ribotoxins
Ribotoxins are a subset of ribosome-targeting toxins—usually small, secreted proteins—that directly cleave a single phosphodiester bond within the sarcin-ricin loop of the 28S rRNA in eukaryotic ribosomes. This precise cleavage irreversibly inactivates the ribosome, effectively halting protein synthesis and leading to cell death if the toxin remains unneutralized.
Mechanism and action: Unlike many ribosome-inactivating proteins that depurinate rRNA, ribotoxins perform site-specific endoribonucleolytic cleavage within
Structural and biological properties: Most ribotoxins are small, single-chain proteins, typically around 150 amino acids in
Examples and scope: Alpha-sarcin is a prototypical ribotoxin, and restrictocin is another well-characterized member. Additional ribotoxins
Applications and safety: In research, ribotoxins are used to study ribosome structure and function and as components