Anisotropic Fluctuations in the Ribosome Determine
tRNA Kinetics
Posted on 2017-09-14 - 00:00
The
ribosome is a large ribonucleoprotein complex that is responsible
for the production of proteins in all organisms. Accommodation is
the process by which an incoming aminoacyl-tRNA (aa-tRNA) molecule
binds the ribosomal A site, and its kinetics has been implicated in
the accuracy of tRNA selection. In addition to rearrangements in the
aa-tRNA molecule, the L11 stalk can undergo large-scale anisotropic
motions during translation. To explore the potential impact of this
protruding region on the rate of aa-tRNA accommodation, we used molecular
dynamics simulations with a simplified model to evaluate the free
energy as a function of aa-tRNA position. Specifically, these calculations
describe the transition between A/T and elbow-accommodated (EA) configurations
(∼20 Å displacement). We find that the free-energy barrier
associated with elbow accommodation is proportional to the degree
of mobility exhibited by the L11 stalk. That is, when L11 is more
rigid, the free-energy barrier height is decreased. This effect arises
from the ability of L11 to confine, and thereby destabilize, the A/T
ensemble. In addition, when elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) is present,
the A/T ensemble is further destabilized in an L11-dependent manner.
These results provide a framework that suggests how next-generation
experiments may precisely control the dynamics of the ribosome.
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Yang, Huan; K. Noel, Jeffrey; Whitford, Paul C. (2017). Anisotropic Fluctuations in the Ribosome Determine
tRNA Kinetics. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b06828