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A fully orthogonal system for protein synthesis in bacterial cells

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posted on 2021-04-28, 17:19 authored by NA Aleksashin, T Szal, AE d’Aquino, MC Jewett, N Vázquez-Laslop, Alexander MankinAlexander Mankin
Ribosome engineering is a powerful approach for expanding the catalytic potential of the protein synthesis apparatus. Due to the potential detriment the properties of the engineered ribosome may have on the cell, the designer ribosome needs to be functionally isolated from the translation machinery synthesizing cellular proteins. One solution to this problem was offered by Ribo-T, an engineered ribosome with tethered subunits which, while producing a desired protein, could be excluded from general translation. Here, we provide a conceptually different design of a cell with two orthogonal protein synthesis systems, where Ribo-T produces the proteome, while the dissociable ribosome is committed to the translation of a specific mRNA. The utility of this system is illustrated by generating a comprehensive collection of mutants with alterations at every rRNA nucleotide of the peptidyl transferase center and isolating gain-of-function variants that enable the ribosome to overcome the translation termination blockage imposed by an arrest peptide.

Funding

Specific Interactions of the Ribosome with the Nascent Peptide

Directorate for Biological Sciences

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Unraveling context specificity of translation by elucidating the mechanism of action of auxiliary translation factors

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

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History

Citation

Aleksashin, N. A., Szal, T., d’Aquino, A. E., Jewett, M. C., Vázquez-Laslop, N.Mankin, A. S. (2020). A fully orthogonal system for protein synthesis in bacterial cells. Nature Communications, 11(1), 1858-. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15756-1

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Language

  • en

issn

2041-1723