Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1941747 | Biochemistry and Biophysics Reports | 2016 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
It has been characterized that the programmed ribosomal â1 frameshifting often occurs at the slippery sequence on the presence of a downstream mRNA pseudoknot. In some prokaryotic cases such as the dnaX gene of Escherichia coli, an additional stimulatory signal-an upstream, internal Shine-Dalgarno (SD) sequence-is also necessary to stimulate the efficient â1 frameshifting. However, the molecular and physical mechanism of the â1 frameshifting is poorly understood. Here, we propose a model of the pathway of the â1 translational frameshifting during ribosome translation of the dnaX â1 frameshift mRNA. With the model, the single-molecule fluorescence data (Chen et al. (2014) [29]) on the dynamics of the shunt either to long pausing or to normal translation, the tRNA transit and sampling dynamics in the long-paused rotated state, the EF-G sampling dynamics, the mean rotated-state lifetimes, etc., are explained quantitatively. Moreover, the model is also consistent with the experimental data (Yan et al. (2015) [30]) on translocation excursions and broad branching of frameshifting pathways. In addition, we present some predicted results, which can be easily tested by future optical trapping experiments.
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Authors
Ping Xie,