LANL Researchers Simulate Ribosome-tRNA Interactions, Providing Insights for Improved Antibiotics

September 20, 2023

Sept. 20, 2023 — A first-ever, atom-by-atom supercomputer simulation shows how antibiotics kill bacteria and illustrates other processes of the molecular machinery in living cells. The research opens fresh pathways to improving antibiotics, designing new ones to fight drug-resistant bacteria and developing vaccines for viruses such as SARS-CoV-2, which causes COVID-19.

In the first image (left), a molecular simulation on a supercomputer at Los Alamos National Laboratory reveals how the antibiotic evernimicin (light blue) interacts with transfer RNA molecules (gold) in the ribosome of bacteria, shedding new light on how the antibiotic’s chemistry makes it kill bacteria. The second image from a simulation (right) shows “incorrect” transfer RNA (orange) moving into a ribosome without antibiotic.

“The ribosome is the central information-processing molecular machine in all life forms. It has to decipher information about accepting correct amino acids and rejecting incorrect amino acids for building proteins in the cell,” said Karissa Sanbonmatsu, a structural biologist at Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Sanbonmatsu is coauthor of a new paper about the breakthrough simulation published in Nature Communications.

“Using the supercomputers at Los Alamos, we’re able to image this process atom for atom and show how antibiotics affect that process,” Sanbonmatsu said. “Studies like these are critical for combatting the emerging crisis of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.”

“Antimicrobial resistance is on the rise due to overuse in medicine and agriculture,” said Dylan Girodat, first author of the paper, who developed the project with Sanbonmatsu. Now an assistant professor at the University of Arkansas, Girodat was a postdoctoral fellow at Los Alamos when he and Sanbonmatsu performed the research. “To combat antimicrobial resistance, we must understand how conventional antibiotics work if we want to develop novel ones.”

Sanbonmatsu’s lab at Los Alamos coordinated the ribosome research, which also has implications for cancer treatments and understanding the origins of life. The research closely integrated single-molecule experiments led by Scott Blanchard, a dynamic structural biologist at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, with simulations on a Los Alamos supercomputer by Girodat.

Genetic Messenger

Messenger RNA, or mRNA, carries codes with the information for creating specific proteins in a cell. The ribosome decodes this genetic information by reading codes from the mRNA, pulling the mRNA through the ribosome similarly to the way a cassette tape player “reads” information off a tape. The ribosome looks up the codes in a molecular-information table, which is a suite of molecules called transfer RNAs, or tRNA, to select specific amino acids and manufactures proteins based on those encoded instructions.

For each code unit in the mRNA, the ribosome sorts through amino acids and chooses the correct amino acid corresponding to that code unit, while rejecting incorrect amino acids. tRNA molecules deliver the essential building blocks of proteins to the ribosomes. The ribosome then assembles a protein by adding the correct amino acid.

Many antibiotics work by gumming up this molecular machinery in bacteria’s ribosomes, Sanbonmatsu said. The drugs either grind the machine to a halt or cause errors in the information processing, resulting in malformed proteins, killing the bacteria.

In contrast, mRNA-based vaccines target human ribosomes, convincing them to make COVID virus proteins (the spike protein), which helps inoculate the body against the virus. A deeper understanding, attained from supercomputers, of how the ribosome can read mRNA will help researchers design more effective antibiotics and vaccines.

Massive Supercomputers Simulate Massive Molecules

“About 50% of all antibiotics inhibit ribosome function, so we know that this is an effective strategy for antibiotics,” Girodat said. “To develop new antibiotics, we need to understand how ribosomes work at an atomic level.”

To that end, the research team simulated the molecular dynamics of the interactions between ribosomes and tRNA.

“Our simulations revealed that incorrect tRNA molecules do not adopt the proper geometry when interacting with ribosomes,” Girodat said. “By introducing the antibiotics gentamicin, neomycin, evernimicin and hygromycin in these simulations, we demonstrated that antibiotics influence the geometry of tRNA, causing the ribosome to incorporate incorrect tRNA or none at all.”

That kills the bacteria.

“Ribosomes are massive biomolecules, and achieving the necessary timescales to observe ribosome dynamics requires massive computational resources, such as those available at the high-performance compute cluster at Los Alamos,” Girodat said.

Paper: Geometric alignment of aminoacyl-tRNA relative to catalytic centers of the ribosome underpins accurate mRNA decoding.” Nature Communications. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-40404-9

Funding:  This work was funded by the National Institutes of Health and by a Director’s Funded Postdoctoral Fellowship (for Dylan Girodat) at Los Alamos National Laboratory.


Source: LANL

Subscribe to HPCwire's Weekly Update!

