Protein synthesis is central to life and requires the ribosome, which catalyzes the stepwise addition of amino acids to a polypeptide chain by undergoing a sequence of structural transformations. Here, we employed high-resolution template matching (HRTM) on cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM) images of directly cryofixed living cells to obtain a set of ribosomal configurations covering the entire elongation cycle, with each configuration occurring at its native abundance. HRTM's position and orientation precision and ability to detect small targets (∼300 kDa) made it possible to order these configurations along the reaction coordinate and to reconstruct molecular features of any configuration along the elongation cycle. Visualizing the cycle's structural dynamics by combining a sequence of >40 reconstructions into a 3D movie readily revealed component and ligand movements, some of them surprising, such as spring-like intramolecular motion, providing clues about the molecular mechanisms involved in some still mysterious steps during chain elongation.
Keywords: HRTM; elongation cycle; in situ cryo-EM; molecular motion; protein translation; ribosome dynamics; structural biology.
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