Leader Peptidase A - Function

Function

LepA is suspected to improve the fidelity of translation by recognizing a ribosome with mistranslocated tRNA and consequently inducing a back-translocation. By back-translocating the already post-transcriptionally modified ribosome, the EF-G factor is consequentially enabled to attempt translocation for a second time. Back-translocation by LepA occurs at a similar rate as an EF-G-dependent translocation. As mentioned above, EF-G's structure is highly analogous to LepA's structure; LepA's function is thus similarly analogous to EF-G's function. However, Domain IV of EF-G has been shown through several studies to occupy the decoding sequence of the A site after the tRNAs have been translocated from A and P sites to the P and E sites. Thus, domain IV of EF-G prevents back-movement of the tRNA. Despite the structural similarities between LepA and EF-G, LepA lacks this Domain IV. Thus LepA reduces the activation barrier between Pre and POST states in a similar way to EF-G but is, at the same time, able to catalyze a back-translocation rather that a canonical translocation.

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