Be the most informed person in the room! Stay ahead of the tech trends with industry updates delivered to you every week!

Qubit Roundup – Quantum Zoo Grows, Rigetti’s QPU Play, Google’s New Algorithm, QuEra’s EC Advance, and More

December 11, 2023

While the IBM Quantum Summit and the QC Ware’s Q2B Silicon Valley conference dominated last week’s news flow, there was no shortage of other quantum news emerging. Here’s brief recap of highlights. Let’s start Read more…

Inside AWS’s Plans to Make S3 Faster and Better

December 10, 2023

As far as big data storage goes, Amazon S3 has won the war. Even among storage vendors whose initials are not A.W.S., S3 is the defacto standard for storing lots of data. But AWS isn’t resting on its laurels with S3, a Read more…

Quantum Market, Though Small, will Grow 22% and Hit $1.5B in 2026

December 7, 2023

Few markets as small as the quantum information sciences market generate as much lively discussion. Hyperion Research pegged the worldwide quantum market at $848 million for 2023 and expects it to reach ~$1.5 billion in Read more…

AMD’s Horsepower-packed MI300X GPU Beats Nvidia’s Upcoming H200

December 7, 2023

AMD and Nvidia are locked in an AI performance battle – much like the gaming GPU performance clash the companies have waged for decades. AMD has claimed its new Instinct MI300X GPU is the fastest AI chip in the worl Read more…

Finding Opportunity in the High-Growth “AI Market” 

December 6, 2023

 “What’s the size of the AI market?” It’s a totally normal question for anyone to ask me. After all, I’m an analyst, and my company, Intersect360 Research, specializes in scalable, high-performance datacenter Read more…

AWS Solution Channel

Shutterstock 1708898095

Reducing Costs by Up to 87% Using AWS Batch with Seqera

Biotech software company Seqera wanted to unlock scale for high performance computing (HPC) while maintaining ease of use for scientists worldwide. Scientists, engineers, and developers download Seqera’s open-source software, Nextflow, more than 160,000 times each month to power their bioinformatics workloads. Read more…

QCT Solution Channel

QCT and Intel Codeveloped QCT DevCloud Program to Jumpstart HPC and AI Development

Organizations and developers face a variety of issues in developing and testing HPC and AI applications. Challenges they face can range from simply having access to a wide variety of hardware, frameworks, and toolkits to time spent on installation, development, testing, and troubleshooting which can lead to increases in cost. Read more…

Imagine a Beowulf Cluster of SuperNODEs …
(They did)

December 6, 2023

Clustering resources for faster performance is not new. In the early days of clustering, the Beowulf project demonstrated that high performance was achievable from commodity hardware. These days, the "Beowulf cluster mem Read more…

Inside AWS’s Plans to Make S3 Faster and Better

December 10, 2023

As far as big data storage goes, Amazon S3 has won the war. Even among storage vendors whose initials are not A.W.S., S3 is the defacto standard for storing lot Read more…

Quantum Market, Though Small, will Grow 22% and Hit $1.5B in 2026

December 7, 2023

Few markets as small as the quantum information sciences market generate as much lively discussion. Hyperion Research pegged the worldwide quantum market at $84 Read more…

Shutterstock 1285747942

AMD’s Horsepower-packed MI300X GPU Beats Nvidia’s Upcoming H200

December 7, 2023

AMD and Nvidia are locked in an AI performance battle – much like the gaming GPU performance clash the companies have waged for decades. AMD has claimed it Read more…

Finding Opportunity in the High-Growth “AI Market” 

December 6, 2023

 “What’s the size of the AI market?” It’s a totally normal question for anyone to ask me. After all, I’m an analyst, and my company, Intersect360 Res Read more…

Imagine a Beowulf Cluster of SuperNODEs …
(They did)

December 6, 2023

Clustering resources for faster performance is not new. In the early days of clustering, the Beowulf project demonstrated that high performance was achievable f Read more…

The IBM-Meta AI Alliance Promotes Safe and Open AI Progress

December 5, 2023

IBM and Meta have co-launched a massive industry-academic-government alliance to shepherd AI development. The new group has united under the AI Alliance banner Read more…

Shutterstock 1336284338

ChatGPT Friendly Programming Languages
(hello-world.llm)

December 4, 2023

 Using OpenAI's ChatGPT to write code is an alluring goal. Describing "what to" solve, but not "how to solve" would be a huge breakthrough in computer programm Read more…

IBM Quantum Summit: Two New QPUs, Upgraded Qiskit, 10-year Roadmap and More

December 4, 2023

IBM kicks off its annual Quantum Summit today and will announce a broad range of advances including its much-anticipated 1121-qubit Condor QPU, a smaller 133-qu Read more…

