Metadata
Title
ResearchStructurally heterogeneous ribosomes cooperate in protein synthesis in bacterial cells
Category
general
UUID
560409778b3b42dbacca7aa44f8ef82d
Source URL
https://www.bio.uni-heidelberg.de/en/newsroom/structurally-heterogeneous-ribosom...
Parent URL
https://www.bio.uni-heidelberg.de/en/news
Crawl Time
2026-03-11T06:36:53+00:00
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ResearchStructurally heterogeneous ribosomes cooperate in protein synthesis in bacterial cells

Source: https://www.bio.uni-heidelberg.de/en/newsroom/structurally-heterogeneous-ribosomes-cooperate-in-protein-synthesis-in-bacterial-cells Parent: https://www.bio.uni-heidelberg.de/en/news

Research Structurally heterogeneous ribosomes cooperate in protein synthesis in bacterial cells

A functionally neutral form of ribosome heterogeneity

Even though the process of protein synthesis is highly conserved in all kingdoms of life, the structure and composition of the cellular machinery for protein synthesis, the ribosome, can differ between organisms, tissues and even within a single cell. Whether such heterogeneity reflects genuine functional specialization of ribosomes is a highly debated question. In a collaboration between the groups of Stefan Pfeffer (ZMBH), Sergey Melnikov (Newcastle University) and Christopher Hill (University of York), the shared first-authors Karla Helena-Bueno and Sophie Kopetschke used cryo-electron microscopy to investigate the function of individual structurally heterogeneous ribosomes within bacterial cells. Their work revealed that ribosomes differing in the copy number of ribosomal protein bS20 were indistinguishable in their core activities and cooperated in simultaneous translation of mRNAs, demonstrating a case of functionally neutral ribosome heterogeneity.

Two types of ribosomes with one (blue) or two (green) copies of bS20 were visualized at molecular resolution within intact bacterial cells. | Kopetschke

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