Publication | Open Access
Defects in the Assembly of Ribosomes Selected for β-Amino Acid Incorporation
27
Citations
77
References
2019
Year
Ribosome engineering has emerged as a promising field in synthetic biology, particularly concerning the production of new sequence-defined polymers. Mutant ribosomes have been developed that improve the incorporation of several nonstandard monomers including d-amino acids, dipeptides, and β-amino acids into polypeptide chains. However, there remains little mechanistic understanding of how these ribosomes catalyze incorporation of these new substrates. Here, we probed the properties of a mutant ribosome-P7A7-evolved for better <i>in vivo</i> β-amino acid incorporation through <i>in vitro</i> biochemistry and cryo-electron microscopy. Although P7A7 is a functional ribosome <i>in vivo</i>, it is inactive <i>in vitro</i>, and assembles poorly into 70S ribosome complexes. Structural characterization revealed large regions of disorder in the peptidyltransferase center and nearby features, suggesting a defect in assembly. Comparison of RNA helix and ribosomal protein occupancy with other assembly intermediates revealed that P7A7 is stalled at a late stage in ribosome assembly, explaining its weak activity. These results highlight the importance of ensuring efficient ribosome assembly during ribosome engineering toward new catalytic abilities.
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