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Dive into the research topics where Yury S. Polikanov is active.

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Featured researches published by Yury S. Polikanov.


Science | 2012

How hibernation factors RMF, HPF, and YfiA turn off protein synthesis.

Yury S. Polikanov; Gregor Blaha; Thomas A. Steitz

The Hibernating Ribosome When bacteria enter stationary phase, their ribosomes are inactivated. In Escherichia coli, ribosome modulation factor (RMF) causes dimerization of the 70S ribosome and the dimer is stabilized by, hibernation promotion factor (HPF). Alternately, the stationary phase protein, YfiA, inactivates 70S ribosomes. Polikanov et al. (p. 915) present high-resolution structures of the Thermus thermophilus 70S ribosome bound to each of these three factors. The structures suggest that RMF binding inhibits protein synthesis by preventing initial messenger RNA (mRNA) binding and that HPF and YfiA have overlapping binding sites and would both interfere with binding of mRNA, transfer RNA, and initiation factors. Three crystal structures show why bacteria stop making proteins when they enter the stationary phase. Eubacteria inactivate their ribosomes as 100S dimers or 70S monomers upon entry into stationary phase. In Escherichia coli, 100S dimer formation is mediated by ribosome modulation factor (RMF) and hibernation promoting factor (HPF), or alternatively, the YfiA protein inactivates ribosomes as 70S monomers. Here, we present high-resolution crystal structures of the Thermus thermophilus 70S ribosome in complex with each of these stationary-phase factors. The binding site of RMF overlaps with that of the messenger RNA (mRNA) Shine-Dalgarno sequence, which prevents the interaction between the mRNA and the 16S ribosomal RNA. The nearly identical binding sites of HPF and YfiA overlap with those of the mRNA, transfer RNA, and initiation factors, which prevents translation initiation. The binding of RMF and HPF, but not YfiA, to the ribosome induces a conformational change of the 30S head domain that promotes 100S dimer formation.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2014

A proton wire to couple aminoacyl-tRNA accommodation and peptide-bond formation on the ribosome

Yury S. Polikanov; Thomas A. Steitz; C.A. Innis

During peptide-bond formation on the ribosome, the α-amine of an aminoacyl-tRNA attacks the ester carbonyl carbon of a peptidyl-tRNA to yield a peptide lengthened by one amino acid. Although the ribosomes contribution to catalysis is predominantly entropic, the lack of high-resolution structural data for the complete active site in complex with full-length ligands has made it difficult to assess how the ribosome might influence the pathway of the reaction. Here, we present crystal structures of preattack and postcatalysis complexes of the Thermus thermophilus 70S ribosome at ~2.6-Å resolution. These structures reveal a network of hydrogen bonds along which proton transfer could take place to ensure the concerted, rate-limiting formation of a tetrahedral intermediate. We propose that, unlike earlier models, the ribosome and the A-site tRNA facilitate the deprotonation of the nucleophile through the activation of a water molecule.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2015

Structural insights into the role of rRNA modifications in protein synthesis and ribosome assembly

Yury S. Polikanov; Sergey V. Melnikov; Dieter Söll; Thomas A. Steitz

We report crystal structures of the Thermus thermophilus ribosome at 2.3- to 2.5-Å resolution, which have enabled modeling of rRNA modifications. The structures reveal contacts of modified nucleotides with mRNA and tRNAs or protein pY, and contacts within the ribosome interior stabilizing the functional fold of rRNA. Our work provides a resource to explore the roles of rRNA modifications and yields a more comprehensive atomic model of a bacterial ribosome.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2012

Distant Activation of Transcription: Mechanisms of Enhancer Action

Olga I. Kulaeva; Ekaterina V. Nizovtseva; Yury S. Polikanov; Sergei V. Ulianov; Vasily M. Studitsky

ABSTRACT Enhancers are regulatory DNA sequences that activate transcription over long distances. Recent studies revealed a widespread role of distant activation in eukaryotic gene regulation and in development of various human diseases, including cancer. Genomic and gene-targeted studies of enhancer action revealed novel mechanisms of transcriptional activation over a distance. They include formation of stable, inactive DNA-protein complexes at the enhancer and target promoter before activation, facilitated distant communication by looping of the spacer chromatin-covered DNA, and promoter activation by mechanisms that are different from classic recruiting. These studies suggest the similarity between the looping mechanisms involved in enhancer action on DNA in bacteria and in chromatin of higher organisms.


