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Dive into the research topics where Pawel A. Penczek is active.

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Featured researches published by Pawel A. Penczek.


Cell | 2001

Structure of the 80S Ribosome from Saccharomyces cerevisiae—tRNA-Ribosome and Subunit-Subunit Interactions

Christian M.T. Spahn; Roland Beckmann; Narayanan Eswar; Pawel A. Penczek; Andrej Sali; Günter Blobel; Joachim Frank

A cryo-EM reconstruction of the translating yeast 80S ribosome was analyzed. Computationally separated rRNA and protein densities were used for docking of appropriately modified rRNA models and homology models of yeast ribosomal proteins. The core of the ribosome shows a remarkable degree of conservation. However, some significant differences in functionally important regions and dramatic changes in the periphery due to expansion segments and additional ribosomal proteins are evident. As in the bacterial ribosome, bridges between the subunits are mainly formed by RNA contacts. Four new bridges are present at the periphery. The position of the P site tRNA coincides precisely with its prokaryotic counterpart, with mainly rRNA contributing to its molecular environment. This analysis presents an exhaustive inventory of an eukaryotic ribosome at the molecular level.


Ultramicroscopy | 1992

Three-dimensional reconstruction of single particles embedded in ice

Pawel A. Penczek; Michael Radermacher; Joachim Frank

Single particles embedded in ice pose new challenges for image processing because of the intrinsically low signal-to-noise ratio of such particles in electron micrographs. We have developed new techniques that address some of these problems and have applied these techniques to electron micrographs of the Escherichia coli ribosome. Data collection and reconstruction follow the protocol of the random-conical technique of Radermacher et al. [J. Microscopy 146 (1987) 113]. A reference-free alignment algorithm has been developed to overcome the propensity of reference-based algorithms to reinforce the reference motif in very noisy situations. In addition, an iterative 3D reconstruction method based on a chi-square minimization constraint has been developed and tested. This algorithm tends to reduce the effects of the missing angular range on the reconstruction, thereby facilitating the merging of random-conical data sets obtained from differently oriented particles.


Ultramicroscopy | 1994

The ribosome at improved resolution: new techniques for merging and orientation refinement in 3D cryo-electron microscopy of biological particles.

Pawel A. Penczek; Robert A. Grassucci; Joachim Frank

Cryo-electron microscopy of single biological particles opens up new possibilities for structure analysis: the particle can be reconstructed in its native shape and internal features are preserved. To take advantage of these possibilities we have developed new methods of data collection and image processing and we have applied them to the 70S Escherichia coli ribosome. A method of orientation search is proposed, which makes it possible to relate random-conical data sets to one another even if they are collected from low-tilt micrographs. A technique for 3D alignment of projections is described and applied to the single-micrograph 3D reconstruction.


Cell | 2001

Architecture of the Protein-Conducting Channel Associated with the Translating 80S Ribosome

Roland Beckmann; Christian M.T. Spahn; Narayanan Eswar; Jürgen Helmers; Pawel A. Penczek; Andrej Sali; Joachim Frank; Günter Blobel

In vitro assembled yeast ribosome-nascent chain complexes (RNCs) containing a signal sequence in the nascent chain were immunopurified and reconstituted with the purified protein-conducting channel (PCC) of yeast endoplasmic reticulum, the Sec61 complex. A cryo-EM reconstruction of the RNC-Sec61 complex at 15.4 A resolution shows a tRNA in the P site. Distinct rRNA elements and proteins of the large ribosomal subunit form four connections with the PCC across a gap of about 10-20 A. Binding of the PCC influences the position of the highly dynamic rRNA expansion segment 27. The RNC-bound Sec61 complex has a compact appearance and was estimated to be a trimer. We propose a binary model of cotranslational translocation entailing only two basic functional states of the translating ribosome-channel complex.


Cell | 2000

Solution structure of the E. coli 70S ribosome at 11.5 A resolution.

Irene S. Gabashvili; Rajendra K. Agrawal; Christian M.T. Spahn; Robert A. Grassucci; Dmitri I. Svergun; Joachim Frank; Pawel A. Penczek

Over 73,000 projections of the E. coli ribosome bound with formyl-methionyl initiator tRNAf(Met) were used to obtain an 11.5 A cryo-electron microscopy map of the complex. This map allows identification of RNA helices, peripheral proteins, and intersubunit bridges. Comparison of double-stranded RNA regions and positions of proteins identified in both cryo-EM and X-ray maps indicates good overall agreement but points to rearrangements of ribosomal components required for the subunit association. Fitting of known components of the 50S stalk base region into the map defines the architecture of the GTPase-associated center and reveals a major change in the orientation of the alpha-sarcin-ricin loop. Analysis of the bridging connections between the subunits provides insight into the dynamic signaling mechanism between the ribosomal subunits.


