2LC8 image
Deposition Date 2011-04-26
Release Date 2011-11-23
Last Version Date 2024-05-15
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
2LC8
Keywords:
Title:
Solution structure of the MLV readthrough pseudoknot
Biological Source:
Source Organism:
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Conformers Calculated:
200
Conformers Submitted:
10
Selection Criteria:
structures with the least restraint violations
Macromolecular Entities
Polymer Type:polyribonucleotide
Molecule:RNA (56-MER)
Chain IDs:A
Chain Length:63
Number of Molecules:1
Biological Source:Moloney murine leukemia virus
Ligand Molecules
Primary Citation
An equilibrium-dependent retroviral mRNA switch regulates translational recoding
Nature 480 561 564 (2011)
PMID: 22121021 DOI: 10.1038/nature10657

Abstact

Most retroviruses require translational recoding of a viral messenger RNA stop codon to maintain a precise ratio of structural (Gag) and enzymatic (Pol) proteins during virus assembly. Pol is expressed exclusively as a Gag-Pol fusion either by ribosomal frameshifting or by read-through of the gag stop codon. Both of these mechanisms occur infrequently and only affect 5-10% of translating ribosomes, allowing the virus to maintain the critical Gag to Gag-Pol ratio. Although it is understood that the frequency of the recoding event is regulated by cis RNA motifs, no mechanistic explanation is currently available for how the critical protein ratio is maintained. Here we present the NMR structure of the murine leukaemia virus recoding signal and show that a protonation-dependent switch occurs to induce the active conformation. The equilibrium is such that at physiological pH the active, read-through permissive conformation is populated at approximately 6%: a level that correlates with in vivo protein quantities. The RNA functions by a highly sensitive, chemo-mechanical coupling tuned to ensure an optimal read-through frequency. Similar observations for a frameshifting signal indicate that this novel equilibrium-based mechanism may have a general role in translational recoding.

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Primary Citation of related structures