PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Warias, Malte AU - Grubmüller, Helmut AU - Bock, Lars V. TI - tRNA dissociation from EF-Tu after GTP hydrolysis and P<sub>i</sub> release: primary steps and antibiotic inhibition AID - 10.1101/602383 DP - 2019 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 602383 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/04/11/602383.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/04/11/602383.full AB - In each round of ribosomal translation, the translational GTPase EF-Tu delivers a tRNA to the ribosome. After successful decoding, EF-Tu hydrolyses GTP, which triggers a conformational change that ultimately results in the release of the tRNA from EF-Tu. To identify the primary steps of these conformational changes and how they are prevented by the antibiotic kirromycin, we employed all-atom explicit-solvent Molecular Dynamics simulations of the full ribosome-EF-Tu complex. Our results suggest that after GTP hydrolysis and Pi release, the loss of interactions between the nucleotide and the switch 1 loop of EF-Tu allows domain D1 of EF-Tu to rotate relative to domains D2 and D3 and leads to an increased flexibility of the switch 1 loop. This rotation induces a closing of the D1-D3 interface and an opening of the D1-D2 interface. We propose that the opening of the D1-D2 interface, which binds the CCA-tail of the tRNA, weakens the crucial EF-Tu-tRNA interactions which lowers tRNA binding affinity, representing the first step of tRNA release. Kirromycin binds within the D1-D3 interface, sterically blocking its closure, but does not prevent hydrolysis. The resulting increased flexibility of switch 1 explains why it is not resolved in kirromycin-bound structures.