[Home]
[Full version]
Scientists obtain first direct observations of protein-synthesis mechanism
Apr 07 ,General Science
Research by UC Santa Cruz molecular biologist Harry Noller and his collaborators has led to the first direct observations of the mechanism for protein synthesis in living cells. Their new findings on ribosomes, the protein-making molecular machines in all cells, are featured on the cover of the April 3, 2008, issue of the international science journal
Nature.
The researchers used a laser apparatus called "optical tweezers" to probe the physical steps of the ribosome machine as it translates genetic code into a protein molecule.
Noller, the Sinsheimer Professor of Molecular Biology at UCSC, has been studying the ribosome for more than 30 years. His latest findings are the result of a six-year collaboration among three groups within the California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences (QB3). The joint effort involved Noller and postdoctoral researcher Laura Lancaster at UCSC and the UC Berkeley labs of biophysicist Carlos Bustamante and biophysical chemist Ignacio Tinoco, Jr.
"This is a collaboration between the tweezers guys at Berkeley and the ribosome guy at UCSC," Noller said. "We got together to figure out if we could use this approach to measure forces exerted by ribosomes during protein synthesis."
To make a new protein, the genetic instructions are first copied from the DNA sequence of a gene into a messenger RNA molecule. The ribosome then reads the genetic code from the messenger RNA and translates the code into the structure of a protein.
The Noller lab engineered ribosomes containing messenger RNA molecules with strands of DNA attached to both ends to serve as "handles." The DNA strands, in turn, are attached to tiny beads. Both beads are fixed by lasers in the optical-tweezers apparatus, and the lasers at each end exert opposing forces on the translation system.
Using this system, the researchers were able to follow the translation process in individual ribosomes. They found that protein synthesis has a beat: bop, bop, bop, pause; bop, bop, bop, pause; and so on. The three "bops" correspond to the ribosome reading one "codon"--a sequence of three RNA subunits that tell the ribosome to add a specific amino acid to the protein chain.
"The ribosome moves along the message in a series of stop-and-go events--stalling and translocation. Pause, translocate, pause," Noller said.
Noller's research group was the first to solve the complete structure of a ribosome using x-ray crystallography. That was the first step in answering a bigger question: How does the ribosome operate?
"Until now, we were limited to watching a few trillion ribosomes, and they were not synchronized--the details were blurred. Now we can watch one ribosome at a time," he said.
Noller, who directs the Center for Molecular Biology of RNA at UCSC, said the next phase in this project involves refining the analysis. "We have not yet directly measured the forces exerted by the ribosome," he said. "Now we have a more sensitive tweezers setup at UC Berkeley, and we have devised a way of grabbing a ribosome with one tweezers and the message with the other. We can feel the ribosome pulling on the message."
The first author of the Nature paper is Jin-Der Wen of UC Berkeley. In addition to Noller, Lancaster, Bustamante, and Tinoco, the coauthors include Courtney Hodges of UC Berkeley; Ana-Carolina Zeri of the Brazilian Synchrotron Light Laboratory; and Shige Yoshimura of Kyoto University.
Source: UC Santa Cruz
Related stories:
Researchers observe spontaneous 'ratcheting' of single ribosome molecules
Researchers report this week that they are the first to observe the dynamic, ratchet-like movements of single ribosomal molecules in the act of building proteins from genetic blueprints. Their study, published in the journal
Molecular Cell, reveals a key mechanism in the interplay of molecules that allows cells to build the proteins needed to sustain life.
Biologists probe the machinery of cellular protein factories
Proteins of all sizes and shapes do most of the work in living cells, and the DNA sequences in genes spell out the instructions for making those proteins. The crucial job of reading the genetic instructions and synthesizing the specified proteins is carried out by ribosomes, tiny protein factories humming away inside the cells of all living things.
An unusual RNA structure in the SARS virus
Research on the genome of the virus that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) has revealed an unusual molecular structure that looks like a promising target for antiviral drugs. A team of scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, has determined the three-dimensional shape of this structure, an intricately twisted and folded segment of RNA. Their findings suggest that it may help the virus hijack the protein-building machinery of infected cells.
Breakthrough in cell-type analysis offers new ways to study development and disease
(PhysOrg.com) -- Like skilled assassins, many diseases seem to know exactly what types of cells to attack. While decimating one cadre of cells, diseases will inexplicably spare a seemingly identical group of neighbors. What makes cells vulnerable or not depends largely on the kinds and amounts of proteins they produce — their “translational profile,” in the lingo of molecular biology. For this reason, scientists have struggled to parse the subtle molecular differences among the hundreds of specialized cell types that are tangled together in tissues like the brain.
Breakthrough in cell-type analysis offers new ways to study development and disease
Like skilled assassins, many diseases seem to know exactly what types of cells to attack. While decimating one cadre of cells, diseases will inexplicably spare a seemingly identical group of neighbors. What makes cells vulnerable or not depends largely on the kinds and amounts of proteins they produce - their "translational profile," in the lingo of molecular biology. For this reason, scientists have struggled to parse the subtle molecular differences among the hundreds of specialized cell types that are tangled together in tissues like the brain.
Scientists trace extensive networks regulating alternative RNA splicing
RNA targets of tissue-specific splicing factors Fox-1 and Fox-2 are successfully predicted
Two professors at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) have succeeded in tracing intricate biochemical networks involving a class of proteins that enable genes to express themselves in specific tissues at particular moments in development.
Study shows more genes are controlled by biological clocks
The tick-tock of your biological clock may have just gotten a little louder. Researchers at the University of Georgia report that the number of genes under control of in living things than suspected only a few years ago. The biological clock in a much-studied model organism is dramatically higher than previously reported. The new study implies that the clock may be much more important.
Molecular sleuths track evolution through the ribosome
A new study of the ribosome, the cell's protein-building machinery, sheds light on the oldest branches of the evolutionary tree of life and suggests that differences in ribosomal structure between the three main branches of that tree are "molecular fossils" of the early evolution of protein synthesis.
[Home]
[Full version]