CORNELL I-WAY DEMONSTRATION PITS PARASITE AGAINST VICTIM

October 6, 1995

Ithaca, NY --Visitors to this year's Supercomputing '95 (SC'95) conference will witness a life-and-death struggle between parasite and victim, using virtual Read more…

SGI POWERS VIRTUAL OPERATING ROOM USED IN SURGEON TRAINING

October 6, 1995

Surgery simulations to date have largely been created through the development of dedicated applications requiring considerable programming and computer graphi Read more…

U.S. Will Relax Export Restrictions on Supercomputers

October 6, 1995

New York, NY -- U.S. President Bill Clinton has announced that he will definitely relax restrictions on exports of high-performance computers, giving a boost Read more…

Dutch HPC Center Will Have 20 GFlop, 76-Node SP2 Online by 1996

October 6, 1995

Amsterdam, the Netherlands -- SARA, (Stichting Academisch Rekencentrum Amsterdam), Academic Computing Services of Amsterdam recently announced that it has pur Read more…

Cray Delivers J916 Compact Supercomputer to Solvay Chemical

October 6, 1995

Eagan, Minn. -- Cray Research Inc. has delivered a Cray J916 low-cost compact supercomputer and Cray's UniChem client/server computational chemistry software Read more…

NEC Laboratory Reviews First Year of Cooperative Projects

October 6, 1995

Sankt Augustin, Germany -- NEC C&C (Computers and Communication) Research Laboratory at the GMD Technopark has wrapped up its first year of operation. Read more…

Sun and Sybase Say SQL Server 11 Benchmarks at 4544.60 tpmC

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- Sun Microsystems, Inc. and Sybase, Inc. recently announced the first benchmark results for SQL Server 11. The result represents a n Read more…

New Study Says Parallel Processing Market Will Reach $14B in 1999

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- A study by the Palo Alto Management Group (PAMG) indicates the market for parallel processing systems will increase at more than 4 Read more…

Leading Solution Providers

Contributors

SC23 Booth Videos

Achronix @ SC23
AMD @ SC23
AWS @ SC23
Altair @ SC23
CoolIT @ SC23
Cornelis Networks @ SC23
CoreHive @ SC23
DDC @ SC23
HPE @ SC23 with Justin Hotard
HPE @ SC23 with Trish Damkroger
Intel @ SC23
Intelligent Light @ SC23
Lenovo @ SC23
Penguin Solutions @ SC23
QCT Intel @ SC23
Tyan AMD @ SC23
Tyan Intel @ SC23
HPCwire LIVE from SC23 Playlist

CORNELL I-WAY DEMONSTRATION PITS PARASITE AGAINST VICTIM

October 6, 1995

Ithaca, NY --Visitors to this year's Supercomputing '95 (SC'95) conference will witness a life-and-death struggle between parasite and victim, using virtual Read more…

SGI POWERS VIRTUAL OPERATING ROOM USED IN SURGEON TRAINING

October 6, 1995

Surgery simulations to date have largely been created through the development of dedicated applications requiring considerable programming and computer graphi Read more…

U.S. Will Relax Export Restrictions on Supercomputers

October 6, 1995

New York, NY -- U.S. President Bill Clinton has announced that he will definitely relax restrictions on exports of high-performance computers, giving a boost Read more…

Dutch HPC Center Will Have 20 GFlop, 76-Node SP2 Online by 1996

October 6, 1995

Amsterdam, the Netherlands -- SARA, (Stichting Academisch Rekencentrum Amsterdam), Academic Computing Services of Amsterdam recently announced that it has pur Read more…

Cray Delivers J916 Compact Supercomputer to Solvay Chemical

October 6, 1995

Eagan, Minn. -- Cray Research Inc. has delivered a Cray J916 low-cost compact supercomputer and Cray's UniChem client/server computational chemistry software Read more…

NEC Laboratory Reviews First Year of Cooperative Projects

October 6, 1995

Sankt Augustin, Germany -- NEC C&C (Computers and Communication) Research Laboratory at the GMD Technopark has wrapped up its first year of operation. Read more…

Sun and Sybase Say SQL Server 11 Benchmarks at 4544.60 tpmC

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- Sun Microsystems, Inc. and Sybase, Inc. recently announced the first benchmark results for SQL Server 11. The result represents a n Read more…

New Study Says Parallel Processing Market Will Reach $14B in 1999

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- A study by the Palo Alto Management Group (PAMG) indicates the market for parallel processing systems will increase at more than 4 Read more…

  • arrow
  • Click Here for More Headlines
  • arrow
HPCwire