| Literature DB >> 33436566 |
Howard Gamper1, Haixing Li2, Isao Masuda1, D Miklos Robkis3, Thomas Christian1, Adam B Conn4, Gregor Blaha4, E James Petersson3, Ruben L Gonzalez5, Ya-Ming Hou6.
Abstract
While genome recoding using quadruplet codons to incorporate non-proteinogenic amino acids is attractive for biotechnology and bioengineering purposes, the mechanism through which such codons are translated is poorly understood. Here we investigate translation of quadruplet codons by a +1-frameshifting tRNA, SufB2, that contains an extra nucleotide in its anticodon loop. Natural post-transcriptional modification of SufB2 in cells prevents it from frameshifting using a quadruplet-pairing mechanism such that it preferentially employs a triplet-slippage mechanism. We show that SufB2 uses triplet anticodon-codon pairing in the 0-frame to initially decode the quadruplet codon, but subsequently shifts to the +1-frame during tRNA-mRNA translocation. SufB2 frameshifting involves perturbation of an essential ribosome conformational change that facilitates tRNA-mRNA movements at a late stage of the translocation reaction. Our results provide a molecular mechanism for SufB2-induced +1 frameshifting and suggest that engineering of a specific ribosome conformational change can improve the efficiency of genome recoding.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33436566 PMCID: PMC7803779 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-20373-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919