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Download Lecture 25: Protein Synthesis
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Lecture 25: Protein Synthesis Key learning goals: • Be able to explain the main stuctural features of • • • • • • • • • ribosomes, and know (roughly) how many DNA and protein subunits they contain. Understand the main functions of the big subunit. Understand the main functions of the lile subunit. Explain what a polysome is. Understand how ribosomes place themselves on the start codon. This is different in bacteria and in eukaryotes. Be able to compare and contrast these mechanisms. Understand what bacterial IF-1 and IF-3 do. Understand what the eukaryotic eIF4 complex does. Understand what a polycistronic mRNA is. Be able to explain why polycistronic mRNA’s are very common in bacteria, and extremely rare in eukaryotes. Be able to explain why coupled transcription and translation occur in bacteria, but not in eukaryotes. Understand the special role of formylated methionine (fMet) in bacterial initiation. Template-mediated polymer synthesis: 3 stages (2% 62% TVSXIMR Initiation. Locate the starting point on the template; assemble the polymerization machinery. Elongation. Add a protomer to the growing polymer, as specified by the sequence on the template; repeat many times. Termination. Cease elongation; disassemble the elongation hardware. TRANSLATION PARTS LIST: • mRNA — the template • amino acids (20) • tRNAs (approximately 40) • aminoacyl tRNA synthases (20) • ATP • GTP • ribosome -small subunit (decoding center) -large subunit (peptidyl transferase center) • initiation factors • elongation factors • termination factors Ribosomes & Protein Synthesis This diagram summarizes a lot of what you will need to know about bacterial protein synthesis. Venki Ramakrishnan erythrocyte 8,000 nm bacterium 2,000 nm 300 bp DNA 2 nm wide 100 nm long ribosome 25 nm = 10 nm = 100 Å David Goodsell prokaryotes eukaryotes makes the polypeptide makes the polypeptide decodes the mRNA decodes the mRNA Harry Noller The 70 S bacterial ribosome Noller Group, UCSC • http://rna.ucsc.edu/rnacenter/ribosome_rht.html Ribosomal proteins lie mainly on the surface The folding of ribosomal subunits is highly conserved Crystal Structure of the Eukaryotic 40S Ribosomal Subunit in Complex with Initiation Factor 1 Julius Rabl, et al. Science 331, 730 (2011) Evolutionary conservation & divergence of ribosomal proteins Proteins of the small subunit. Cores found in all kingdoms are light blue. Archaeal cores are orange. Proteins or extensions uniquely found in eukaryotes are red. Rabl et al., Science 331:730 Distinctive features of the eukaryotic ribosome map to the cytoplasmic surface 40 S Eukaryote-specific RNA loops in red; eukaryotespecific proteins in yellow. 60 S Conserved region surrounding polypeptide exit tunnel Ben-Shem et al., Science 334:1524 mRNA with multiple translating ribosomes: a polysome 100 nm mRNA with multiple translating ribosomes: a polysome 3´ 5´ 100 nm Three Stages in Translation Initiation: the ribosome is placed on the start codon Elongation: mRNA-templated polypeptide polymerization Termination: the polypeptide and mRNA are released @ M2.! AUG RIBOSOME POLYPEPTIDE .( @ @ @ @ @ $.! 2.! POLYMERASE Note: this cartoon applies to bacteria. In eukaryotes, transcription occurs in the nucleus, translation in the cytoplasm. But the directions are the same in all cases. In bacterial initiation, ribosome small subunit binds directly to Shine-Delgarno initiation sites on the mRNA In eukaryotic initiation, the small subunit binds the 7-methyl-G cap, then scans 5´ to 3´ to find a start codon To understand initiation, you first must understand the basics of elongation! The ribosome has three tRNA binding sites: 1. Aminoacyl-tRNA 2. Peptidyl-tRNA 3. Exit Direction of tRNA and mRNA movement through ribosome EPA Three major steps in elongation: A site: tRNA selection P site: peptidyl transfer translocation: uncharged tRNA exits from E site Note that the growing polypeptide chain is transferred onto the incoming aa-tRNA! The aa on the incoming aa-tRNA is not transferred onto the chain! Initiation in bacteria Ingredients: mRNA fMet-tRNA[fMet] initiation factors IF-1 IF-2 IF-3 GTP and Mg2+ Small (30 S) subunit Shine-Delgarno sequence binds small subunit AUG start codon RNA aligned in the P site IF-1 occupies the small subunit’s A site Initiation in bacteria fMet Bacteria use a specialized initiator tRNA charged with a modified amino acid, N-formylmethionine (fMet). Eukaryotes use plain old Met. The presence of peptides containing N-terminal fMet is interpreted by animal immune systems as a sign that bacteria are present or that mitochondria have ruptured. In other words, for us fMet is a danger signal. Initiation in bacteria Starting state for elongation: • Initiation factors have fallen off • Large (50S) subunit bound • fMet-tRNA and AUG codon are in P site • A and E sites empty Eukaryotic initiation: the small subunit scans from 5´cap until it finds a start codon As a consequence, eukaryotic mRNAs are almost always monocistronic: they contain only a single initiation site and encode only one polypeptide. polycistronic AUG AUG AUG monocistronic AUG ✁ ✁ In some cases, a polyprotein can be cleaved by site-specific proteases to yield more than one polypeptide Initiation in eukaryotes Ingredients: mRNA Met-tRNA initiation factors: eIF2 > know what this does eIF4 > know what this does eIF5 eIF6 GTP, ATP, and Mg2+ 40 S subunit eIF4 complex binds mRNA 5´ cap & poly-A tail Initiation in eukaryotes not fMet P A Small subunit scans for AUG ATP consumption! Initiation in eukaryotes Starting state for elongation • eIF4 complex stays bound to 5´ cap • Other initiation factors have fallen off • Large (60S) subunit bound • Met-tRNA and AUG codon are in P site • A and E sites empty