Publication | Closed Access
Instruction of Translating Ribosome by Nascent Peptide
235
Citations
22
References
2002
Year
Tryptophanase OperonInduction SiteProtein ExpressionBiochemistryProtein FoldingNatural SciencesProtein BiosynthesisMolecular BiologyNascent PeptideEscherichia ColiPeptide SynthesisProtein EngineeringMolecular MicrobiologyMedicineStructural BiologyProtein Synthesis
Expression of the tryptophanase operon of Escherichia coli is regulated by catabolite repression and tryptophan-induced transcription antitermination. An induction site activated by l -tryptophan is created in the translating ribosome during synthesis of TnaC, the 24-residue leader peptide. Replacing the tnaC stop codon with a tryptophan codon allows tryptophan-charged tryptophan transfer RNA to substitute for tryptophan as inducer. This suggests that the ribosomal A site occupied by the tryptophanyl moiety of the charged transfer RNA is the site of induction. The location of tryptophan-12 of nascent TnaC in the peptide exit tunnel was crucial for induction. These results show that a nascent peptide sequence can influence translation continuation and termination within a translating ribosome.
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