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Author

  • Bauer, Nicholas C. (1)
  • Cole, Megan F. (1)
  • Dunham, Christine (1)
  • Fagan, Crystal E. (1)
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  • 2018
  • Biology, Cell
  • Chemistry, Biochemistry
  • Structure
  • biomedicin

Work 1-2 of 2

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Article

Alternative Mode of E-Site tRNA Binding in the Presence of a Downstream mRNA Stem Loop at the Entrance Channel

by Yan Zhang; Samuel Hong; Ajchareeya Ruangprasert; Georgios Skiniotis; Christine Dunham

2018

Subjects
  • Chemistry, Biochemistry
  • Biophysics, Medical
  • Biology, Cell
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Abstract:Close

Structured mRNAs positioned downstream of the ribosomal decoding center alter gene expression by slowing protein synthesis. Here, we solved the cryo-EM structure of the bacterial ribosome bound to an mRNA containing a 3′ stem loop that regulates translation. Unexpectedly, the E-site tRNA adopts two distinct orientations. In the first structure, normal interactions with the 50S and 30S E site are observed. However, in the second structure, although the E-site tRNA makes normal interactions with the 50S E site, its anticodon stem loop moves ∼54 Å away from the 30S E site to interact with the 30S head domain and 50S uL5. This position of the E-site tRNA causes the uL1 stalk to adopt a more open conformation that likely represents an intermediate state during E-site tRNA dissociation. These results suggest that structured mRNAs at the entrance channel restrict 30S subunit movement required during translation to slow E-site tRNA dissociation. Zhang, Hong et al. solved cryo-EM structures of the 70S ribosome interacting with mRNA containing a stem loop at the mRNA entrance channel. The study provides insight into how the stem loop interacts with uS3 and into the conformation of the E-site tRNA, suggesting how structured mRNAs affect translation.

Article

Structural and Dynamics Comparison of Thermostability in Ancient, Modern, and Consensus Elongation Factor Tus

by C. Denise Okafor; Manish C. Pathak; Crystal E. Fagan; Nicholas C. Bauer; Megan F. Cole; Eric A. Gaucher; Eric Ortlund

2018

Subjects
  • Biology, Cell
  • Biology, Molecular
  • Chemistry, Biochemistry
  • File Download
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Abstract:Close

Rationally engineering thermostability in proteins would create enzymes and receptors that function under harsh industrial applications. Several sequence-based approaches can generate thermostable variants of mesophilic proteins. To gain insight into the mechanisms by which proteins become more stable, we use structural and dynamic analyses to compare two popular approaches, ancestral sequence reconstruction (ASR) and the consensus method, used to generate thermostable variants of Elongation Factor Thermo-unstable (EF-Tu). We present crystal structures of ancestral and consensus EF-Tus, accompanied by molecular dynamics simulations aimed at probing the strategies employed to enhance thermostability. All proteins adopt crystal structures similar to extant EF-Tus, revealing no difference in average structure between the methods. Molecular dynamics reveals that ASR-generated sequences retain dynamic properties similar to extant, thermostable EF-Tu from Thermus aquaticus, while consensus EF-Tu dynamics differ from evolution-based sequences. This work highlights the advantage of ASR for engineering thermostability while preserving natural motions in multidomain proteins. Ancestral sequence reconstruction (ASR) and the consensus approach are compared in the generation of thermostable EF-Tu homologs. Using a combination of X-ray crystallography and molecular dynamics simulations, Okafor et al. show that while both methods yield thermostable proteins, ASR, unlike consensus, preserves the natural protein motions in EF-Tu.
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