A functional connection between translation elongation and protein folding at the ribosome exit tunnel in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Author:

Rodríguez-Galán Olga12,García-Gómez Juan J12,Rosado Iván V12ORCID,Wei Wu34,Méndez-Godoy Alfonso5,Pillet Benjamin5,Alekseenko Alisa6,Steinmetz Lars M378,Pelechano Vicent6ORCID,Kressler Dieter5,de la Cruz Jesús12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Instituto de Biomedicina de Sevilla (IBiS), Hospital Universitario Virgen del Rocío/CSIC/Universidad de Sevilla, Seville, Spain

2. Departamento de Genética, Universidad de Sevilla, Seville, Spain

3. Stanford Genome Technology Center, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, USA

4. CAS Key Lab of Computational Biology, CAS-MPG Partner Institute for Computational Biology, Shanghai Institute of Nutrition and Health, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China

5. Unit of Biochemistry, Department of Biology, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland

6. SciLifeLab, Department of Microbiology, Tumor and Cell Biology. Karolinska Institutet, Solna, Sweden

7. European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), Genome Biology Unit, Heidelberg, Germany

8. Department of Genetics, School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Proteostasis needs to be tightly controlled to meet the cellular demand for correctly de novo folded proteins and to avoid protein aggregation. While a coupling between translation rate and co-translational folding, likely involving an interplay between the ribosome and its associated chaperones, clearly appears to exist, the underlying mechanisms and the contribution of ribosomal proteins remain to be explored. The ribosomal protein uL3 contains a long internal loop whose tip region is in close proximity to the ribosomal peptidyl transferase center. Intriguingly, the rpl3[W255C] allele, in which the residue making the closest contact to this catalytic site is mutated, affects diverse aspects of ribosome biogenesis and function. Here, we have uncovered, by performing a synthetic lethal screen with this allele, an unexpected link between translation and the folding of nascent proteins by the ribosome-associated Ssb-RAC chaperone system. Our results reveal that uL3 and Ssb-RAC cooperate to prevent 80S ribosomes from piling up within the 5′ region of mRNAs early on during translation elongation. Together, our study provides compelling in vivo evidence for a functional connection between peptide bond formation at the peptidyl transferase center and chaperone-assisted de novo folding of nascent polypeptides at the solvent-side of the peptide exit tunnel.

Funder

Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness

European Regional Development Fund

Swiss National Science Foundation

Ragnar Söderberg Foundation

Swedish Research Council

Wallenberg Academy

Karolinska Institutet

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Institutes of Health

German Research Foundation

European Research Council

MINECO

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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