There are two major components of Escherichia coli
ribosomes directly involved in selection and binding of mRNA
during initiation of protein synthesis—the highly conserved
3′ end of 16S rRNA (aSD) complementary to the
Shine–Dalgarno (SD) domain of mRNA, and the ribosomal
protein S1. A contribution of the SD-aSD and S1-mRNA interactions
to translation yield in vivo has been evaluated in a genetic
system developed to compare efficiencies of various
ribosome-binding sites (RBS) in driving β-galactosidase
synthesis from the single-copy (chromosomal) lacZ gene.
The in vivo experiments have been supplemented by in vitro
toeprinting and gel-mobility shift assays. A shortening of a
potential SD-aSD duplex from 10 to 8 and to 6 bp increased the
β-galactosidase yield (four- and sixfold, respectively)
suggesting that an extended SD-aSD duplex adversely affects
translation, most likely due to its redundant stability causing
ribosome stalling at the initiation step. Translation yields
were significantly increased upon insertion of the A/U-rich
S1 binding targets upstream of the SD region, but the longest
SD remained relatively less efficient. In contrast to complete
30S ribosomes, the S1-depleted 30S particles have been able
to form an extended SD-aSD duplex, but not the true ternary
initiation complex. Taken together, the in vivo and in vitro
data allow us to conclude that S1 plays two roles in translation
initiation: It forms an essential part of the mRNA-binding track
even when mRNA bears a long SD sequence, and through the binding
to the 5′ untranslated region, it can ensure a substantial
enhancing effect on translation.