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Interpretation of anomalously long crosslinks in ribosome crosslinking reveals the ribosome interaction in stationary phase E. coli .

Santosh A MisalBingqing ZhaoJames P Reilly
Published in: RSC chemical biology (2022)
Crosslinking mass spectrometry (XL-MS) of bacterial ribosomes revealed the dynamic intra- and intermolecular interactions within the ribosome structure. It has been also extended to capture the interactions of ribosome binding proteins during translation. Generally, XL-MS often identified the crosslinks within a cross-linkable distance (<40 Å) using amine-reactive crosslinkers. The crosslinks larger than cross-linkable distance (>40 Å) are always difficult to interpret and remain unnoticed. Here, we focused on stationary phase bacterial ribosome crosslinking that yields ultra-long crosslinks in an E. coli cell lysate. We explain these ultra-long crosslinks with the combination of sucrose density gradient centrifugation, chemical crosslinking, high-resolution mass spectrometry, and electron microscopy analysis. Multiple ultra-long crosslinks were observed in E. coli ribosomes for example ribosomal protein L19 (K63, K94) crosslinks with L21 (K71, K81) at two locations that are about 100 Å apart. Structural mapping of such ultra-long crosslinks in 70S ribosomes suggested that these crosslinks are not potentially formed within one 70S particle and could be a result of dimer and trimer formation as evidenced by negative staining electron microscopy. Ribosome dimerization captured by chemical crosslinking reaction could be an indication of ribosome-ribosome interactions in the stationary phase.
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