Artículos de revistas
Capturing Transition Paths and Transition States for Conformational Rearrangements in the Ribosome
Date
2014-12-16Registration in:
Biophysical Journal. Cambridge: Cell Press, v. 107, n. 12, p. 2872-2881, 2014.
0006-3495
10.1016/j.bpj.2014.10.022
WOS:000346434200018
1518826294347383
0500034174785796
Author
Rice Univ
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Northeastern Univ
Institutions
Abstract
To reveal the molecular determinants of biological function, one seeks to characterize the interactions that are formed in conformational and chemical transition states. In other words, what interactions govern the molecule's energy landscape? To accomplish this, it is necessary to determine which degrees of freedom can unambiguously identify each transition state. Here, we perform simulations of large-scale aminoacyl-transfer RNA ( aa-tRNA) rearrangements during accommodation on the ribosome and project the dynamics along experimentally accessible atomic distances. From this analysis, we obtain evidence for which coordinates capture the correct number of barrier-crossing events and accurately indicate when the aa-tRNA is on a transition path. Although a commonly used coordinate in single-molecule experiments performs poorly, this study implicates alternative coordinates along which rearrangements are accurately described as diffusive movements across a one-dimensional free-energy profile. From this, we provide the theoretical foundation required for single-molecule techniques to uncover the energy landscape governing aa-tRNA selection by the ribosome.