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1.
E Arndt 《FEBS letters》1990,267(2):193-198
Four genes encoding ribosomal proteins HmaS17, HmaL14, HmaL24 and HS3, have been identified in the lambda EMBL3 clone PP*7 from a genomic library of the archaebacterium Halobacterium marismortui. The clone contains genes from the 'S10 and spectinomycin' operon equivalent region. Three of the deduced proteins are homologous to the corresponding Escherichia coli and Methancoccus vannielii S17, L14 and L24 proteins, as well as to eukaryotic proteins from rat or yeast. HS3 was identified as an extra protein corresponding to the gene product for orfc in M. vannielii and the eukaryotic ribosomal protein RS4 from rat. The equivalence of HmaL24 (HL16) and E. coli L24, which share only 28% identical amino acid residues, could now be shown by localizing the HmaL24 gene at the same position in the cluster.  相似文献   

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A DNA fragment containing the genes for the eight ribosomal proteins HmaL3, HL6, HmaL23, HmaL2, HmaS19, HmaL22, HmaS3, and HmaL29 from Halobacterium marismortui has been cloned and sequenced. The organization of this gene cluster in general corresponds to the S10 operon of Escherichia coli although there exists some differences between them. The sequence analysis of the 5'- and 3'-region of the gene cluster revealed three open reading frames (orf1, orf2, and orf3) which do not code for any ribosomal protein whose structure is known. A putative promoter is located upstream of orf1. Out of the eight ribosomal proteins five have counterparts in eubacteria only, two in both eubacteria and eukaryotes, and one is exclusively related to an eukaryotic ribosomal protein.  相似文献   

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The primary structure of ribosomal protein L12 from Methanococcus vannielii has been determined by direct amino acid sequence analysis with automated liquid phase Edman degradation of the entire protein and manual 4-N,N'-dimethylaminoazobenzene-4'-isothiocyanate/phenylisothiocyanate sequencing of fragments obtained by enzymatic digestion and by partial acid hydrolysis. The knowledge of the amino acid sequences of these various fragments allowed the synthesis of two oligonucleotide probes complementary to the 5'- and the 3'-end of the gene, and they were used for hybridization with digested M. vannielii chromosomal DNA. Both oligonucleotide probes gave similar and clear hybridization signals. The plasmid pMvaX1 containing the entire gene of protein L12 was obtained. The nucleotide sequence complemented the partial amino acid sequence, and it is in full agreement with the protein sequence and the amino acid analysis. Comparison of secondary structural elements and hydrophobicity plots of the M. vannielii protein L12 with the known L12 sequences derived from other archaebacterial and eukaryotic sources show strong homologies among these sequences. They contain an exceptional highly conserved hydrophilic sequence area in the C-terminal part of the proteins. In comparison with eubacterial L12 proteins, the conservation is reduced to single amino acid residues. However, the eubacterial L12 proteins have hydrophilic regions similar to those of L12 from M. vannielii. These regions are predicted to be located at the surface of the proteins, as has been proven to be the case in crystallized Escherichia coli L12 protein. It is possible that the strongly conserved hydrophilic sequence regions form part of the factor-binding domain.  相似文献   

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A segment of Bacillus subtilis chromosomal DNA homologous to the Escherichia coli spc ribosomal protein operon was isolated using cloned E. coli rplE (L5) DNA as a hybridization probe. DNA sequence analysis of the B. subtilis cloned DNA indicated a high degree of conservation of spc operon ribosomal protein genes between B. subtilis and E. coli. This fragment contains DNA homologous to the promoter-proximal region of the spc operon, including coding sequences for ribosomal proteins L14, L24, L5, S14, and part of S8; the organization of B. subtilis genes in this region is identical to that found in E. coli. A region homologous to the E. coli L16, L29 and S17 genes, the last genes of the S10 operon, was located upstream from the gene for L14, the first gene in the spc operon. Although the ribosomal protein coding sequences showed 40-60% amino acid identity with E. coli sequences, we failed to find sequences which would form a structure resembling the E. coli target site for the S8 translational repressor, located near the beginning of the L5 coding region in E. coli, in this region or elsewhere in the B. subtilis spc DNA.  相似文献   

8.
Ribosomal proteins in halobacteria   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The amino acid sequences of 16 ribosomal proteins from archaebacterium Halobacterium marismortui have been determined by a direct protein chemical method. In addition, amino acid sequences of three proteins, S11, S18, and L25, have been established by DNA sequencing of their genes as well as by protein sequencing. Comparison of their sequences with those of ribosomal proteins from other organisms revealed that proteins S14, S16, S19, and L25 are related to both eukaryotic and eubacterial ribosomal proteins, being more homologous to eukaryotic than eubacterial counterparts, and proteins S12, S15, and L16 are related to only eukaryotic ribosomal proteins. Furthermore, some proteins are found to be similar to only eubacterial proteins, whereas other proteins show no homology to any other known ribosomal proteins. Comparisons of amino acid compositions between halophilic and nonhalophilic ribosomal proteins revealed that halophilic proteins gain aspartic and glutamic acid residues and significantly lose lysine and arginine residues. In addition, halophilic proteins seem to lose isoleucine as compared with Escherichia coli ribosomal proteins.  相似文献   

