Understanding the initiation of protein synthesis in mammals

(麻豆淫院) 鈥擯rotein synthesis, the process by which cells generate new proteins, is the most important cellular function, requiring more than 70 percent of the total energy of a cell. The initiation of this process is the most regulated and most critical component, but it is still the least understood.
Research by Ivan Lomakin and Thomas Steitz of Yale University has unlocked the genetic scanning mechanism that begins this crucial piece of cell machinery.
They determined the structures of three complexes of the ribosome, a complex molecular machine that links together amino acids to form proteins according to an order specified by messenger RNA. These three structures represent distinct steps in protein translation in mammals 鈥 the recruitment and scanning of mRNA, the selection of initiator tRNA, and the joining of large and small ribosomal subunits.
"Any small defect or disruption in the protein synthesis process can cause abnormalities or disease," said Lomakin. "Understanding this process is critical for understanding how human life comes to be, and how some over-expressions or abnormalities in the initiation of protein synthesis may be connected to cancer or Alzheimer's or other diseases."
Using x-ray crystallography on ribosomal subunits purified from rabbit cells, they were able to determine the positions and roles of the different pieces of cellular machinery, a bit like creating a playbook for a football game. They found that the tRNA and mRNA compete for position at the P site 鈥 one of three key sites on a ribosome 鈥 where short chains of amino acids are linked to form proteins.
"Now, we have a low resolution structure, so we can't yet talk about atomic details of the mechanism," said Lomakin. "The next important step is to get higher resolution images. And we can change organisms to see if they behave differently, so we're working on the structure of human ribosome initiation complexes, too."
For this higher resolution, Lomakin and his collaborators will use the National Synchrotron Light Source II, a new state-of-the-art light source that will begin early science at Brookhaven National Laboratory in 2014. "Our hope is to be able to look at very weak diffraction to get higher resolution structures of these important cellular mechanisms."
More information: "The initiation of mammalian protein synthesis and mRNA scanning mechanism." Ivan B. Lomakin & Thomas A. Steitz. Nature 500, 307鈥311 (15 August 2013) . Received 11 March 2013 Accepted 07 June 2013 Published online 21 July 2013
Journal information: Nature
Provided by Brookhaven National Laboratory