Eukaryotic ribosome (80S)
s are a large and complex molecular machine that catalyzes the synthesis of proteins, referred to as translation. The ribosome selects aminoacylated transfer RNAs based on the sequence of a protein-encoding messenger RNA and covalently links the amino acids into a polypeptide chain.
Ribosomes from all organisms share a highly conserved catalytic center. However, the ribosomes of eukaryotes are much larger than prokaryotic ribosomes and subject to more complex regulation and biogenesis pathways.
Eukaryotic ribosomes are also known as 80S ribosomes, referring to their sedimentation coefficients in Svedberg units, because they sediment faster than the prokaryotic ribosomes. Eukaryotic ribosomes have two unequal subunits, designated small subunit and large subunit according to their sedimentation coefficients. Both subunits contain dozens of ribosomal proteins arranged on a scaffold composed of ribosomal RNA. The small subunit monitors the complementarity between tRNA anticodon and mRNA, while the large subunit catalyzes peptide bond formation.
Composition
Compared to their prokaryotic homologs, many of the eukaryotic ribosomal proteins are enlarged by insertions or extensions to the conserved core. Furthermore, several additional proteins are found in the small and large subunits of eukaryotic ribosomes, which do not have prokaryotic homologs.The 40S subunit contains a 18S ribosomal RNA, which is homologous to the prokaryotic 16S rRNA. The 60S subunit contains a 28S rRNA that is homologous to the prokaryotic 23S ribosomal RNA. In addition, it contains a 5.8S rRNA that corresponds to the 5' end of the 23S rRNA, and a short 5S rRNA.
Both 18S and 28S have multiple insertions to the core rRNA fold of their prokaryotic counterparts, which are called expansion segments. For a detailed list of proteins, including archaeal and bacterial homologs please refer to the separate articles on the 40S and 60S subunits. Recent research suggests heterogeneity in the ribosomal composition, i.e., that the stoichiometry among core ribosomal proteins in wild-type yeast cells and embryonic stem cells depends both on the growth conditions and on the number of ribosomes bound per mRNA.
Eukaryotic | Bacterial | ||
Ribosome | Sedimentation coefficient | 80 S | 70 S |
Ribosome | Molecular mass | ~3.2×106 Da | ~2.0×106 Da |
Ribosome | Diameter | ~250–300 Å | ~200 Å |
Large subunit | Sedimentation coefficient | 60 S | 50 S |
Large subunit | Molecular mass | ~2.0×106 Da | ~1.3×106 Da |
Large subunit | Proteins | 47 | 33 |
Large subunit | rRNAs |
| |
Small subunit | Sedimentation coefficient | 40 S | 30 S |
Small subunit | Molecular mass | ~1.2×106 Da | ~0.7×106 Da |
Small subunit | Proteins | 32 | 20 |
Small subunit | rRNAs |
Structure determination
Initial structures of eukaryotic ribosomes were determined by electron microscopy.First 3D structures were obtained at 30–40 Å resolution for yeast
and mammalian ribosomes.
Higher resolution structures of the yeast ribosome by cryo-electron microscopy allowed the identification of protein and RNA structural elements.
More recently structures at sub-nanometer resolution were obtained for complexes of ribosomes and factors involved in translation.
After the determination of the first bacterial
and archaeal
ribosome structures at atomic resolution in the 1990s, it took another decade until in 2011, high resolution structures of eukaryotic ribosome were obtained by X-ray crystallography, mainly because of the difficulties in obtaining crystals of sufficient quality.
The complete structure of a eukaryotic 40S ribosomal structure in Tetrahymena thermophila was published and described, as well as much about the 40S subunit's interaction with eIF1 during translation initiation. The eukaryotic 60S subunit structure was also determined from T. thermophila in complex with eIF6. The complete structure of the eukaryotic 80S ribosome from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was obtained by crystallography at 3.0 A resolution. These structures reveal the precise architecture of eukaryote-specific elements, their interaction with the universally conserved core, and all eukaryote-specific bridges between the two ribosomal subunits.
Atomic coordinates and structure factors of the eukaryotic ribosome have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank under the following accession codes:
Complex | Source Organism | Resolution | PDB Identifier |
80S:Stm1 | S. cerevisiae | 3.0 Å | * * * |
40S:eIF1 | T. thermophila | 3.9 Å | |
60S:eIF6 | T. thermophila | 3.5 Å | * |
Architecture
General features
Some general architectural features of the ribosome are conserved across kingdoms: The structure of the small subunit can be sub-divided into two large segments, the head and the body. Characteristic features of the body include the left and right feet, the shoulder and the platform. The head features a pointed protrusion reminiscent of a bird's beak. In the characteristic "crown view" of the large subunit, structural landmarks include the central protuberance, the L1-stalk and the P-stalk.The majority of the eukaryote-specific RNA and protein elements are found on the solvent-exposed sides of the 40S and 60S subunits. The subunit interface, as well as important functional regions such as the peptidyl transferase center and the decoding site are mostly conserved, with some differences observed in the surrounding regions. In stark contrast to prokaryotic ribosomal proteins, which interact primarily with RNA, the eukaryote-specific protein segments engage in a multitude of protein-protein interactions. Long distance interactions are mediated by eukaryote-specific helical extensions of ribosomal proteins, and several eukaryotic ribosomal proteins jointly to form inter-protein beta-sheets.
The ribosomal RNA core is represented as a grey tube, expansion segments are shown in red. Universally conserved proteins are shown in blue. These proteins have homologs in eukaryotes, archaea and bacteria. Proteins Shared only between eukaryotes and archaea are shown in orange, and proteins specific to eukaryotes are shown in red.
Co-evolution of rRNA and proteins
The structure of the 40S subunit revealed that the eukaryote-specific proteins, as well as numerous eukaryote-specific extensions of proteins, are located on the solvent-exposed side of the small subunit. Here, they participate in the stabilization of rRNA expansion segments. Moreover, the beak of the 40S subunit is remodeled, as rRNA has been replaced by proteins rpS10 and rpS12.As observed for the 40S subunit, all eukaryote-specific proteins of the 60S subunit and many extensions are located at the solvent-exposed side, forming an intricate network of interactions with eukaryotic-specific RNA expansion segments. RPL6, RPL27 and RPL29 mediate contacts between the ES sets ES7–ES39, ES31–ES20–ES26 and ES9–ES12, respectively and RPL28 stabilized expansion segment ES7A.