| Literature DB >> 28096346 |
Michelle R Gibbs1,2, Kyung-Mee Moon3, Menglin Chen1,2,4, Rohan Balakrishnan1,2,4, Leonard J Foster3, Kurt Fredrick5,2,4.
Abstract
The physiological role of LepA, a paralog of EF-G found in all bacteria, has been a mystery for decades. Here, we show that LepA functions in ribosome biogenesis. In cells lacking LepA, immature 30S particles accumulate. Four proteins are specifically underrepresented in these particles-S3, S10, S14, and S21-all of which bind late in the assembly process and contribute to the folding of the 3' domain of 16S rRNA. Processing of 16S rRNA is also delayed in the mutant strain, as indicated by increased levels of precursor 17S rRNA in assembly intermediates. Mutation ΔlepA confers a synthetic growth phenotype in absence of RsgA, another GTPase, well known to act in 30S subunit assembly. Analysis of the ΔrsgA strain reveals accumulation of intermediates that resemble those seen in the absence of LepA. These data suggest that RsgA and LepA play partially redundant roles to ensure efficient 30S assembly.Entities:
Keywords: EF4; RsgA; YjeQ; protein synthesis; translation
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28096346 PMCID: PMC5293072 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1613665114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205