Literature DB >> 34255840

RqcH and RqcP catalyze processive poly-alanine synthesis in a reconstituted ribosome-associated quality control system.

Hiraku Takada1,2,3, Caillan Crowe-McAuliffe4, Christine Polte4, Zhanna Yu Sidorova5,6, Victoriia Murina2,3, Gemma C Atkinson7, Andrey L Konevega5,8,7, Zoya Ignatova4, Daniel N Wilson4, Vasili Hauryliuk2,3,9,10.   

Abstract

In the cell, stalled ribosomes are rescued through ribosome-associated protein quality-control (RQC) pathways. After splitting of the stalled ribosome, a C-terminal polyalanine 'tail' is added to the unfinished polypeptide attached to the tRNA on the 50S ribosomal subunit. In Bacillus subtilis, polyalanine tailing is catalyzed by the NEMF family protein RqcH, in cooperation with RqcP. However, the mechanistic details of this process remain unclear. Here we demonstrate that RqcH is responsible for tRNAAla selection during RQC elongation, whereas RqcP lacks any tRNA specificity. The ribosomal protein uL11 is crucial for RqcH, but not RqcP, recruitment to the 50S subunit, and B. subtilis lacking uL11 are RQC-deficient. Through mutational mapping, we identify critical residues within RqcH and RqcP that are important for interaction with the P-site tRNA and/or the 50S subunit. Additionally, we have reconstituted polyalanine-tailing in vitro and can demonstrate that RqcH and RqcP are necessary and sufficient for processivity in a minimal system. Moreover, the in vitro reconstituted system recapitulates our in vivo findings by reproducing the importance of conserved residues of RqcH and RqcP for functionality. Collectively, our findings provide mechanistic insight into the role of RqcH and RqcP in the bacterial RQC pathway.
© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34255840     DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab589

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res        ISSN: 0305-1048            Impact factor:   16.971


  2 in total

Review 1.  Ribosome-associated quality-control mechanisms from bacteria to humans.

Authors:  Sebastian Filbeck; Federico Cerullo; Stefan Pfeffer; Claudio A P Joazeiro
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2022-04-21       Impact factor: 19.328

2.  Bacterial ribosome collision sensing by a MutS DNA repair ATPase paralogue.

Authors:  Federico Cerullo; Sebastian Filbeck; Pratik Rajendra Patil; Hao-Chih Hung; Haifei Xu; Julia Vornberger; Florian W Hofer; Jaro Schmitt; Guenter Kramer; Bernd Bukau; Kay Hofmann; Stefan Pfeffer; Claudio A P Joazeiro
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2022-03-09       Impact factor: 69.504

  2 in total

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