| Literature DB >> 27071098 |
Attilio Fabbretti1, Andreas Schedlbauer2, Letizia Brandi1, Tatsuya Kaminishi2, Anna Maria Giuliodori1, Raffaella Garofalo1, Borja Ochoa-Lizarralde2, Chie Takemoto3, Shigeyuki Yokoyama4, Sean R Connell5, Claudio O Gualerzi6, Paola Fucini5.
Abstract
In prokaryotic systems, the initiation phase of protein synthesis is governed by the presence of initiation factors that guide the transition of the small ribosomal subunit (30S) from an unlocked preinitiation complex (30S preIC) to a locked initiation complex (30SIC) upon the formation of a correct codon-anticodon interaction in the peptidyl (P) site. Biochemical and structural characterization of GE81112, a translational inhibitor specific for the initiation phase, indicates that the main mechanism of action of this antibiotic is to prevent P-site decoding by stabilizing the anticodon stem loop of the initiator tRNA in a distorted conformation. This distortion stalls initiation in the unlocked 30S preIC state characterized by tighter IF3 binding and a reduced association rate for the 50S subunit. At the structural level we observe that in the presence of GE81112 the h44/h45/h24a interface, which is part of the IF3 binding site and forms ribosomal intersubunit bridges, preferentially adopts a disengaged conformation. Accordingly, the findings reveal that the dynamic equilibrium between the disengaged and engaged conformations of the h44/h45/h24a interface regulates the progression of protein synthesis, acting as a molecular switch that senses and couples the 30S P-site decoding step of translation initiation to the transition from an unlocked preIC to a locked 30SIC state.Entities:
Keywords: GE81112; X-ray crystallography; antibiotics; protein synthesis; ribosome
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27071098 PMCID: PMC4843482 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1521156113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205