Multiplication of Ribosomal P-Stalk Proteins Contributes to the Fidelity of Translation
Author(s) -
Leszek Wawiórka,
Eliza Molestak,
Monika Szajwaj,
Barbara MichalecWawiórka,
Mateusz Mołoń,
Lidia Borkiewicz,
Przemysław Grela,
Aleksandra Boguszewska,
Marek Tchórzewski
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.00060-17
Subject(s) - biology , gtpase , ribosome , translation (biology) , protein biosynthesis , microbiology and biotechnology , ribosomal protein , proteome , elongation factor , eukaryotic ribosome , biochemistry , rna , messenger rna , gene
The P-stalk represents a vital element within the ribosomal GTPase-associated center, which represents a landing platform for translational GTPases. The eukaryotic P-stalk exists as a uL10-(P1-P2)2 pentameric complex, which contains five identical C-terminal domains, one within each protein, and the presence of only one such element is sufficient to stimulate factor-dependent GTP hydrolysisin vitro and to sustain cell viability. The functional contribution of the P-stalk to the performance of the translational machineryin vivo , especially the role of P-protein multiplication, has never been explored. Here, we show that ribosomes depleted of P1/P2 proteins exhibit reduced translation fidelity at elongation and termination steps. The elevated rate of the decoding error is inversely correlated with the number of the P-proteins present on the ribosome. Unexpectedly, the lack of P1/P2 has little effectin vivo on the efficiency of other translational GTPase (trGTPase)-dependent steps of protein synthesis, including translocation. We have shown that loss of accuracy of decoding caused by P1/P2 depletion is the major cause of translation slowdown, which in turn affects the metabolic fitness of the yeast cell. We postulate that the multiplication of P-proteins is functionally coupled with the qualitative aspect of ribosome action, i.e., the recoding phenomenon shaping the cellular proteome.
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