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Chloroplast-encoded small subunit extensions reshape the Chlamydomonas chlororibosome
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Chloroplast ribosomes (chlororibosomes) synthesize the core protein components of the photosynthetic apparatus, yet their structural diversity outside flowering plants remains largely unexplored. Here, we combine in situ cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) with single-particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) to determine the structure of the chlororibosome from the unicellular green alga
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
. Subtomogram averaging of chlororibosomes in their native environment, resolved to ∼5 Å resolution and in distinct translational states, reveals particles both free in the stroma and loosely tethered to thylakoid membranes. These
in situ
reconstructions uncover an additional “arm” domain on the small subunit. High-resolution single-particle reconstruction of isolated chlororibosomes to ∼2.5 Å, in states bound either to the inhibitory translation factor pY or to a nascent chain-linked P-site tRNA, reveals that this domain is built primarily from extensive chloroplast-encoded insertions and extensions of conserved small subunit proteins, supported by chlororibosome-specific ribosomal proteins. The arm domain is located around the mRNA entry and exit channels, suggesting a role in stabilizing the mRNA trajectory through the small subunit and organizing chloroplast polysomes. Together, these data reveal unexpected structural variation of algal chlororibosomes and suggest that chloroplast translation has diversified substantially even among relatively closely related photosynthetic lineages.
Title: Chloroplast-encoded small subunit extensions reshape the Chlamydomonas chlororibosome
Description:
Chloroplast ribosomes (chlororibosomes) synthesize the core protein components of the photosynthetic apparatus, yet their structural diversity outside flowering plants remains largely unexplored.
Here, we combine in situ cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) with single-particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) to determine the structure of the chlororibosome from the unicellular green alga
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
.
Subtomogram averaging of chlororibosomes in their native environment, resolved to ∼5 Å resolution and in distinct translational states, reveals particles both free in the stroma and loosely tethered to thylakoid membranes.
These
in situ
reconstructions uncover an additional “arm” domain on the small subunit.
High-resolution single-particle reconstruction of isolated chlororibosomes to ∼2.
5 Å, in states bound either to the inhibitory translation factor pY or to a nascent chain-linked P-site tRNA, reveals that this domain is built primarily from extensive chloroplast-encoded insertions and extensions of conserved small subunit proteins, supported by chlororibosome-specific ribosomal proteins.
The arm domain is located around the mRNA entry and exit channels, suggesting a role in stabilizing the mRNA trajectory through the small subunit and organizing chloroplast polysomes.
Together, these data reveal unexpected structural variation of algal chlororibosomes and suggest that chloroplast translation has diversified substantially even among relatively closely related photosynthetic lineages.
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