The recent rapid advances that have been made both
in cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) and X-ray crystallography
of bacterial ribosomes or their subunits (e.g., Stark et
al., 1997a, 1997b; Ban et al., 1998; Malhotra et al., 1998)
have led to a correspondingly rapid advance in our understanding
of the three-dimensional (3D) arrangement in situ
of the ribosomal RNA and protein molecules. In 1997 we
published a model for the 16S rRNA (Mueller & Brimacombe,
1997a), which was fitted to a cryo-EM reconstruction at
20 Å resolution of the Escherichia coli
70S ribosome carrying tRNAs at the ribosomal A and P sites
(Stark et al., 1997a). Subsequently, on the basis of the
available RNA–protein interaction data (Mueller &
Brimacombe, 1997b), we were able to fit the structure of
ribosomal protein S7 as determined by X-ray crystallography
(Hosaka et al., 1997; Wimberly et al., 1997) into our model
in such a way as to satisfy both the biochemical data and
the electron density of the EM reconstruction (Tanaka et
al., 1998). More recently, the 16S model has been refined
to fit an EM reconstruction at 13 Å resolution (Brimacombe
et al., 2000), the latter being itself a refinement of
the published EM reconstruction at 18 Å (Stark et
al., 1997b) of 70S ribosomes carrying an EF-Tu/tRNA ternary
complex stalled with the antibiotic kirromycin. In the
refined 16S model, only minor changes needed to be made
in the arrangement of the rRNA region interacting with
S7 and in the positioning of the protein itself.