Q.32 Which group of the antibiotics inhibit translation by binding to the 50s ribosomal subunit?
1. Erythromycin. Chloramphenicol
2. Kanamycin, Neomycin
3. Vancomycin, Cycloserine
4. Kanamycin, Vancomycin
Erythromycin and Chloramphenicol (option 1) are the antibiotics that inhibit translation by binding to the 50S ribosomal subunit.
Question Breakdown
This question tests knowledge of antibiotic mechanisms in microbiology, focusing on how certain drugs target bacterial protein synthesis at the ribosome’s large subunit.
Option Analysis
-
Option 1: Erythromycin, Chloramphenicol: Both bind the 50S subunit—erythromycin blocks the exit tunnel to halt elongation, while chloramphenicol inhibits peptidyl transferase activity. Correct choice.
-
Option 2: Kanamycin, Neomycin: Aminoglycosides that bind the 30S subunit, causing mRNA misreading and inhibiting initiation. Incorrect.
-
Option 3: Vancomycin, Cycloserine: Cell wall synthesis inhibitors—vancomycin blocks peptidoglycan cross-linking; cycloserine disrupts precursor formation. No ribosomal action.
-
Option 4: Kanamycin, Vancomycin: Kanamycin targets 30S; vancomycin affects cell walls. Mixed targets, incorrect.
Introduction to 50S-Targeting Antibiotics
Antibiotics inhibit translation 50S ribosomal subunit like erythromycin and chloramphenicol by binding its peptidyl transferase center or nascent peptide tunnel, stopping bacterial protein synthesis.
These drugs are vital in microbiology for selective prokaryotic targeting, sparing eukaryotic 60S subunits.
Mechanism of Key Antibiotics
Erythromycin, a macrolide, binds 50S near 23S rRNA to block elongation. Chloramphenicol overlaps at the A-site, preventing peptide bond formation.
Both disrupt 50S maturation indirectly in some cases.
Comparison of Options
| Option | Antibiotics | Target Site | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Erythromycin, Chloramphenicol | 50S subunit | Peptidyl transferase/exit tunnel | Translation inhibition |
| 2. Kanamycin, Neomycin | 30S subunit | mRNA decoding | Misreading/initiation block |
| 3. Vancomycin, Cycloserine | Cell wall | Peptidoglycan synthesis | No ribosomal effect |
| 4. Kanamycin, Vancomycin | 30S + cell wall | Mixed, non-50S exclusive | Incorrect pairing |
Relevance for Life Sciences Exams
In GATE or similar exams, recall 50S binders (macrolides, chloramphenicol, lincosamides) versus 30S (aminoglycosides, tetracyclines).
This aligns with your molecular biology focus, emphasizing ribosomal targets in antimicrobial therapy.


