Autonomous synthesis and assembly of a ribosomal subunit on a chip

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Abstract

Ribosome biogenesis is an efficient and complex assembly process that has not been reconstructed outside a living cell so far, yet is the most critical step for establishing a self-replicating artificial cell. We recreated the biogenesis of Escherichia coli's small ribosomal subunit by synthesizing and capturing all its ribosomal proteins and RNA on a chip. Surface confinement provided favorable conditions for autonomous stepwise assembly of new subunits, spatially segregated from original intact ribosomes. Our real-time fluorescence measurements revealed hierarchal assembly, cooperative interactions, unstable intermediates, and specific binding to large ribosomal subunits. Using only synthetic genes, our methodology is a crucial step toward creation of a self-replicating artificial cell and a general strategy for the mechanistic investigation of diverse multicomponent macromolecular machines.

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Levy, M., Falkovich, R., Daube, S. S., & Bar-Ziv, R. H. (2020). Autonomous synthesis and assembly of a ribosomal subunit on a chip. Science Advances, 6(16). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aaz6020

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