Abstract
AbstractStructural biology performed inside cells can capture molecular machines in action within their native context. Here we develop an integrative in-cell structural approach using the genome-reduced human pathogen Mycoplasma pneumoniae. We combine whole-cell crosslinking mass spectrometry, cellular cryo-electron tomography, and integrative modeling to determine an in-cell architecture of a transcribing and translating expressome at sub-nanometer resolution. The expressome comprises RNA polymerase (RNAP), the ribosome, and the transcription elongation factors NusG and NusA. We pinpoint NusA at the interface between a NusG-bound elongating RNAP and the ribosome, and propose it could mediate transcription-translation coupling. Translation inhibition dissociates the expressome, whereas transcription inhibition stalls and rearranges it, demonstrating that the active expressome architecture requires both translation and transcription elongation within the cell.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
11 articles.
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