255 research outputs found

    A simple model of the electrostatic environment around the catalytic center of the ribosome and its significance for the elongation kinetics

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    editorial reviewedThe central function of the large subunit of the ribosome is to catalyze peptide bond formation. This biochemical reaction is conducted at the peptidyl transferase center (PTC). Experimental evidence shows that the catalytic activity is affected by the electrostatic environment around the peptidyl transferase center. Here, we set up a minimal geometrical model fitting the available X-ray solved structures of the ribonucleoproteic cavity around the catalytic center of the large subunit of the ribosome. The purpose of this phenomenological model is to estimate quantitatively the electrostatic potential and electric field that are experienced during the peptidyl transfer reaction. At least two reasons motivate the need for developing this quantification. First, we inquire whether the electric field in this particular catalytic environment, made only of nucleic acids, is of the same order of magnitude as the one prevailing in catalytic centers of the proteic enzymes counterparts. Second, the protein synthesis rate is dependent on the nature of the amino acid sequentially incorporated in the nascent chain. The activation energy of the catalytic reaction and its detailed kinetics are shown to be dependent on the mechanical work exerted on the amino acids by the electric field, especially when one of the four charged amino acid residues (R, K, E, D) is newly incorporated in the nascent chain. Physical values of the electric field provide quantitative knowledge of mechanical work, activation energy and rate of the peptide bond formation catalyzed by the ribosome. We show that our theoretical calculations are consistent with two independent sets of previously published experimental results. Experimental results for E.coli in the minimal case of the dipeptide bond formation when puromycin is used as the final amino acid acceptor strongly support our theoretically derived reaction time courses. Experimental Ribo-seq results on S. cerevisiae and E.coli comparing the residence time distribution of ribosomes upon specific codons are also well accounted for by our theoretical calculations. Our interpretation of these results sheds light on the functional role of the electrostatic profile around the PTC and its impact on the ribosome elongation cycle

    A simple geometrical model of the electrostatic environment around the catalytic center of the ribosome and its significance for the elongation cycle kinetics

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    peer reviewedThe central function of the large subunit of the ribosome is to catalyze peptide bond formation. This biochemical reaction is conducted at the peptidyl transferase center (PTC). Experimental evidence shows that the catalytic activity is affected by the electrostatic environment around the peptidyl transferase center. Here, we set up a minimal geometrical model fitting the available x-ray solved structures of the ribonucleic cavity around the catalytic center of the large subunit of the ribosome. The purpose of this phenomenological model is to estimate quantitatively the electrostatic potential and electric field that are experienced during the peptidyl transfer reaction. At least two reasons motivate the need for developing this quantification. First, we inquire whether the electric field in this particular catalytic environment, made only of nucleic acids, is of the same order of magnitude as the one prevailing in catalytic centers of the proteic enzymes counterparts. Second, the protein synthesis rate is dependent on the nature of the amino acid sequentially incorporated in the nascent chain. The activation energy of the catalytic reaction and its detailed kinetics are shown to be dependent on the mechanical work exerted on the amino acids by the electric field, especially when one of the four charged amino acid residues (R, K, E, D) has previously been incorporated at the carboxy-terminal end of the peptidyl-tRNA. Physical values of the electric field provide quantitative knowledge of mechanical work, activation energy and rate of the peptide bond formation catalyzed by the ribosome. We show that our theoretical calculations are consistent with two independent sets of previously published experimental results. Experimental results for E.coli in the minimal case of the dipeptide bond formation when puromycin is used as the final amino acid acceptor strongly support our theoretically derived reaction time courses. Experimental Ribo-Seq results on E. coli and S. cerevisiae comparing the residence time distribution of ribosomes upon specific codons are also well accounted for by our theoretical calculations. The statistical queueing time theory was used to model the ribosome residence time per codon during nascent protein elongation and applied for the interpretation of the Ribo-Seq data. The hypo-exponential distribution fits the residence time observed distribution of the ribosome on a codon. An educated deconvolution of this distribution is used to estimate the rates of each elongation step in a codon specific manner. Our interpretation of all these results sheds light on the functional role of the electrostatic profile around the PTC and its impact on the ribosome elongation cycle

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    The impact of ribosome exit tunnel electrostatics on the protein elongation rate or on forces acting upon the nascent polypeptide chain are currently not fully elucidated. In the past, researchers have measured the electrostatic potential inside the ribosome polypeptide exit tunnel at a limited number of spatial points, at least in rabbit reticulocytes. Here we present a basic electrostatic model of the exit tunnel of the ribosome, providing a quantitative physical description of the tunnel interaction with the nascent proteins at all centro-axial points inside the tunnel. We show that a strong electrostatic screening is due to water molecules (not mobile ions) attracted to the ribosomal nucleic acid phosphate moieties buried in the immediate vicinity of the tunnel wall. We also show how the tunnel wall components and local ribosomal protein protrusions impact on the electrostatic potential profile and impede charged amino acid residues from progressing through the tunnel, affecting the elongation rate in a range of −40% to +85% when compared to the average elongation rate. The time spent by the ribosome to decode the genetic encrypted message is constrained accordingly. We quantitatively derive, at single-residue resolution, the axial forces acting on the nascent peptide from its particular sequence embedded in the tunnel. The model sheds light on how the experimental data point measurements of the potential are linked to the local structural chemistry of the inner wall, shape, and size of the tunnel. The model consistently connects experimental observations coming from different fields in molecular biology, x-ray crystallography, physical chemistry, biomechanics, and synthetic and multiomics biology. Our model should be a valuable tool to gain insight into protein synthesis dynamics, translational control, and the role of the ribosome's mechanochemistry in the cotranslational protein folding.FNRS-FWO EOS Grant No. 30480119 (Join-t-against-Osteoarthritis); WELBIO CR2017S02 (THERAtRAME);ERC grant agreement n°772418 (INSITE

