Litcius/Paper detail

Macromolecular assemblies supporting transcription-translation coupling

Michael Webster, Albert Weixlbaumer

2021Transcription27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Coordination between the molecular machineries that synthesize and decode prokaryotic mRNAs is an important layer of gene expression control known as transcription-translation coupling. While it has long been known that translation can regulate transcription and vice-versa, recent structural and biochemical work has shed light on the underlying mechanistic basis. Complexes of RNA polymerase linked to a trailing ribosome (expressomes) have been structurally characterized in a variety of states at near-atomic resolution, and also directly visualized in cells. These data are complemented by recent biochemical and biophysical analyses of transcription-translation systems and the individual components within them. Here, we review our improved understanding of the molecular basis of transcription-translation coupling. These insights are discussed in relation to our evolving understanding of the role of coupling in cells.

Topics & Concepts

Transcription (linguistics)RibosomeComputational biologyBiologyTranslation (biology)RNA polymerase IICell biologyGene expressionRNAGeneticsGeneMessenger RNAPromoterPhilosophyLinguisticsRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA Research and SplicingRNA modifications and cancer