Folding of VemP into translation-arresting secondary structure is driven by the ribosome exit tunnel

Author:

Kolář Michal H12ORCID,Nagy Gabor1,Kunkel John3,Vaiana Sara M3,Bock Lars V1,Grubmüller Helmut1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Theoretical and Computational Biophysics, Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences, Am Fassberg 11, 370 77 Göttingen, Germany

2. Department of Physical Chemistry, University of Chemistry and Technology in Prague, Technická 5, 166 28 Prague, Czech Republic

3. Department of Physics and Center for Biological Physics, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA

Abstract

Abstract The ribosome is a fundamental biomolecular complex that synthesizes proteins in cells. Nascent proteins emerge from the ribosome through a tunnel, where they may interact with the tunnel walls or small molecules such as antibiotics. These interactions can cause translational arrest with notable physiological consequences. Here, we studied the arrest caused by the regulatory peptide VemP, which is known to form α-helices inside the ribosome tunnel near the peptidyl transferase center under specific conditions. We used all-atom molecular dynamics simulations of the entire ribosome and circular dichroism spectroscopy to study the driving forces of helix formation and how VemP causes the translational arrest. To that aim, we compared VemP dynamics in the ribosome tunnel with its dynamics in solution. We show that the VemP peptide has a low helical propensity in water and that the propensity is higher in mixtures of water and trifluorethanol. We propose that helix formation within the ribosome is driven by the interactions of VemP with the tunnel and that a part of VemP acts as an anchor. This anchor might slow down VemP progression through the tunnel enabling α-helix formation, which causes the elongation arrest.

Funder

Czech Science Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Leibniz Supercomputing Center

Max Planck Computing and Data Facility

The Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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