BALTIMORE, Jan. 7 (AScribe Newswire) -- The enzyme machine that translates a cell's DNA code into the proteins of life
is nothing if not an editorial perfectionist.
Johns Hopkins researchers, reporting this week in Nature, have discovered a new proofreading step
during which the
suite of translational tools called the ribosome recognizes errors, just after making them, and definitively responds by hitting
its version of a delete
button.
It turns out, the Johns Hopkins researchers say, that the ribosome exerts far tighter quality control than anyone ever
suspected over its precious protein products which, as workhorses of the cell, carry out the very business of life.
What we now know is that in the event of miscoding, the ribosome cuts the bond and aborts the protein-in-progress, end
of story,
says Rachel Green, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator and professor of molecular biology and genetics
in the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. There's no second chance.
Previously, Green says, molecular biologists thought the ribosome tightly managed its actions only prior to the actual
incorporation of the next building block by being super-selective about which chemical ingredients it allows to enter the
process.
Because a protein's chemical shape
dictates its function, mistakes in translating assembly codes can be toxic to
cells, resulting in the misfolding of proteins often associated with neurodegenerative conditions. Working with bacterial
ribosomes, Green and her team watched them react to lab-induced chemical errors and were surprised to see that the protein-manufacturing
process didn't proceed as usual, getting past the error and continuing its walk
along the DNA's protein-encoding genetic
messages.
We thought that once the mistake was made, it would have just gone on to make the next bond and the next,
Green says.
But instead, we noticed that one mistake on the ribosomal assembly line begets another, and it's this compounding of errors
that leads to the partially finished protein being tossed into the cellular trash,
she adds.
To their further surprise, the ribosome lets go of error-laden proteins 10,000 times faster than it would normally release
error-free proteins, a rate of destruction that Green says is shocking
and reveals just how much of a stickler the
ribosome is about high-fidelity protein synthesis.
These are not subtle numbers,
she says, noting that there's a clear biological cost for this ribosomal editing and
jettisoning of errors, but a necessary expense.
The cell is a wasteful system in that it makes something and then says, forget it, throw it out,
Green concedes. But
it's evidently worth the waste to increase fidelity. There are places in life where fidelity matters.
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health with support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
In addition to Rachel Green, Hani S. Zaher, also of Johns Hopkins, was author of the paper.
On the Web:
http://pmcb.jhu.edu/old/old-faculty/green.html
http://www.nature.com
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CONTACTS: Johns Hopkins Medicine Media Relations and Public Affairs - Maryalice Yakutchik, 443-287-2251, myakutc1@jhmi.edu;
or Audrey Huang, 410-614-5105, audrey@jhmi.edu
NOTE TO EDITORS: An graphic of a ribosome is available at: http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2009/images/ribosome.ppt