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Amicoumacin A Inhibits Translation by Stabilizing mRNA Interaction with the Ribosome
ISSN
1097-2765
Date Issued
2014
Author(s)
Polikanov, Yury S.
Osterman, Ilya A.
Szal, Teresa
Tashlitsky, Vadim N.
Serebryakova, Marina V.
Kusochek, Pavel
Bulkley, David
Malanicheva, Irina A.
Efimenko, Tatyana A.
Efremenkova, Olga V.
Shaw, Karen J.
Bogdanov, Alexey A.
Dontsova, Olga A.
Mankin, Alexander S.
Steitz, Thomas A.
Sergiev, Petr V.
DOI
10.1016/j.molcel.2014.09.020
Abstract
We demonstrate that the antibiotic amicoumacin A (AMI) is a potent inhibitor of protein synthesis. Resistance mutations in helix 24 of the 16S rRNA mapped the AMI binding site to the small ribosomal subunit. The crystal structure of bacterial ribosome in complex with AMI solved at 2.4 angstrom resolution revealed that the antibiotic makes contacts with universally conserved nucleotides of 16S rRNA in the E site and the mRNA backbone. Simultaneous interactions of AMI with 16S rRNA and mRNA and the in vivo experimental evidence suggest that it may inhibit the progression of the ribosome along mRNA. Consistent with this proposal, binding of AMI interferes with translocation in vitro. The inhibitory action of AMI can be partly compensated by mutations in the translation elongation factor G.