The landscape of translational stall sites in bacteria revealed by monosome and disome profiling
- Tomoya Fujita1,
- Takeshi Yokoyama2,
- Mikako Shirouzu3,
- Hideki Taguchi1,
- Takuhiro Ito4 and
- Shintaro Iwasaki5,6
- 1 School of Life Science and Technology, Tokyo Institute of Technology;
- 2 Laboratory for Protein Functional and Structural Biology, RIKEN Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research;
- 3 Laboratory for Protein Functional and Structural Biology, RIKEN Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research,;
- 4 Laboratory for Translation Structural Biology, RIKEN Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research;
- 5 RNA Systems Biochemistry Laboratory, RIKEN Cluster for Pioneering Research
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: shintaro.iwasaki{at}riken.jp
Abstract
Ribosome pauses are associated with various cotranslational events and determine the fate of mRNAs and proteins. Thus, the identification of precise pause sites across the transcriptome is desirable; however, the landscape of ribosome pauses in bacteria remains ambiguous. Here, we harness monosome and disome (or collided ribosome) profiling strategies to survey ribosome pause sites in Escherichia coli. Compared to eukaryotes, ribosome collisions in bacteria showed remarkable differences: a low frequency of disomes at stop codons, collisions occurring immediately after 70S assembly on start codons, and shorter queues of ribosomes trailing upstream. The pause sites corresponded with the biochemical validation by integrated nascent chain profiling (iNP) to detect polypeptidyl-tRNA, an elongation intermediate. Moreover, the subset of those sites showed puromycin resistance, presenting slow peptidyl transfer. Among the identified sites, the ribosome pause at Asn586 of ycbZ was validated by biochemical reporter assay, tRNA sequencing (tRNA-Seq), and cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) experiments. Our results provide a useful resource for ribosome stalling sites in bacteria
Keywords
- Received November 17, 2020.
- Accepted November 24, 2021.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the RNA Society
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