Coli Ribosomes (coli + ribosome)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Substrate specificity of a maize ribosome-inactivating protein differs across diverse taxa

FEBS JOURNAL, Issue 7 2000
Julie E. Krawetz
The superfamily of ribosome-inactivating proteins (RIPs) consists of toxins that catalytically inactivate ribosomes at a universally conserved region of the large ribosomal RNA. RIPs carry out a single N-glycosidation event that alters the binding site of the translational elongational factor eEF1A and causes a cessation of protein synthesis that leads to subsequent cell death. Maize RIP1 is a kernel-specific RIP with the unusual property of being produced as a zymogen, proRIP1. ProRIP1 accumulates during seed development and becomes active during germination when cellular proteases remove acidic residues from a central domain and both termini. These deletions also result in RIP activation in vitro. However, the effectiveness of RIP1 activity against target ribosomes remains species-dependent. To determine the potential efficiency of maize RIP1 as a plant defense protein, we used quantitative RNA gel blots to detect products of RIP activity against intact ribosomal substrates from various species. We determined the enzyme specificity of recombinant maize proRIP1 (rproRIP1), papain-activated rproRIP1 and MOD1 (an active deletion mutant of rproRIP1) against ribosomal substrates with differing levels of RIP sensitivity. The rproRIP1 had no detectable enzymatic activity against ribosomes from any of the species assayed. The papain-activated rproRIP1 was more active than MOD1 against ribosomes from either rabbit or the corn pathogen, Aspergillus flavus, but the difference was much more marked when rabbit ribosomes were used as a substrate. The papain-activated rproRIP1 was much more active against rabbit ribosomes than homologous Zea mays ribosomes and had no detectable effect on Escherichia coli ribosomes. [source]


Interaction of ribosome recycling factor and elongation factor EF-G with E. coli ribosomes studied by the surface plasmon resonance technique

GENES TO CELLS, Issue 12 2000
Tetsuya Ishino
Ribosome recycling factor (RRF), in concert with elongation factor EF-G, is required for disassembly of the post-termination complex of a ribosome after the release of polypeptides. How RRF dissociates the complex has long been puzzling. Crystal structures of RRF molecules have been solved recently and shown to mimic a transfer RNA (tRNA) shape, which prompted us to examine whether RRF binds to the ribosome as tRNA does. The formation of ribosome complexes on the surface-coupled RRF and elongation factor EF-G of Escherichia coli was monitored in real time with a BIACORE 2000 instrument based on the surface plasmon resonance technique. RRF interacted with 70S ribosomes as well as 50S and 30S subunits, although it interacted preferentially with 50S subunits, which was clearly seen under high but physiological ionic conditions. This 50S interaction was diminished by a single amino acid substitutions for Arg132 of RRF, which did not appreciably affect the protein folding but nullified the activity in vivo and in vitro. Moreover, a set of antibiotics that inhibited the RRF,50S interaction were also inhibitory to the polysome breakdown activity of RRF in vitro. The BIACORE technique also worked very well in demonstrating the action of the antibiotics thiostrepton and fusidic acid, which are inhibitory to the RRF function by freezing the pre- and post-translocation intermediates catalysed by EF-G. These results suggest that the preferential interplay of RRF with the 50S subunit may be of biological significance, probably reflecting the mode of RRF action. The BIACORE technique proved useful for real-time monitoring of the interaction between the ribosome and translation factors, as well as for screening of potential inhibitors for ribosome recycling factor. [source]


Two proteins, YfiA and YhbH, associated with resting ribosomes in stationary phase Escherichia coli

GENES TO CELLS, Issue 12 2000
Yasushi Maki
Ribosomes in Escherichia coli change their composition and conformation in the stationary phase. Ribosome modulation factor (RMF) and ribosomal protein S22 are known to be associated with stationary phase ribosomes. RMF association causes the loss of translational activity and the dimerization of 70S ribosomes into 100S ribosomes, which may increase cell survival in the stationary phase. Two weakly acidic proteins having related amino acid sequences were found to be associated with E. coli ribosomes in the stationary phase. These proteins are the products of ORFs named yfiA and yhbH. The sum of the copy numbers of their product proteins, YfiA and YhbH, in the ribosomal particles was low in the log phase, but increased to nearly one in the stationary phase. YfiA was found in the 70S ribosomal fraction rather than the 100S. On the other hand, YhbH was detected exclusively in the 100S ribosomal fraction. When the stationary phase cells were transferred to fresh medium, YfiA and YhbH were found in the 70S ribosomal fraction, but not in the polysome fraction. Two proteins, YfiA and YhbH, associated with E. coli ribosomes were found to accumulate in the stationary phase, leading to the formation of several types of ribosomes. They are not likely to have roles in the elongation step of the translation in log phase cells, but are likely to be involved in the stabilization and preservation of ribosomes in the stationary phase, which might be necessary for cell survival. [source]


The pleuromutilin drugs tiamulin and valnemulin bind to the RNA at the peptidyl transferase centre on the ribosome

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 5 2001
Susan M. Poulsen
The pleuromutilin antibiotic derivatives, tiamulin and valnemulin, inhibit protein synthesis by binding to the 50S ribosomal subunit of bacteria. The action and binding site of tiamulin and valnemulin was further characterized on Escherichia coli ribosomes. It was revealed that these drugs are strong inhibitors of peptidyl transferase and interact with domain V of 23S RNA, giving clear chemical footprints at nucleotides A2058,9, U2506 and U2584,5. Most of these nucleotides are highly conserved phylogenetically and functionally important, and all of them are at or near the peptidyl transferase centre and have been associated with binding of several antibiotics. Competitive footprinting shows that tiamulin and valnemulin can bind concurrently with the macrolide erythromycin but compete with the macrolide carbomycin, which is a peptidyl transferase inhibitor. We infer from these and previous results that tiamulin and valnemulin interact with the rRNA in the peptidyl transferase slot on the ribosomes in which they prevent the correct positioning of the CCA-ends of tRNAs for peptide transfer. [source]


Confined dynamics of a ribosome-bound nascent globin: Cone angle analysis of fluorescence depolarization decays in the presence of two local motions

PROTEIN SCIENCE, Issue 10 2009
Jamie P. Ellis
Abstract We still know very little about how proteins achieve their native three-dimensional structure in vitro and in the cell. Folding studies as proteins emerge from the mega Dalton-sized ribosome pose special challenges due to the large size and complicated nature of the ribosome-nascent chain complex. This work introduces a combination of three-component analysis of fluorescence depolarization decays (including the presence of two local motions) and in-cone analysis of diffusive local dynamics to investigate the spatial constraints experienced by a protein emerging from the ribosomal tunnel. We focus on E. coli ribosomes and an all-,-helical nascent globin in the presence and absence of the cotranslationally active chaperones DnaK and trigger factor. The data provide insights on the dynamic nature and structural plasticity of ribosome-nascent chain complexes. We find that the sub-ns motions of the N-terminal fluorophore, reporting on the globin dynamics in the vicinity of the N terminus, are highly constrained both inside and outside the ribosomal tunnel, resulting in high-order parameters (>0.85) and small cone semiangles (<30°). The shorter globin chains buried inside the tunnel are less spatially constrained than those of a reference sequence from a natively unfolded protein, suggesting either that the two nascent chain sequences have a different secondary structure and therefore sample different regions of the tunnel or that the tunnel undergoes local structural adjustments to accommodate the globin sequence. Longer globins emerging out of the ribosomal tunnel are also found to have highly spatially constrained slow (ns) motions. There are no observable spectroscopic changes in the absence of bound chaperones. [source]