Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1259782 | Current Opinion in Chemical Biology | 2011 | 11 Pages |
Combined with the availability of highly purified, fluorescently labeled in vitro translation systems, the advent of single-molecule fluorescence imaging has ushered in a new era in high-resolution mechanistic studies of ribosome-catalyzed protein synthesis, or translation. Together with ensemble biochemical investigations of translation and structural studies of functional ribosomal complexes, in vitro single-molecule fluorescence imaging of protein synthesis is providing unique mechanistic insight into this fundamental biological process. More recently, rapidly evolving breakthroughs in fluorescence-based molecular imaging in live cells with sub-diffraction-limit spatial resolution and ever-increasing temporal resolution provide great promise for conducting mechanistic studies of translation and its regulation in living cells. Here we review the remarkable recent progress that has been made in these fields, highlight important mechanistic insights that have been gleaned from these studies thus far, and discuss what we envision lies ahead as these approaches continue to evolve and expand to address increasingly complex mechanistic and regulatory aspects of translation.
► We review recent advances in single-molecule fluorescence imaging of protein synthesis. ► In vitro studies are providing unique insights into the mechanism of protein synthesis. ► Individual steps of the protein synthesis process are being investigated in great detail. ► The most recent advances enable in vivo imaging of ribosomes and protein synthesis. ► In vivo studies are tracking ribosomes with unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution.