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Dive into the research topics where Jayati Sengupta is active.

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Featured researches published by Jayati Sengupta.


Cell | 2003

Locking and Unlocking of Ribosomal Motions

Mikel Valle; Andrey Zavialov; Jayati Sengupta; Urmila Rawat; Måns Ehrenberg; Joachim Frank

During the ribosomal translocation, the binding of elongation factor G (EF-G) to the pretranslocational ribosome leads to a ratchet-like rotation of the 30S subunit relative to the 50S subunit in the direction of the mRNA movement. By means of cryo-electron microscopy we observe that this rotation is accompanied by a 20 A movement of the L1 stalk of the 50S subunit, implying that this region is involved in the translocation of deacylated tRNAs from the P to the E site. These ribosomal motions can occur only when the P-site tRNA is deacylated. Prior to peptidyl-transfer to the A-site tRNA or peptide removal, the presence of the charged P-site tRNA locks the ribosome and prohibits both of these motions.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003

Incorporation of Aminoacyl-tRNA into the Ribosome as seen by Cryo-electron Microscopy

Mikel Valle; Andrey Zavialov; Wen Li; Scott M. Stagg; Jayati Sengupta; Rikke Nielsen; Poul Nissen; Stephen C. Harvey; Måns Ehrenberg; Joachim Frank

Aminoacyl-tRNAs (aa-tRNAs) are delivered to the ribosome as part of the ternary complex of aa-tRNA, elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) and GTP. Here, we present a cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) study, at a resolution of ∼9 Å, showing that during the incorporation of the aa-tRNA into the 70S ribosome of Escherichia coli, the flexibility of aa-tRNA allows the initial codon recognition and its accommodation into the ribosomal A site. In addition, a conformational change observed in the GTPase-associated center (GAC) of the ribosomal 50S subunit may provide the mechanism by which the ribosome promotes a relative movement of the aa-tRNA with respect to EF-Tu. This relative rearrangement seems to facilitate codon recognition by the incoming aa-tRNA, and to provide the codon-anticodon recognition-dependent signal for the GTPase activity of EF-Tu. From these new findings we propose a mechanism that can explain the sequence of events during the decoding of mRNA on the ribosome.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

Cryo-EM reveals an active role for aminoacyl-tRNA in the accommodation process.

Mikel Valle; Jayati Sengupta; Neil K. Swami; Robert A. Grassucci; Nils Burkhardt; Knud H. Nierhaus; Rajendra K. Agrawal; Joachim Frank

During the elongation cycle of protein biosynthesis, the specific amino acid coded for by the mRNA is delivered by a complex that is comprised of the cognate aminoacyl‐tRNA, elongation factor Tu and GTP. As this ternary complex binds to the ribosome, the anticodon end of the tRNA reaches the decoding center in the 30S subunit. Here we present the cryo‐ electron microscopy (EM) study of an Escherichia coli 70S ribosome‐bound ternary complex stalled with an antibiotic, kirromycin. In the cryo‐EM map the anticodon arm of the tRNA presents a new conformation that appears to facilitate the initial codon–anticodon interaction. Furthermore, the elbow region of the tRNA is seen to contact the GTPase‐associated center on the 50S subunit of the ribosome, suggesting an active role of the tRNA in the transmission of the signal prompting the GTP hydrolysis upon codon recognition.


Cell | 2003

Study of the Structural Dynamics of the E. coli 70S Ribosome Using Real-Space Refinement

Haixiao Gao; Jayati Sengupta; Mikel Valle; Andrei Korostelev; Narayanan Eswar; Scott M. Stagg; Patrick Van Roey; Rajendra K. Agrawal; Stephen C. Harvey; Andrej Sali; Michael S. Chapman; Joachim Frank

Cryo-EM density maps showing the 70S ribosome of E. coli in two different functional states related by a ratchet-like motion were analyzed using real-space refinement. Comparison of the two resulting atomic models shows that the ribosome changes from a compact structure to a looser one, coupled with the rearrangement of many of the proteins. Furthermore, in contrast to the unchanged inter-subunit bridges formed wholly by RNA, the bridges involving proteins undergo large conformational changes following the ratchet-like motion, suggesting an important role of ribosomal proteins in facilitating the dynamics of translation.


EMBO Reports | 2004

Regulation of eukaryotic translation by the RACK1 protein: a platform for signalling molecules on the ribosome

Jakob Nilsson; Jayati Sengupta; Joachim Frank; Poul Nissen

The receptor for activated C‐kinase (RACK1) is a scaffold protein that is able to interact simultaneously with several signalling molecules. It binds to protein kinases and membrane‐bound receptors in a regulated fashion. Interestingly, RACK1 is also a constituent of the eukaryotic ribosome, and a recent cryo‐electron microscopy study localized it to the head region of the 40S subunit in the vicinity of the messenger RNA (mRNA) exit channel. RACK1 recruits activated protein kinase C to the ribosome, which leads to the stimulation of translation through the phosphorylation of initiation factor 6 and, potentially, of mRNA‐associated proteins. RACK1 therefore links signal‐transduction pathways directly to the ribosome, which allows translation to be regulated in response to cell stimuli. In addition, the fact that RACK1 associates with membrane‐bound receptors indicates that it promotes the docking of ribosomes at sites where local translation is required, such as focal adhesions.


