Berkeley -- A new, sharper picture of the nano-machine that translates our genetic
program into proteins promises to help researchers explain how some types of
antibiotics work and could lead to the design of better ones.
The high-resolution snapshots of the bacterial ribosome
were captured by scientists at the University of
California, Berkeley, and Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory (LBNL) with the lab's Advanced Light Source,
which generates intense beams of X-rays that can
reveal unprecedented structural detail of such large
and complex molecules.
The
new, high-resolution data on the intact ribosome
allows researchers to build more detailed and more
realistic models of the ribosome that until now
were impossible with the "fuzzy pictures" available.
While sharp images of the two main pieces of the
ribosome have already provided great insight into
how specific antibiotics work, many antibiotics,
such as the aminoglycosides, only interfere with
the entire, fully assembled molecular machine.
"Many antibiotics target only the intact machine,
disrupting messenger RNA decoding or movement," said
lead author Jamie Cate, assistant professor of chemistry
and of molecular and cell biology at UC Berkeley
and a staff scientist in the Physical Biosciences
Division at LBNL. "We are now in a position to look
at some of these drugs and discover things that haven't
been known before."
Cate, a member of the California Institute for Quantitative
Biomedical Research (QB3) at UC Berkeley, and his
colleagues report the detailed structure of the ribosome
from Escherichia coli, the common intestinal bacteria,
in the Nov. 4 issue of Science.
The ribosome, about 21 to 25 nanometers across,
is the original nanomachine, taking genetic information
relayed by messenger RNA, decoding it and spitting
out proteins. Ribosomes are dispersed in the hundreds
of thousands throughout the cell, and in some highly
active cells, ribosomes are responsible for producing
millions of proteins per minute.
Ribosomes are found in all organisms, ranging from
bacteria to humans, and probably arose nearly 2 billion
years ago. They have changed so little through evolution
that a bacterial ribosome can often translate human
genes into protein. Some people suspect that ribosomes,
which at their core consist of ribonucleic acid (RNA),
a sister of the DNA that comprises our genes, arose
when RNA, not DNA, carried our genetic dowry.
Because of its importance to life, and the fact
that important drugs target the ribosome, it has
received lots of attention. Only four years ago,
Cate was part of a team that published a picture
of the ribosome with a resolution of 5.5 Angstroms,
where an Angstrom, about the size of a hydrogen atom,
is one-tenth of a nanometer. The new images have
a resolution of 3.5 Angstroms, allowing Cate and
his colleagues to see the individual nucleotides
in the RNA strands of the ribosome and the amino-acid
backbones of the proteins that surround the RNA core.
Both the old and new images were obtained through
X-ray crystallography using Advanced Light Source
beamlines, which provide extremely bright X-ray sources.
Having the light source in his backyard, Cate said,
has made it easier to get the best crystallographic
picture with the sharpest three-dimensional detail.
He and his laboratory colleagues grow crystals of
ribosomes, check their quality in the light source,
then tweak the crystals and try again.
"We've burned through thousands of crystals in the
last five years," he said.
The
researchers obtained two high-resolution snapshots
of the intact E. coli ribosome and compared them
with a wide range of conformations of other ribosomes.
These other data came from lower-resolution X-ray
crystallographyic images of Thermus thermophilus
and E. coli ribosomes, plus electron microscopy
of E. coli, yeast and mammalian ribosomes. Together,
they yielded what Cate calls "global snapshots" and
allowed him and his colleagues to deduce how individual
parts of the ribosome function during the translocation
process.
What the new structure shows so far is how the two
large pieces of the ribosome bend, ratchet and rotate
as the ribosome goes through the repetitive process
of protein manufacturing.
The "small" subunit of the ribosome first recognizes
and latches onto the messenger RNA (mRNA), which
contains a copy of part of the chromosomal DNA. Once
the small subunit finds the start position, the "large" subunit
moves in and latches on, clamping the mRNA between
them. The combined machine slides along the mRNA,
reading each three-letter codon, matching this code
to the appropriate amino acid, and then adding that
amino acid - one of 20 possible building blocks -
to the lengthening protein chain.
As this translation takes place, transfer RNA (tRNA)
constantly brings in amino acid building blocks,
while energy-supplying molecules in the form of GTP
(guanosine triphosphate) cycle through.
They found that after the bond - called a peptide
bond - forms between the growing chain and the newly
added amino acid, the small subunit ratchets with
respect to the large subunit. Then the head of the
small subunit swivels in preparation for shifting
the mRNA forward by one codon. At the same time,
a groove opens that allows the mRNA to actually move
and the tRNA, depleted of its amino acid, to float
away.
Then, the small subunit reverses its motions, resets,
and is ready to add the next amino acid. This picture
of translocation - ratcheting, swiveling, opening
the groove, then reversing these three steps - is
repeated 10 to 20 times each second in bacteria.
Based on the researchers' analysis of the new data,
Cate said that it appears, also, that the helical
RNA in the ribosome acts as a spring to withstand
the stress of these reversible swivels. Also, the
ribosome harbors an astounding number of positive
magnesium ions - hundreds in all - that apparently
neutralize the highly negative charge of the RNA.
Without these magnesium ions, Cate said, the repulsion
of the RNA's negative charge would blow the ribosome
apart. Some of the magnesium ions form a salty liquid
at the interface between the large and small subunits
of the ribosome, perhaps lubricating the machine.
These and other hypotheses need further exploration,
he said.
"All the interactions we see have been seen before
at lower resolution, but it was not clear how to
interpret them," he said. "It took these high-resolution
studies to coalesce our ideas."
The
study's coauthors include Barbara S. Schuwirth
in UC Berkeley's Department of Chemistry and the
Free University of Berlin's Institute of Chemistry-Crystallography;
Maria A. Borovinskaya, Antón Vila-Sanjurjo
and James M. Holton of LBNL; and Cathy W. Hau and
Wen Zhang of UC Berkeley's Department of Molecular
and Cell Biology.
The work was supported by the National Institute
of General Medical Sciences and the National Cancer
Institute of the National Institutes of Health and
by the U.S. Department of Energy.
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