Translation is one of the most fundamental processes in the biological cell.
Because of the central role that translation plays across all domains of life,
the enzyme that carries out this process, the ribosome, is required to process
information with high accuracy. This accuracy often approaches values near
unity experimentally. In this paper, we model the ribosome as an information
channel and demonstrate mathematically that this biological machine has
information-processing capabilities that have not been recognized previously.
In particular, we calculate bounds on the ribosome's theoretical Shannon
capacity and numerically approximate this capacity. Finally, by incorporating
estimates on the ribosome's operation time, we show that the ribosome operates
at speeds safely below its capacity, allowing the ribosome to process
information with an arbitrary degree of error. Our results show that the
ribosome achieves a high accuracy in line with purely information-theoretic
means.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure