Overview of Translation

Definition and Significance

Translation: process converting mRNA nucleotide sequence into polypeptide chain. Location: ribosomes in cytoplasm or rough ER. Significance: essential for gene expression, protein synthesis, cellular function.

Central Dogma Context

Flow of genetic info: DNA → RNA → Protein. Translation is final step. Links genotype to phenotype via proteins.

Key Components

Inputs: mRNA, aminoacyl-tRNAs, ribosomes, translation factors, GTP. Outputs: polypeptides, functional proteins after folding.

"Translation is the decoding of the genetic message into a functional protein." -- Bruce Alberts

The Genetic Code

Codons and Codon Table

Codon: triplet of nucleotides in mRNA specifying one amino acid. 64 codons total: 61 sense codons + 3 stop codons. Universal code with minor exceptions.

Redundancy and Degeneracy

Multiple codons encode same amino acid (degeneracy). Reduces mutation impact, enhances translation fidelity.

Start and Stop Codons

Start codon: AUG (methionine). Stop codons: UAA, UAG, UGA. Signal ribosome to initiate or terminate translation.

CodonAmino Acid
AUGMethionine (Start)
UUU, UUCPhenylalanine
UAA, UAG, UGAStop codons

Ribosome Structure and Function

Composition

Ribosome: ribonucleoprotein complex. Two subunits - large and small. Prokaryotes: 50S + 30S = 70S. Eukaryotes: 60S + 40S = 80S.

Functional Sites

Three tRNA binding sites: A (aminoacyl), P (peptidyl), E (exit). Coordinate tRNA binding, peptide bond formation, and release.

Role in Translation

Facilitates mRNA decoding, catalyzes peptide bond formation (peptidyl transferase activity), ensures accuracy and speed.

Transfer RNA (tRNA)

Structure

Small RNA (~76-90 nt). Cloverleaf secondary structure. Anticodon loop recognizes mRNA codon. 3' acceptor stem binds specific amino acid.

Charging by Aminoacyl-tRNA Synthetases

Enzymes catalyze attachment of amino acid to tRNA 3' end. Highly specific, ensures correct amino acid incorporation.

Wobble Hypothesis

Flexibility in 3rd codon position pairing. Allows single tRNA to recognize multiple codons, optimizing genetic code translation.

Initiation Phase

Formation of Initiation Complex

Small ribosomal subunit binds mRNA near 5' cap (eukaryotes) or Shine-Dalgarno sequence (prokaryotes). Initiator tRNA (Met-tRNAi) binds start codon.

Initiation Factors

Various IFs (IF1, IF2, IF3 in prokaryotes; eIFs in eukaryotes) assist subunit assembly, tRNA positioning, and GTP hydrolysis.

Large Subunit Joining

After start codon recognition, large subunit binds forming 70S (prokaryotes) or 80S (eukaryotes) initiation complex ready for elongation.

Elongation Phase

Aminoacyl-tRNA Entry

EF-Tu (prokaryotes) or eEF1α (eukaryotes) escorts charged tRNA to A site. GTP hydrolysis ensures correct codon-anticodon pairing.

Peptide Bond Formation

Peptidyl transferase catalyzes bond between amino acid in P site and new amino acid in A site. Peptide chain transferred to A site tRNA.

Translocation

EF-G (prokaryotes) or eEF2 (eukaryotes) mediates ribosome movement by one codon along mRNA. Deacylated tRNA moves to E site and exits.

Elongation Cycle:1. aa-tRNA + EF-Tu + GTP → delivery to A site2. GTP hydrolysis → EF-Tu release3. Peptide bond formation → peptide chain lengthens4. EF-G + GTP → translocation5. Repeat until stop codon

Termination Phase

Stop Codon Recognition

Release factors (RFs) recognize UAA, UAG, UGA. No tRNA corresponds to stop codons; RFs bind A site to trigger termination.

Peptide Release

RFs catalyze hydrolysis of bond between polypeptide and tRNA in P site. Polypeptide released for folding or targeting.

Ribosome Recycling

Ribosome subunits dissociate. mRNA and tRNAs released. Factors (RRF, EF-G in prokaryotes) assist recycling for next round.

Post-translational Modifications

Types of Modifications

Phosphorylation, glycosylation, methylation, acetylation, ubiquitination. Alter protein activity, localization, stability.

Protein Folding and Chaperones

New polypeptides fold into functional conformation. Chaperones assist folding, prevent aggregation, ensure proper structure.

Proteolytic Processing

Cleavage of signal peptides or propeptides activates proteins or targets them to organelles.

Regulation of Translation

Global Regulation

Control via initiation factors availability, e.g., eIF2 phosphorylation reduces initiation under stress. mTOR pathway modulates translation rates.

mRNA-Specific Regulation

RNA-binding proteins and microRNAs bind 5' or 3' UTRs to enhance or repress translation of specific transcripts.

Translational Pausing and Quality Control

Ribosome stalling triggers surveillance pathways (e.g., nonsense-mediated decay) to degrade faulty mRNAs.

Translation in Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes

Initiation Differences

Prokaryotes use Shine-Dalgarno sequence for ribosome binding; eukaryotes use 5' cap recognition and scanning mechanism.

Ribosome Size and Composition

Prokaryotic ribosomes: 70S (50S+30S). Eukaryotic ribosomes: 80S (60S+40S). Different rRNA and protein components.

Coupled Transcription-Translation

Prokaryotes translate mRNA while still being transcribed. Eukaryotes separate transcription (nucleus) and translation (cytoplasm).

Clinical Relevance and Applications

Antibiotics Targeting Translation

Many antibiotics (e.g., tetracycline, chloramphenicol, erythromycin) inhibit prokaryotic ribosome function selectively.

Genetic Disorders

Mutations affecting translation factors cause diseases (e.g., eIF2B mutations cause leukoencephalopathy).

Biotechnological Uses

Recombinant protein production, synthetic biology, ribosome engineering rely on understanding translation.

Experimental Techniques

In Vitro Translation Systems

Cell-free extracts (rabbit reticulocyte, wheat germ, E. coli S30) used to study translation mechanisms and screen drugs.

Ribosome Profiling

High-throughput sequencing of ribosome-protected mRNA fragments reveals translation dynamics and efficiency genome-wide.

Reporter Assays

Fusion of reporter genes (e.g., luciferase) to study translational regulation, initiation site usage, and effects of mutations.

TechniquePurposeApplication
In vitro translationProtein synthesis studyDrug screening, mechanism analysis
Ribosome profilingTranslation dynamicsGenome-wide translation mapping
Reporter assaysRegulatory element analysisGene expression studies

References

  • Alberts B, Johnson A, Lewis J, et al. Molecular Biology of the Cell. 6th ed. Garland Science; 2014. pp. 345-389.
  • Watson JD, Baker TA, Bell SP, et al. Molecular Biology of the Gene. 7th ed. Pearson; 2013. pp. 489-523.
  • Rodnina MV, Wintermeyer W. Protein synthesis: translation in prokaryotes. Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol. 2016;8(2):a032664.
  • Dever TE, Green R. The elongation, termination, and recycling phases of translation in eukaryotes. Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol. 2012;4(7):a013706.
  • Ingolia NT, Ghaemmaghami S, Newman JR, Weissman JS. Genome-wide analysis in vivo of translation with nucleotide resolution using ribosome profiling. Science. 2009;324(5924):218-223.