The EMBO Journal | 2004

Domain movements of elongation factor eEF2 and the eukaryotic 80S ribosome facilitate tRNA translocation

Christian M. T. Spahn; Maria G. Gomez-Lorenzo; Robert A. Grassucci; René Jørgensen; Gregers R. Andersen; Roland Beckmann; Pawel A. Penczek; Juan P. G. Ballesta; Joachim Frank

An 11.7‐Å‐resolution cryo‐EM map of the yeast 80S·eEF2 complex in the presence of the antibiotic sordarin was interpreted in molecular terms, revealing large conformational changes within eEF2 and the 80S ribosome, including a rearrangement of the functionally important ribosomal intersubunit bridges. Sordarin positions domain III of eEF2 so that it can interact with the sarcin–ricin loop of 25S rRNA and protein rpS23 (S12p). This particular conformation explains the inhibitory action of sordarin and suggests that eEF2 is stalled on the 80S ribosome in a conformation that has similarities with the GTPase activation state. A ratchet‐like subunit rearrangement (RSR) occurs in the 80S·eEF2·sordarin complex that, in contrast to Escherichia coli 70S ribosomes, is also present in vacant 80S ribosomes. A model is suggested, according to which the RSR is part of a mechanism for moving the tRNAs during the translocation reaction.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1999

EF-G-dependent GTP hydrolysis induces translocation accompanied by large conformational changes in the 70S ribosome

Rajendra K. Agrawal; Amy B. Heagle; Pawel A. Penczek; Robert A. Grassucci; Joachim Frank

Cryo-electron microscopy has been used to visualize elongation factor G (EF-G) on the 70S ribosome in GDP and GTP states. GTP hydrolysis is required for binding of all the domains of EF-G to the pretranslocational complex and for the completion of translocation. In addition, large conformational changes have been identified in the ribosome. The head of the 30S subunit shifts toward the L1 protein side, and the L7/L12 stalk becomes bifurcated upon EF-G binding. Upon GTP hydrolysis, the bifurcation is reversed and an arc-like connection is formed between the base of the stalk and EF-G.


Ultramicroscopy | 1995

Double-tilt electron tomography

Pawel A. Penczek; Michael Marko; Karolyn F. Buttle; Joachim Frank

Fidelity of tomographic reconstructions is improved and reconstruction artifacts are reduced, without increasing the number of projections, by combining tilt series taken around two orthogonal axes. Test reconstructions were made from high-voltage EM of rat liver mitochondria in a 0.6 micron thick plastic section. A number of schemes for selecting tilt angles for the projections are compared. A new method for aligning fiducial markers is described. It uses an iterative algorithm to determine the shift, scale, in-plane rotation and tilt angle for each tilt image, enforcing agreement of the expected locations of the fiducial markers in 3D space. These 3D locations are used to find the orientation between two tilt series and to merge both sets of projections.


Cell | 1998

A 9 Å Resolution X-Ray Crystallographic Map of the Large Ribosomal Subunit

Nenad Ban; Betty Freeborn; Poul Nissen; Pawel A. Penczek; Robert A. Grassucci; Robert M. Sweet; Joachim Frank; Peter B. Moore; Thomas A. Steitz

The 50S subunit of the ribosome catalyzes the peptidyl-transferase reaction of protein synthesis. We have generated X-ray crystallographic electron density maps of the large ribosomal subunit from Haloarcula marismortui at various resolutions up to 9 A using data from crystals that diffract to 3 A. Positioning a 20 A resolution EM image of these particles in the crystal lattice produced phases accurate enough to locate the bound heavy atoms in three derivatives using difference Fourier maps, thus demonstrating the correctness of the EM model and its placement in the unit cell. At 20 A resolution, the X-ray map is similar to the EM map; however, at 9 A it reveals long, continuous, but branched features whose shape, diameter, and right-handed twist are consistent with segments of double-helical RNA that crisscross the subunit.


Nature | 2010

Head swivel on the ribosome facilitates translocation by means of intra-subunit tRNA hybrid sites

Andreas H. Ratje; Justus Loerke; Aleksandra Mikolajka; Matthias Brünner; Peter W. Hildebrand; Agata L. Starosta; Alexandra Dönhöfer; Sean R. Connell; Paola Fucini; Thorsten Mielke; Paul C. Whitford; José N. Onuchic; Yanan Yu; Karissa Y. Sanbonmatsu; Roland K. Hartmann; Pawel A. Penczek; Daniel N. Wilson; Christian M. T. Spahn

The elongation cycle of protein synthesis involves the delivery of aminoacyl-transfer RNAs to the aminoacyl-tRNA-binding site (A site) of the ribosome, followed by peptide-bond formation and translocation of the tRNAs through the ribosome to reopen the A site. The translocation reaction is catalysed by elongation factor G (EF-G) in a GTP-dependent manner. Despite the availability of structures of various EF-G–ribosome complexes, the precise mechanism by which tRNAs move through the ribosome still remains unclear. Here we use multiparticle cryoelectron microscopy analysis to resolve two previously unseen subpopulations within Thermus thermophilus EF-G–ribosome complexes at subnanometre resolution, one of them with a partly translocated tRNA. Comparison of these substates reveals that translocation of tRNA on the 30S subunit parallels the swivelling of the 30S head and is coupled to unratcheting of the 30S body. Because the tRNA maintains contact with the peptidyl-tRNA-binding site (P site) on the 30S head and simultaneously establishes interaction with the exit site (E site) on the 30S platform, a novel intra-subunit ‘pe/E’ hybrid state is formed. This state is stabilized by domain IV of EF-G, which interacts with the swivelled 30S-head conformation. These findings provide direct structural and mechanistic insight into the ‘missing link’ in terms of tRNA intermediates involved in the universally conserved translocation process.

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Rajendra K. Agrawal

New York State Department of Health

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Chao Yang

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Philip R. Baldwin

Baylor College of Medicine

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Zhong Huang

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Christian M.T. Spahn

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Nicolas Boisset

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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