NMR study of eukaryotic translation termination

Translation termination is critical. Many diseases are caused by nonsense mutation. Hence, understanding termination could pave the way to strategic interference of the process with medical benefit. Unlike in bacteria, eukaryotic translation termination is more complex. Exact mechanism of stop codon...

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Main Author: Wong, Leo E
Other Authors: Konstantin Pervushin
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/54845
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-548452023-02-28T18:41:36Z NMR study of eukaryotic translation termination Wong, Leo E Konstantin Pervushin School of Biological Sciences DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences::Biochemistry Translation termination is critical. Many diseases are caused by nonsense mutation. Hence, understanding termination could pave the way to strategic interference of the process with medical benefit. Unlike in bacteria, eukaryotic translation termination is more complex. Exact mechanism of stop codon recognition by class I release factor eRF1 and the cooperative role of class II release factor eRF3 remain obscure. By solving the solution structures of both wild-type N-domain of human eRF1 exhibiting omnipotent specificity and its mutant with UGA-unipotency, we found the conserved GTS loop adopting alternate conformations. We propose that structural variability in the GTS loop may underline the switching between omnipotency and unipotency of eRF1. In addition, we showed the specific binding of a 15-mer RNA oligonucleotide mimicking the decoding region of 18S rRNA helix 44 to helix α1 of N-domain, on the interface that is shielded partially by C-domain in full-length eRF1. The 15-mer RNA displaces C-domain from the non-covalent NC-complex, suggesting an imperative domain rearrangement in eRF1 during which N-domain accommodates itself into ribosomal A site. On another hand, we also demonstrated the feasibility of targeted acquisition of NMR data that is dynamically controlled by the completeness of automatic backbone resonances assignment, in an effort to accelerate structural study of biomolecules by NMR spectroscopy. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (SBS) 2013-09-11T03:58:23Z 2013-09-11T03:58:23Z 2013 2013 Thesis Wong, L. E. (2013). NMR study of eukaryotic translation termination. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/54845 10.32657/10356/54845 en 136 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences::Biochemistry
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences::Biochemistry
Wong, Leo E
NMR study of eukaryotic translation termination
description Translation termination is critical. Many diseases are caused by nonsense mutation. Hence, understanding termination could pave the way to strategic interference of the process with medical benefit. Unlike in bacteria, eukaryotic translation termination is more complex. Exact mechanism of stop codon recognition by class I release factor eRF1 and the cooperative role of class II release factor eRF3 remain obscure. By solving the solution structures of both wild-type N-domain of human eRF1 exhibiting omnipotent specificity and its mutant with UGA-unipotency, we found the conserved GTS loop adopting alternate conformations. We propose that structural variability in the GTS loop may underline the switching between omnipotency and unipotency of eRF1. In addition, we showed the specific binding of a 15-mer RNA oligonucleotide mimicking the decoding region of 18S rRNA helix 44 to helix α1 of N-domain, on the interface that is shielded partially by C-domain in full-length eRF1. The 15-mer RNA displaces C-domain from the non-covalent NC-complex, suggesting an imperative domain rearrangement in eRF1 during which N-domain accommodates itself into ribosomal A site. On another hand, we also demonstrated the feasibility of targeted acquisition of NMR data that is dynamically controlled by the completeness of automatic backbone resonances assignment, in an effort to accelerate structural study of biomolecules by NMR spectroscopy.
author2 Konstantin Pervushin
author_facet Konstantin Pervushin
Wong, Leo E
format Theses and Dissertations
author Wong, Leo E
author_sort Wong, Leo E
title NMR study of eukaryotic translation termination
title_short NMR study of eukaryotic translation termination
title_full NMR study of eukaryotic translation termination
title_fullStr NMR study of eukaryotic translation termination
title_full_unstemmed NMR study of eukaryotic translation termination
title_sort nmr study of eukaryotic translation termination
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/54845
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