Published August 21, 2024 | Version v1
Publication

The Beak of Eukaryotic Ribosomes: Life, Work and Miracles

Description

Ribosomes are not totally globular machines. Instead, they comprise prominent structural protrusions and a myriad of tentacle-like projections, which are frequently made up of ribosomal RNA expansion segments and N- or C-terminal extensions of ribosomal proteins. This is more evident in higher eukaryotic ribosomes. One of the most characteristic protrusions, present in small ribosomal subunits in all three domains of life, is the so-called beak, which is relevant for the function and regulation of the ribosome's activities. During evolution, the beak has transitioned from an all ribosomal RNA structure (helix h33 in 16S rRNA) in bacteria, to an arrangement formed by three ribosomal proteins, eS10, eS12 and eS31, and a smaller h33 ribosomal RNA in eukaryotes. In this review, we describe the different structural and functional properties of the eukaryotic beak. We discuss the state-of-the-art concerning its composition and functional significance, including other processes apparently not related to translation, and the dynamics of its assembly in yeast and human cells. Moreover, we outline the current view about the relevance of the beak's components in human diseases, especially in ribosomopathies and cancer.

Abstract

MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/ERDF, UE - R+D+i PID2022-136564NB-I00

Abstract

Plataforma Andaluza de Biomodelos y Recursos en Edición Genómica, al Programa Fortalece de MCIN (FORT 2023)

Abstract

Acciones COST Translacore (CA21154) y ProteoCure (CA20113) de la UE

Abstract

Swiss National Science Foundation - 310030_204801

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2024
Modified:
August 22, 2024