Transcript Outline
Protein synthesis
30.4 Ribosome Structure and Assembly
30.5 Mechanics of Protein Synthesis
30.4 Ribosome Structure and
Assembly
E. coli ribosome is 25 nm diameter, 2520 kD in mass, and
consists of two unequal subunits that dissociate at < 1mM
Mg2+
30S subunit is 930 kD with 21 proteins and a 16S rRNA
50S subunit is 1590 kD with 31 proteins and two rRNAs:
23S rRNA and 5S rRNA
These ribosomes and others are roughly 2/3 RNA
20,000 ribosomes in a cell, 20% of cell's mass
Ribosomal RNA
3 rRNA molecules
23S, 16S, 5S
Derived from a single 30S rRNA
precursor transcript
Extensive intrachain H-bonding
2/3 rRNA is helical
Ribosomal Proteins
One of each per ribosome, except
L7/L12 with 4
L7/L12 identical except for extent of
acetylation at N-terminus
Only one protein is common to large
and small subunits: S20 = L26
Variety of structures, still being
characterized
Ribosome Assembly/Structure
If individual proteins and rRNAs are mixed,
functional ribosomes will assemble
Gross structures of large and small subunits are
known - see Figure 30.12
A tunnel runs through the large subunit
Growing peptide chain is thought to thread
through the tunnel during protein synthesis
Eukaryotic Ribosomes
Mitochondrial and chloroplast ribosomes are
quite similar to prokaryotic ribosomes,
reflecting their supposed prokaryotic origin
Cytoplasmic ribosomes are larger and more
complex, but many of the structural and
functional properties are similar
See Table 30.6 for properties
30.5 Mechanics of Protein
Synthesis
All protein synthesis involves three phases:
initiation, elongation, termination
Initiation involves binding of mRNA and initiator
aminoacyl-tRNA to small subunit, followed by
binding of large subunit
Elongation: synthesis of all peptide bonds with tRNAs bound to acceptor (A) and peptidyl
(P) sites. See Figure 30.13
Termination occurs when "stop codon" reached
Prokaryotic Initiation
The initiator tRNA is one with a formylated
methionine: f-Met-tRNAfMet
It is only used for initiation, and regular MettRNAmMet is used instead for Met addition
N-formyl methionine is first aa of all E.coli
proteins, but this is cleaved in about half
A formyl transferase adds the formyl group (see
Figure 30.15)
More Initiation
Correct registration of mRNA on ribosome requires
alignment of a pyrimidine-rich sequence on 3'-end
of 16S RNA with a purine-rich part of 5'-end of
mRNA
The purine-rich segment - the ribosome-binding
site - is known as the Shine-Dalgarno sequence
(see Figure 30.17)
Initiation factor proteins, GTP, N-formyl-MettRNAfMet, mRNA and 30S ribosome form the 30S
initiation complex
Events of Initiation
30S subunit with IF-1 and IF-3 binds mRNA, IF-2,
GTP and f-Met-tRNAfMet (Figure 30.18)
IF-2 delivers the initiator tRNA in a GTPdependent process
Loss of the initiation factors leads to binding of
50S subunit
Note that the "acceptor site" is now poised to
accept an incoming aminoacyl-tRNA
The Elongation Cycle
Elongation factor Tu will bring each aa-tRNA into the A
site
Decoding center of 16S rRNA makes sure the proper aa tRNA is
in the A site by direct surveillance
Peptide bond formation occurs by direct transfer of the
peptidyl chain from the tRNA bearing it to the NH2
group of the new amino acid
Translocation of the one-residue-longer peptidyl tRNA
to the P site to make room for the next incoming aatRNA at the A site.
EF-Tu-EF-Ts cycle
The elongation factors are vital to cell function,
so they are present in significant quantities (EF-Tu
is 5% of total protein in E. coli (Table 30.8)
EF-Tu binds aminoacyl-tRNA and GTP
Aminoacyl-tRNA binds to A site of ribosome as a
complex with EF-Tu and GTP
GTP is then hydrolyzed and EF-Tu:GDP complex
dissociates
EF-Ts recycles EF-Tu by exchanging GTP for GDP
Peptidyl Transferase
This is the central reaction of protein synthesis
23S rRNA is the peptidyl transferase!
The "reaction center" of 23S rRNA is shown in Figure
30.22 - these bases are among the most highly
conserved in all of biology.
Translocation of peptidyl-tRNA from the A site to the P
site follows (see Figures 30.19 & 30.21 ) catalyzed by
EF-G.
Peptide Chain Termination
Proteins known as "release factors"
recognize the stop codon at the A site
Presence of release factors with a
nonsense codon at A site transforms
the peptidyl transferase into a
hydrolase, which cleaves the peptidyl
chain from the tRNA carrier
The Role of GTP Hydrolysis
IF-2, EF-Tu, EF-G, RF-3 are all GTPbinding proteins
Part of the G protein superfamily
Hydrolysis drives essential
conformation changes
IF-2, EF-Tu, EF-G, RF-3 interact with
the same site on the 50S subunit, the
factor binding center
Polysomes
mRNA with several ribosomes
Polyribosomes
All protein synthesis occurs on
polysomes
Procaryotes have around 10,
eucaryotes fewer than 10 ribosomes