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High-speed atomic force microscopy visualizes cell protein factories

Factor-pooling by ribosomes caught on video using state-of-art high-speed atomic force microscopy technology. Ribosomes are the complexes of ribonucleoproteins at the heart of protein synthesis in cells. However in the absence of conclusive evidence, how these complexes operate has been open to debate. Now Hirotatsu Imai and Noriyuki Kodera at Kanazawa University, alongside Toshio Uchiumi at Niigata University in Japan, show visualizations of the structural dynamics and factor pooling that take place at ribosome stalk proteins as they build new proteins. Ribosomes were first discovered in the 1950s and their broad function has been widely understood for some time – they read messenger RNA sequences and from that generate sequences of correctly ordered amino acids into new proteins. The ribosome stalk protein in particular plays an integral role in the protein synthesis process by recruiting protein factors responsible for translation and elongation of the amino acid sequence. How

Japan
Hirotatsu-imai
Toshio-uchiumi
Noriyuki-kodera
Toshio-ando
Proceedings-of-the-national-academy-sciences
Kanazawa-university
Noriyuki-kodera-at-kanazawa-university
Toshio-uchiumi-at-niigata-university
Niigata-university
National-academy
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