    Three-sided pyramid wavefront sensor. II. Preliminary demonstration on the new CACTI testbed

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    The next generation of giant ground and space telescopes will have the light-collecting power to detect and characterize potentially habitable terrestrial exoplanets using high-contrast imaging for the first time. This will only be achievable if the performance of Giant Segmented Mirror Telescopes (GSMTs) extreme adaptive optics (ExAO) systems are optimized to their full potential. A key component of an ExAO system is the wavefront sensor (WFS), which measures aberrations from atmospheric turbulence. A common choice in current and next-generation instruments is the pyramid wavefront sensor (PWFS). ExAO systems require high spatial and temporal sampling of wavefronts to optimize performance, and as a result, require large detectors for the WFS. We present a closed-loop testbed demonstration of a three-sided pyramid wavefront sensor (3PWFS) as an alternative to the conventional four-sided pyramid wavefront (4PWFS) sensor for GSMT-ExAO applications on the new Comprehensive Adaptive Optics and Coronagraph Test Instrument (CACTI). The 3PWFS is less sensitive to read noise than the 4PWFS because it uses fewer detector pixels. The 3PWFS has further benefits: a high-quality three-sided pyramid optic is easier to manufacture than a four-sided pyramid. We detail the design of the two components of the CACTI system, the adaptive optics simulator and the PWFS testbed that includes both a 3PWFS and 4PWFS. A preliminary experiment was performed on CACTI to study the performance of the 3PWFS to the 4PWFS in varying strengths of turbulence using both the Raw Intensity and Slopes Map signal processing methods. This experiment was repeated for a modulation radius of 1.6 lambda/D and 3.25 lambda/D. We found that the performance of the two wavefront sensors is comparable if modal loop gains are tuned.Comment: 28 Pages, 15 Figures, and 4 Table

    Elp3-mediated codon-dependent translation promotes mTORC2 activation and regulates macrophage polarization.

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    peer reviewedMacrophage polarization is a process whereby macrophages acquire distinct effector states (M1 or M2) to carry out multiple and sometimes opposite functions. We show here that translational reprogramming occurs during macrophage polarization and that this relies on the Elongator complex subunit Elp3, an enzyme that modifies the wobble uridine base U34 in cytosolic tRNAs. Elp3 expression is downregulated by classical M1-activating signals in myeloid cells, where it limits the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines via FoxO1 phosphorylation, and attenuates experimental colitis in mice. In contrast, alternative M2-activating signals upregulate Elp3 expression through a PI3K- and STAT6-dependent signaling pathway. The metabolic reprogramming linked to M2 macrophage polarization relies on Elp3 and the translation of multiple candidates, including the mitochondrial ribosome large subunit proteins Mrpl3, Mrpl13, and Mrpl47. By promoting translation of its activator Ric8b in a codon-dependent manner, Elp3 also regulates mTORC2 activation. Elp3 expression in myeloid cells further promotes Wnt-driven tumor initiation in the intestine by maintaining a pool of tumor-associated macrophages exhibiting M2 features. Collectively, our data establish a functional link between tRNA modifications, mTORC2 activation, and macrophage polarization

    Wobble tRNA modification and hydrophilic amino acid patterns dictate protein fate.

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    peer reviewedRegulation of mRNA translation elongation impacts nascent protein synthesis and integrity and plays a critical role in disease establishment. Here, we investigate features linking regulation of codon-dependent translation elongation to protein expression and homeostasis. Using knockdown models of enzymes that catalyze the mcm(5)s(2) wobble uridine tRNA modification (U(34)-enzymes), we show that gene codon content is necessary but not sufficient to predict protein fate. While translation defects upon perturbation of U(34)-enzymes are strictly dependent on codon content, the consequences on protein output are determined by other features. Specific hydrophilic motifs cause protein aggregation and degradation upon codon-dependent translation elongation defects. Accordingly, the combination of codon content and the presence of hydrophilic motifs define the proteome whose maintenance relies on U(34)-tRNA modification. Together, these results uncover the mechanism linking wobble tRNA modification to mRNA translation and aggregation to maintain proteome homeostasis

    Genomic Ancestry of North Africans Supports Back-to-Africa Migrations

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    North African populations are distinct from sub-Saharan Africans based on cultural, linguistic, and phenotypic attributes; however, the time and the extent of genetic divergence between populations north and south of the Sahara remain poorly understood. Here, we interrogate the multilayered history of North Africa by characterizing the effect of hypothesized migrations from the Near East, Europe, and sub-Saharan Africa on current genetic diversity. We present dense, genome-wide SNP genotyping array data (730,000 sites) from seven North African populations, spanning from Egypt to Morocco, and one Spanish population. We identify a gradient of likely autochthonous Maghrebi ancestry that increases from east to west across northern Africa; this ancestry is likely derived from “back-to-Africa” gene flow more than 12,000 years ago (ya), prior to the Holocene. The indigenous North African ancestry is more frequent in populations with historical Berber ethnicity. In most North African populations we also see substantial shared ancestry with the Near East, and to a lesser extent sub-Saharan Africa and Europe. To estimate the time of migration from sub-Saharan populations into North Africa, we implement a maximum likelihood dating method based on the distribution of migrant tracts. In order to first identify migrant tracts, we assign local ancestry to haplotypes using a novel, principal component-based analysis of three ancestral populations. We estimate that a migration of western African origin into Morocco began about 40 generations ago (approximately 1,200 ya); a migration of individuals with Nilotic ancestry into Egypt occurred about 25 generations ago (approximately 750 ya). Our genomic data reveal an extraordinarily complex history of migrations, involving at least five ancestral populations, into North Africa
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