The first models of translation described protein synthesis in terms of two operationally defined tRNA binding sites, the P-site for the donor substrate, the peptidyl-tRNA, and the A-site for the acceptor substrates, the aminoacyl-tRNAs. The discovery and analysis of the third tRNA binding site, the E-site specific for deacylated tRNAs, resulted in the allosteric three-site model, the two major features of which are (1) the reciprocal relationship of A-site and E-site occupation, and (2) simultaneous codon-anticodon interactions of both tRNAs present at the elongating ribosome. However, structural studies do not support the three operationally defined sites in a simple fashion as three topographically fixed entities, thus leading to new concepts of tRNA binding and movement: (1) the hybrid-site model describes the tRNAs' movement through the ribosome in terms of changing binding sites on the 30S and 50S subunits in an alternating fashion. The tRNAs thereby pass through hybrid binding states. (2) The alpha-epsilon model introduces the concept of a movable tRNA-binding domain comprising two binding sites, termed alpha and epsilon. The translocation movement is seen as a result of a conformational change of the ribosome rather than as a diffusion process between fixed binding sites. The alpha-epsilon model reconciles most of the experimental data currently available.
Some applications of NMR and of neutron scattering require fully deuterated biological material which should be highly active and available in large quantities. These requirements are hardly compatible since full deuteration is achieved easily only if cells are grown in minimal media. This condition used in standard batch fermentation results in both low yields and reduced activities of the biological mass. Here we report a method which combines the apparently incompatible requirements taking advantage of a recent observation according to which the appearance of growth inhibiting extracellular products could be prevented. The method was applied for growing Escherichia coli cells, strain MRE600rif (resistance against high doses of rifampicin is used as selection marker) on partially deuterated media (76% and 84% D,O) with glucose as carbon source and on deuterated acetate and succinate with 100% D,O when full deuteration was to be achieved. The essential point for preserving the log-phase character of the cells is that the cultivation is carried out at substrate limiting conditions thus keeping the growth rate at low levels (for glucose the growth rate, p 5 0.35 h-', for acetatelsuccinate p 5 0.1 h-') which avoids the accumulation of the substrate or of by-products in the medium. Our data suggest that acetate is a main extracellular component for accompanying or triggering the transition from logarithmic growth to stationary phase of E. coli cells cultivated on glucose as carbon source.The cells were first grown in fed-batch to high cell densities (above 50 g wet cells/l) under conditions of substrate limitations. A steady-flow fermentation followed keeping the growth rate at about p of 0.1 h-'. Cells were harvested in kg quantities, the extracted ribosomes showed a normal complement of proteins, contained intact rRNA and were fully active. The ribosomal protein and rRNA fractions could be efficiently reconstituted to highly active particles. In the case of full deuteration a matching point of 120% (tentative D,O scale) was achieved. The reported method facilitates the preparation of deuterated biological material for applications in NMR and neutron scattering analysis.
We determined the positions and arrangements of RNA ligands within the ribosome with a new neutron-scattering technique, the proton-spin contrast-variation. Two tRNAs were bound to the ribosome in the pre-translocational and the post-translocational state. The mass centre of gravity of both tRNAs resides at the subunit interface of the body of the 30S subunit. Both tRNAs are separated by an angle of 50-55 degrees, and their mutual arrangement does not change during translocation. The mass centre of gravity moves by 13 +/- 3 A (1A = 0.1 nm) during translocation, corresponding well with the length of one codon. Using an RNase-digestion technique, the length of the mRNA sequence covered by the ribosome was determined to be 39 +/- 3 nucleotides before and after translocation. The ribosome moves like a rigid frame along the mRNA during translocation. In contrast, both tRNAs seem to be located on a movable ribosomal domain, which carries the tRNAs before, during, and after translocation, leaving the microtopography of the tRNAs with the ribosome unaltered. This conclusion was derived from an analysis of the contract patterns of thioated tRNAs on the ribosome. The results have led to a new model of the elongation cycle, which reinterprets the features of the previous "allosteric three-sites model" in a surprisingly simple fashion. Finally, a mutational analysis has identified a single nucleotide of the 23S rRNA essential for the peptidyltransferase activity.
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