Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5913863 | Journal of Structural Biology | 2015 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Translation elongation factor EF-Tu belongs to the superfamily of guanine-nucleotide binding proteins, which play key cellular roles as regulatory switches. All G-proteins require activation via exchange of GDP for GTP to carry out their respective tasks. Often, guanine-nucleotide exchange factors are essential to this process. During translation, EF-Tu:GTP transports aminoacylated tRNA to the ribosome. GTP is hydrolyzed during this process, and subsequent reactivation of EF-Tu is catalyzed by EF-Ts. The reaction path of guanine-nucleotide exchange is structurally poorly defined for EF-Tu and EF-Ts. We have determined the crystal structures of the following reaction intermediates: two structures of EF-Tu:GDP:EF-Ts (2.2 and 1.8Â Ã
resolution), EF-Tu:PO4:EF-Ts (1.9Â Ã
resolution), EF-Tu:GDPNP:EF-Ts (2.2Â Ã
resolution) and EF-Tu:GDPNP:pulvomycin:Mg2+:EF-Ts (3.5Â Ã
resolution). These structures provide snapshots throughout the entire exchange reaction and suggest a mechanism for the release of EF-Tu in its GTP conformation. An inferred sequence of events during the exchange reaction is presented.
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Authors
Søren S. Thirup, Lan Bich Van, Tine K. Nielsen, Charlotte R. Knudsen,