4.8 Article

Annealing synchronizes the 70S ribosome into a minimum-energy conformation

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2111231119

关键词

annealing; protein synchronization; ribosome; cryo-EM

资金

  1. National Key R&D program of China [2017YFA0504800, 2021YFF1200403, 2018YFC1406700]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31870743]

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This study investigates the effect of annealing on biological macromolecules using the 70S ribosome as a model. Experimental results show that annealing with a fast cooling rate can enhance the homogeneity and resolution of the ribosome, reaching a minimum energy state in the free-energy landscape. This approach has potential applications in improving protein stability and synchronizing proteins on a single-molecule level.
Researchers commonly anneal metals, alloys, and semiconductors to repair defects and improve microstructures via recrystallization. Theoretical studies indicate that simulated annealing on biological macromolecules helps predict the final structures with minimum free energy. Experimental validation of this homogenizing effect and further exploration of its applications are fascinating scientific questions that remain elusive. Here, we chose the apo-state 70S ribosome from Escherichia coli as a model, wherein the 30S subunit undergoes a thermally driven intersubunit rotation and exhibits substantial structural flexibility as well as distinct free energy. We experimentally demonstrate that annealing at a fast cooling rate enhances the 70S ribosome homogeneity and improves local resolution on the 30S subunit. After annealing, the 70S ribosome is in a nonrotated state with respect to corresponding intermediate structures in unannealed or heated ribosomes. Manifold-based analysis further indicates that the annealed 70S ribosome takes a narrow conformational distribution and exhibits a minimumenergy state in the free-energy landscape. Our experimental results offer a facile yet robust approach to enhance protein stability, which is ideal for high-resolution cryogenic electron microscopy. Beyond structure determination, annealing shows great potential for synchronizing proteins on a single-molecule level and can be extended to study protein folding and explore conformational and energy landscapes.

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