Affiliation:
1. Life Sciences Institute, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China
Abstract
Abstract
The ribosome is an ancient and universally conserved macromolecular machine that synthesizes proteins in all organisms. Since the discovery of the ribosome by electron microscopy in the mid-1950s, rapid progress has been made in research on it, regarding its architecture and functions. As a machine that synthesizes polypeptides, the sequential addition of amino acids to a growing polypeptide chain occurs during a phase called the elongation cycle. This is the core step of protein translation and is highly conserved between bacteria and eukarya. The elongation cycle involves codon recognition by aminoacyl tRNAs, catalysis of peptide bond formation, and the most complex operation of translation—translocation. In this review, we discuss the fundamental results from structural and functional studies over the past decades that have led to understanding of the three key questions underlying translation.
Funder
Thousand Young Talents Plan of China
New Faculty Start-up Funds from Zhejiang University
Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
Zhejiang Natural Science Foundation
Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
China Science Publishing & Media Ltd.
Subject
General Medicine,Biochemistry,Biophysics
Cited by
4 articles.
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