4.6 Article

The importance of structural transitions of the switch II region for the functions of elongation factor Tu on the ribosome

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 276, Issue 25, Pages 22183-22190

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M102186200

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Elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) undergoes a large con formational transition when switching from the GTP to GDP forms. Structural changes in the switch I and II regions in the G domain are particularly important for this rearrangement. In the snitch II region, helix alpha2 is flanked by two glycine residues: Gly(83) in the consensus element DXXG at the N terminus and Gly(94) the C terminus. The role of helix alpha2 was studied by pre-steady state kinetic experiments using Escherichia coli EF-Tu mutants where either Gly(83), Gly(94), Or both were replaced with alanine. The G83A mutation slows down the association of the ternary complex EF-Tu.GTP.aminoacyl-tRNA with the ribosome and abolishes the ribosome-induced GTPase activity of EF-Tu. The G94A mutation strongly impairs the conformational change of EF-Tu from the GTP- to the GDP-bound form and decelerates the dissociation of EF-Tu GDP from the ribosome. The behavior of the double mutant is dominated by the G83A mutation. The results directly relate structural transitions in the switch II region to specific functions of EF-Tu on the ribosome.

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