Structural insight into the role of the ribosomal tunnel in cellular regulation
- 31 March 2003
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
- Vol. 10 (5) , 366-370
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nsb915
Abstract
Nascent proteins emerge out of ribosomes through an exit tunnel, which was assumed to be a firmly built passive path. Recent biochemical results, however, indicate that the tunnel plays an active role in sequence-specific gating of nascent chains and in responding to cellular signals. Consistently, modulation of the tunnel shape, caused by the binding of the semi-synthetic macrolide troleandomycin to the large ribosomal subunit from Deinococcus radiodurans, was revealed crystallographically. The results provide insights into the tunnel dynamics at high resolution. Here we show that, in addition to the typical steric blockage of the ribosomal tunnel by macrolides, troleandomycin induces a conformational rearrangement in a wall constituent, protein L22, flipping the tip of its highly conserved beta-hairpin across the tunnel. On the basis of mutations that alleviate elongation arrest, the tunnel motion could be correlated with sequence discrimination and gating, suggesting that specific arrest motifs within nascent chain sequences may induce a similar gating mechanism.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Instruction of Translating Ribosome by Nascent PeptideScience, 2002
- Regulatory Nascent Peptides in the Ribosomal TunnelCell, 2002
- The Ribosomal Exit Tunnel Functions as a Discriminating GateCell, 2002
- The Polypeptide Tunnel System in the Ribosome and Its Gating in Erythromycin Resistance Mutants of L4 and L22Molecular Cell, 2001
- Upstream Open Reading Frames as Regulators of mRNA TranslationMolecular and Cellular Biology, 2000
- Revised Translation Start Site for secM Defines an Atypical Signal Peptide That Regulates Escherichia coli secA ExpressionJournal of Bacteriology, 2000
- The Structural Basis of Ribosome Activity in Peptide Bond SynthesisScience, 2000
- Signal sequence recognition and protein targetingCurrent Opinion in Structural Biology, 1999
- A Tunnel in the Large Ribosomal Subunit Revealed by Three-Dimensional Image ReconstructionScience, 1987
- Location of exit channel for nascent protein in 80S ribosomeNature, 1986