Nature | 2003

A cryo-electron microscopic study of ribosome-bound termination factor RF2

Urmila Rawat; Andrey Zavialov; Jayati Sengupta; Mikel Valle; Robert A. Grassucci; Jamie Linde; Bente Vestergaard; Måns Ehrenberg; Joachim Frank

Protein synthesis takes place on the ribosome, where genetic information carried by messenger RNA is translated into a sequence of amino acids. This process is terminated when a stop codon moves into the ribosomal decoding centre (DC) and is recognized by a class-1 release factor (RF). RFs have a conserved GGQ amino-acid motif, which is crucial for peptide release and is believed to interact directly with the peptidyl-transferase centre (PTC) of the 50S ribosomal subunit. Another conserved motif of RFs (SPF in RF2) has been proposed to interact directly with stop codons in the DC of the 30S subunit. The distance between the DC and PTC is ∼73u2009Å. However, in the X-ray structure of RF2, SPF and GGQ are only 23u2009Å apart, indicating that they cannot be at DC and PTC simultaneously. Here we show that RF2 is in an open conformation when bound to the ribosome, allowing GGQ to reach the PTC while still allowing SPF–stop-codon interaction. The results indicate new interpretations of accuracy in termination, and have implications for how the presence of a stop codon in the DC is signalled to PTC.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2004

Identification of the versatile scaffold protein RACK1 on the eukaryotic ribosome by cryo-EM

Jayati Sengupta; Jakob Nilsson; Richard Gursky; Christian M. T. Spahn; Poul Nissen; Joachim Frank

RACK1 serves as a scaffold protein for a wide range of kinases and membrane-bound receptors. It is a WD-repeat family protein and is predicted to have a β-propeller architecture with seven blades like a Gβ protein. Mass spectrometry studies have identified its association with the small subunit of eukaryotic ribosomes and, most recently, it has been shown to regulate initiation by recruiting protein kinase C to the 40S subunit. Here we present the results of a cryo-EM study of the 80S ribosome that positively locate RACK1 on the head region of the 40S subunit, in the immediate vicinity of the mRNA exit channel. One face of RACK1 exposes the WD-repeats as a platform for interactions with kinases and receptors. Using this platform, RACK1 can recruit other proteins to the ribosome.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

The process of mRNA–tRNA translocation

Joachim Frank; Haixiao Gao; Jayati Sengupta; Ning Gao; Derek J. Taylor

In the elongation cycle of translation, translocation is the process that advances the mRNA–tRNA moiety on the ribosome, to allow the next codon to move into the decoding center. New results obtained by cryoelectron microscopy, interpreted in the light of x-ray structures and kinetic data, allow us to develop a model of the molecular events during translocation.


FEBS Letters | 2005

The role of tRNA as a molecular spring in decoding, accommodation, and peptidyl transfer.

Joachim Frank; Jayati Sengupta; Haixiao Gao; Wen Li; Mikel Valle; Andrey Zavialov; Måns Ehrenberg

Translation is the process by which the genetic information contained in mRNA is used to link amino acids in a predetermined sequential order into a polypeptide chain, which then folds into a protein. Transfer RNAs (tRNAs) are the adapter molecules designed to provide the “lookup” from codons to amino acids. Cryo‐EM has provided evidence that the ribosome, as a molecular machine, undergoes many structural changes during translation. Recent findings show that the tRNA structure itself undergoes large conformational changes as well, and that the decoding process must be seen as a complex dynamic interplay between tRNA and the ribosome.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2008

Exploration of parameters in cryo-EM leading to an improved density map of the E. coli ribosome.

Jamie LeBarron; Robert A. Grassucci; Tanvir R. Shaikh; William T. Baxter; Jayati Sengupta; Joachim Frank

A number of image processing parameters in the 3D reconstruction of a ribosome complex from a cryo-EM data set were varied to test their effects on the final resolution. The parameters examined were pixel size, window size, and mode of Fourier amplitude enhancement at high spatial frequencies. In addition, the strategy of switching from large to small pixel size during angular refinement was explored. The relationship between resolution (in Fourier space) and the number of particles was observed to follow a lin-log dependence, a relationship that appears to hold for other data, as well. By optimizing the above parameters, and using a lin-log extrapolation to the full data set in the estimation of resolution from half-sets, we obtained a 3D map from 131,599 ribosome particles at 6.7A resolution (FSC=0.5).

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Mikel Valle

Spanish National Research Council

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Rajendra K. Agrawal

New York State Department of Health

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Haixiao Gao

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Richard Gursky

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Jakob Nilsson

University of Copenhagen

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