Molecular Cell | 2015

Distinct tRNA Accommodation Intermediates Observed on the Ribosome with the Antibiotics Hygromycin A and A201A.

Yury S. Polikanov; Agata L. Starosta; Manuel F. Juette; Roger B. Altman; Daniel S. Terry; Wanli Lu; Benjamin J. Burnett; George P. Dinos; Kevin A. Reynolds; Scott C. Blanchard; Thomas A. Steitz; Daniel N. Wilson

The increase in multi-drug-resistant bacteria is limiting the effectiveness of currently approved antibiotics, leading to a renewed interest in antibiotics with distinct chemical scaffolds. We have solved the structures of the Thermus thermophilus 70S ribosome with A-, P-, and E-site tRNAs bound and in complex with either the aminocyclitol-containing antibiotic hygromycin A (HygA) or the nucleoside antibiotic A201A. Both antibiotics bind at the peptidyl transferase center and sterically occlude the CCA-end of the A-tRNA from entering the A site of the peptidyl transferase center. Single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer (smFRET) experiments reveal that HygA and A201A specifically interfere with full accommodation of the A-tRNA, leading to the presence of tRNA accommodation intermediates and thereby inhibiting peptide bond formation. Thus, our results provide not only insight into the mechanism of action of HygA and A201A, but also into the fundamental process of tRNA accommodation during protein synthesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Internucleosomal Interactions Mediated by Histone Tails Allow Distant Communication in Chromatin

Olga I. Kulaeva; Guohui Zheng; Yury S. Polikanov; Andrew V. Colasanti; Nicolas Clauvelin; Swagatam Mukhopadhyay; Anirvan M. Sengupta; Vasily M. Studitsky; Wilma K. Olson

Background: Gene expression is regulated by DNA elements that often lie far apart along genomic sequences. Results: Novel computations and experiments provide new structural insights into long-range communication on chromatin. Conclusion: Efficient long-range association of transcriptional elements requires intact tails on the core histones. Significance: The understanding of action-at-a-distance in three dimensions helps to connect nucleosome structure/positioning to chromatin dynamics and gene regulation. Action across long distances on chromatin is a hallmark of eukaryotic transcriptional regulation. Although chromatin structure per se can support long-range interactions, the mechanisms of efficient communication between widely spaced DNA modules in chromatin remain a mystery. The molecular simulations described herein suggest that transient binary internucleosomal interactions can mediate distant communication in chromatin. Electrostatic interactions between the N-terminal tails of the core histones and DNA enhance the computed probability of juxtaposition of sites that lie far apart along the DNA sequence. Experimental analysis of the rates of communication in chromatin constructs confirms that long-distance communication occurs efficiently and independently of distance on tail-containing, but not on tailless, chromatin. Taken together, our data suggest that internucleosomal interactions involving the histone tails are essential for highly efficient, long-range communication between regulatory elements and their targets in eukaryotic genomes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Chromatin structure can strongly facilitate enhancer action over a distance

Mikhail A. Rubtsov; Yury S. Polikanov; Vladimir A. Bondarenko; Yuh-Hwa Wang; Vasily M. Studitsky

Numerous DNA transactions in eukaryotic nuclei are regulated by elements (enhancers) that can directly interact with their targets over large regions of DNA organized into chromatin. The mechanisms allowing communication over a distance in chromatin are unknown. We have established an experimental system allowing quantitative analysis of the impact of chromatin structure on distant transcriptional regulation. Assembly of relaxed or linear DNA templates into subsaturated chromatin results in a strong increase of the efficiency of distant enhancer–promoter E–P communication and activation of transcription. The effect is directly proportional to the efficiency of chromatin assembly and cannot be explained only by DNA compaction. Transcription activation on chromatin templates is enhancer- and activator-dependent, and must be accompanied by direct E–P interaction and formation of a chromatin loop. Previously we have shown that DNA supercoiling can strongly facilitate E–P communication on histone-free DNA. The effects of chromatin assembly and DNA supercoiling on the communication are quantitatively similar, but the efficiency of enhancer action in subsaturated chromatin does not depend on the level of unconstrained DNA supercoiling. Thus chromatin structure per se can support highly efficient communication over a distance and functionally mimic the supercoiled state characteristic for prokaryotic DNA.


Cell Reports | 2014

The antibiotics dityromycin and GE82832 bind protein S12 and block EF-G-catalyzed translocation.

David Bulkley; Letizia Brandi; Yury S. Polikanov; Attilio Fabbretti; Michael O’Connor; Claudio O. Gualerzi; Thomas A. Steitz

The translocation of mRNA and tRNA through the ribosome is catalyzed by elongation factor G (EF-G), a universally conserved guanosine triphosphate hydrolase (GTPase). The mechanism by which the closely related decapeptide antibiotics dityromycin and GE82832 inhibit EF-G-catalyzed translocation is elucidated in this study. Using crystallographic and biochemical experiments, we demonstrate that these antibiotics bind to ribosomal protein S12 in solution alone as well as within the small ribosomal subunit, inducing long-range effects on the ribosomal head. The crystal structure of the antibiotic in complex with the 70S ribosome reveals that the binding involves conserved amino acid residues of S12 whose mutations result in in vitro and in vivo antibiotic resistance and loss of antibiotic binding. The data also suggest that GE82832/dityromycin inhibits EF-G-catalyzed translocation by disrupting a critical contact between EF-G and S12 that is required to stabilize the posttranslocational conformation of EF-G, thereby preventing the ribosome-EF-G complex from entering a conformation productive for translocation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Insights into RNA binding by the anticancer drug cisplatin from the crystal structure of cisplatin-modified ribosome.

Sergey V. Melnikov; Dieter Söll; Thomas A. Steitz; Yury S. Polikanov

Abstract Cisplatin is a widely prescribed anticancer drug, which triggers cell death by covalent binding to a broad range of biological molecules. Among cisplatin targets, cellular RNAs remain the most poorly characterized molecules. Although cisplatin was shown to inactivate essential RNAs, including ribosomal, spliceosomal and telomeric RNAs, cisplatin binding sites in most RNA molecules are unknown, and therefore it remains challenging to study how modifications of RNA by cisplatin contributes to its toxicity. Here we report a 2.6Å-resolution X-ray structure of cisplatin-modified 70S ribosome, which describes cisplatin binding to the ribosome and provides the first nearly atomic model of cisplatin–RNA complex. We observe nine cisplatin molecules bound to the ribosome and reveal consensus structural features of the cisplatin-binding sites. Two of the cisplatin molecules modify conserved functional centers of the ribosome—the mRNA-channel and the GTPase center. In the mRNA-channel, cisplatin intercalates between the ribosome and the messenger RNA, suggesting that the observed inhibition of protein synthesis by cisplatin is caused by impaired mRNA-translocation. Our structure provides an insight into RNA targeting and inhibition by cisplatin, which can help predict cisplatin-binding sites in other cellular RNAs and design studies to elucidate a link between RNA modifications by cisplatin and cisplatin toxicity.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2012

Elements of ribosomal drug resistance and specificity

Gregor Blaha; Yury S. Polikanov; Thomas A. Steitz

The structures of ribosomes in complex with inhibitors of translation have not only shed light on the interactions of antibiotics with the ribosome but also on the underlying mechanisms by which they interfere with the ribosome function. Several recent papers [1(•),2(••),3,4] have correlated the available ribosome structures with the wealth of biochemical data [5(•)]. In this review we shall focus on the lessons learned for drug specificity rather than presenting a comprehensive survey of the known structures of ribosome complexes with antibiotics.

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Alexander S. Mankin

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Andrey L. Konevega

Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute

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