIME) within the College of Engineering

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The ribosome is a biomolecular machine that undergoes multiple large-scale structural rearrangements during protein elongation. Here, we focus on a conformational rearrangement during translocation, known as P/E hybrid-state formation. Using a model that explicitly represents all non-hydrogen atoms, we simulated more than 120 spontaneous transitions, where the tRNA molecule is displaced between the P and E sites of the large subunit. In addition to predicting a free-energy landscape that is consistent with previous experimental observations, the simulations reveal how a six-residue gate-like region can limit P/E formation, where sub-angstrom structural perturbations lead to an order-of-magnitude change in kinetics. Thus, this precisely defined set of residues represents a novel target that may be used to control functional dynamics in bacterial ribosomes. This theoretical analysis establishes a direct relationship between ribosome structure and large-scale dynamics, and it suggests how next-generation experiments may precisely dissect the energetics of hybrid formation on the ribosome. The ribosome undergoes multiple large-scale structural rearrangements during protein elongation. Here the authors present an all-atom model of the ribosome to study the energetics of P/E hybrid-state formation, an early conformational rearrangement occurring during translocation.

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