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Ribosome recycling orchestrated by ABCE1 is a fundamental process in protein translation and mRNA surveillance, connecting termination with initiation. Beyond the plenitude of well-studied translational GTPases, ABCE1 is the only essential factor energized by ATP, delivering the energy for ribosome splitting via two nucleotide-binding sites by a yet unknown mechanism. Here, we define how allosterically coupled ATP binding and hydrolysis events in ABCE1 empower ribosome recycling. ATP occlusion in the low-turnover control site II promotes formation of the pre-splitting complex and facilitates ATP engagement in the high-turnover site I, which in turn drives the structural reorganization required for ribosome splitting. ATP hydrolysis and ensuing release of ABCE1 from the small subunit terminate the post-splitting complex. Thus, ABCE1 runs through an allosterically coupled cycle of closure and opening at both sites, consistent with a processive clamp model. This study delineates the inner mechanics of ABCE1 and reveals why various ABCE1 mutants lead to defects in cell homeostasis, growth, and differentiation.
Ribosome recycling orchestrated by the ATP binding cassette (ABC) protein ABCE1 can be considered as the final—or the first—step within the cyclic process of protein synthesis, connecting translation termination and mRNA surveillance with re-initiation. An ATP-dependent tweezer-like motion of the nucleotide-binding domains in ABCE1 transfers mechanical energy to the ribosome and tears the ribosome subunits apart. The post-recycling complex (PRC) then re-initiates mRNA translation. Here, we probed the so far unknown architecture of the 1-MDa PRC (40S/30S·ABCE1) by chemical cross-linking and mass spectrometry (XL-MS). Our study reveals ABCE1 bound to the translational factor-binding (GTPase) site with multiple cross-link contacts of the helix–loop–helix motif to the S24e ribosomal protein. Cross-linking of the FeS cluster domain to the ribosomal protein S12 substantiates an extreme lever-arm movement of the FeS cluster domain during ribosome recycling. We were thus able to reconstitute and structurally analyse a key complex in the translational cycle, resembling the link between translation initiation and ribosome recycling.
Translation is a universal process in all kingdoms of life and organized in a cycle that requires ribosomal subunits (40S and 60S), messenger RNA (mRNA), aminoacylated transfer RNAs (tRNAs), and a myriad of regulatory factors. As soon as translation reaches a stop codon or stalls, a termination or surveillance process is launched via release factors eRF1 or Pelota (Dom34), respectively. The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) protein ABCE1 interacts with release factors at the ribosomal A-site and coordinates the recycling process in Eukarya and Archaea. Two asymmetric nucleotide-binding sites (NBSs) control and execute the ribosome splitting upon dimerization and closure of the two nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs).
Ribosome nascent chain complexes (RNCs), ABCE1, and Dom34 from S. cerevisiae were produced for the reconstitution of splitting assays in order to probe for ABCE1’s actions in the splitting process with its native substrate. Translating ribosomes were stalled in vivo in a no-go situation on truncated mRNAs by a 3´-ribozyme motif that generates truncated mRNAs. The initiated decay mechanisms were circumvented by genomic deletion of the release factor Dom34 (Pelota) of the no-go decay machinery. The mRNA coded for an N terminal affinity purification tag (His-tag) and the green fluorescent protein (GFP) as a reporter of the translated nascent chain in the ribosomal complexes. RNCs were successfully in vivo stalled, enriched, and purified. In native gels, the reconstituted splitting experiments were analyzed by separation of RNCs, ribosomal subunits, and nascent chain-tRNA complexes based on the fluorescence readout of the GFP reporter. In addition, the anti-association factor eIF6 was added in the splitting reaction because it blocks the immediate re-association of ribosomal subunits after splitting. The anti-association activity of eIF6 was probed by an anti-/re-association assay, in which ribosomes are anti-associated by high salt and low magnesium conditions and in a second step re-associated. The re-association can be blocked by binding of eIF6 and other anti-associating factors to the ribosomal intersubunit sites. This approach allowed for the discovery of an anti-association activity of ABCE1 that was dependent on the non-hydrolysable ATP analog AMP-PNP. In addition, the formed complex between 40S and ABCE1 represented formally a post-splitting intermediate.
In collaboration with the Beckmann lab, the structure of the post-splitting complex was reconstructed at 3.9 Å. The ABC system of ABCE1 is fully closed and its N-terminal iron-sulfur (FeS) cluster domain is rotated by 150-degree to a cleft at helix 44 and uS12. The FeS cluster domain is stabilized by interactions of Pro30 to uS12, Arg7 to helix 5, and the cantilever arm that links it to NBD1. Tyr301 of NBD1 stabilizes the FeS cluster domain in the rotated position by interaction to the backbone of the cantilever arm. Upon transition to the post-splitting state, the FeS cluster domain must clash with the release factor and push it in between the ribosomal subunits like a wedge and split the ribosome. In addition, in the post-splitting state, the FeS cluster domain would putatively clash with uL14 of the large ribosomal subunit, and this is the structural explanation for the anti-association effect of ABCE1. In Archaea, a similar conformation of the post-splitting complex was reconstructed in collaboration with the Beck and Beckmann labs and Kristin Kiosze-Becker and Elina Nürenberg-Goloub. Based on the high-resolution structure of the post-splitting complex, the post-splitting state of ABCE1 was identified in the 43S initiation complex 40S–ABCE1–tRNA–eIF2–eIF3. Subsequently, we proposed the post-splitting complex as a platform for initiation.
In the quest to elucidate conformational dynamics of ABCE1, a reconstituted system was established to study conformational dynamics in real-time. Single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer (smFRET) was used for the relative distance detection between a donor and acceptor fluorophore. A cysteine-less ABCE1 variant was engineered with additional cysteines for fluorescent labeling by thiol-maleimide-coupling. In collaboration with Philipp Höllthaler, the double-cysteine variants were labeled for smFRET studies and alternating-laser excitation (ALEX) smFRET measurements were performed with ABCE1 and the small ribosomal subunit. ABCE1’s nucleotide-dependent NBD dimerization and FeS cluster domain rotation was determined in real-time. Finally, a higher opening and closing frequency of the NBDs was discovered than the determined ATPase rate. This observation could be explained by the hypothesis of elastic dimerization that is not immediately connected to ATP hydrolysis.