9.
The genes for the ribosomal 5S rRNA binding protein L5 have been cloned from three extremely thermophilic eubacteria, Thermus flavus, Thermus thermophilus HB8 and Thermus aquaticus (Jahn et al, submitted). Genes for protein L5 from the three Thermus strains display 95% G/C in third positions of codons. Amino acid sequences deduced from the DNA sequence were shown to be identical for T flavus and T thermophilus, although the corresponding DNA sequences differed by two T to C transitions in the T thermophilus gene. Protein L5 sequences from T flavus and T thermophilus are 95% homologous to L5 from T aquaticus and 56.5% homologous to the corresponding E coli sequence. The lowest degrees of homology were found between the T flavus/T thermophilus L5 proteins and those of yeast L16 (27.5%), Halobacterium marismortui (34.0%) and Methanococcus vannielii (36.6%). From sequence comparison it becomes clear that thermostability of Thermus L5 proteins is achieved by an increase in hydrophobic interactions and/or by restriction of steric flexibility due to the introduction of amino acids with branched aliphatic side chains such as leucine. Alignment of the nine protein sequences equivalent to Thermus L5 proteins led to identification of a conserved internal segment, rich in acidic amino acids, which shows homology to subsequences of E coli L18 and L25. The occurrence of conserved sequence elements in 5S rRNA binding proteins and ribosomal proteins in general is discussed in terms of evolution and function.  相似文献   

10.
An open reading frame upstream of the Methanococcus vannielii L12 gene has been detected. The beginning of this open reading frame agrees with the N-terminal region of a protein (MvaL10) which has been isolated from the 50 S ribosomal subunit of M. vannielii and sequenced. The length of this gene is 1008 nucleotides, coding for 336 amino acids. Excellent sequence similarities were found to the L10-like ribosomal proteins from Halobacterium halobium and man. The N-terminal part of the MvaL10 protein shows significant sequence similarities to the E. coli L10 protein. MvaL10 is more than twice as long as E. coli L10 but is of length similar to those of the homologous halobacterial and human proteins. Interestingly, the C-terminal region of MvaL10 shows exceptionally high similarity to the C-terminal sequence of the MvaL12 protein. This is not the case for the E. coli proteins but was also observed for the human, Halobacterium and Sulfolobus proteins.  相似文献   

11.
The mechanisms for regulation of ribosomal gene expression have been characterized in eukaryotes and eubacteria, but not yet in archaebacteria. We have studied the regulation of the synthesis of ribosomal proteins MvaL1, MvaL10, and MvaL12, encoded by the MvaL1 operon of Methanococcus vannielii, a methanogenic archaebacterium. MvaL1, the homolog of the regulatory protein L1 encoded by the L11 operon of Escherichia coli, was shown to be an autoregulator of the MvaL1 operon. As in E. coli, regulation takes place at the level of translation. The target site for repression by MvaL1 was localized by site-directed mutagenesis to a region within the coding sequence of the MvaL1 gene commencing about 30 bases downstream of the ATG initiation codon. The MvaL1 binding site on the mRNA exhibits similarity in both primary sequence and secondary structure to the L1 regulatory target site of E. coli and to the putative binding site for MvaL1 on the 23S rRNA. In contrast to other regulatory systems, the putative MvaL1 binding site is located in a sequence of the mRNA which is not in direct contact with the ribosome as part of the initiation complex. Furthermore, the untranslated leader sequence is not involved in the regulation. Therefore, we suggest that a novel mechanism of translational feedback regulation exists in M. vannielii.  相似文献   

12.
The complete amino acid sequences of ribosomal proteins L9, L20, L21/22, L24 and L32 from the archaebacterium Halobacterium marismortui were determined. The comparison of the sequences of these proteins with those from other organisms revealed that proteins L21/22 and L24 are homologous to ribosomal protein Yrp29 from yeast and L19 from rat, respectively, and that H. marismortui L20 is homologous to L30 from eubacteria. H. marismortui ribosomal protein L9 showed sequence homology to both L29 from yeast and L15 from eubacteria. No homologous protein was found for H. marismortui L32. These results are discussed with respect to the phylogenetic relationship between eubacteria, archaebacteria and eukaryotes.  相似文献   

13.
A small and extremely basic ribosomal protein (HL46e) has been purified from Halobacterium marismortui using reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The amino acid sequence of the protein was determined by automated N-terminal and internal sequence analysis. Comparison of this sequence with other ribosomal protein sequences from eubacteria, archaebacteria and eukaryotes revealed a strong homology to SL46e from Sulfolobus solfataricus, YeaL46 from yeast and RL39 from rat. No significant sequence similarly was found to any eubacterial ribosomal protein so far known. Using a specific oligonucleotide probe the HL46e gene was identified, cloned and the nucleotide sequence including the 5'- and 3'-flanking regions were analysed. The HL46e gene is followed by the gene coding for HL30. A putative halobacterial promoter sequence with the motive 'TTTAAA' has been localized 32 bp upstream of the HL46e gene and a putative terminator sequence localized downstream from the HL30 gene. An equivalent to this HL46e/HL30 operon is apparently not present in Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

14.
Restriction fragments from Bacillus stearothermophilus chromosomal DNA were cross-hybridized with the Escherichia coli ribosomal protein L2 gene rplB. A 2-kb EcoRI fragment which showed cross-hybridization was cloned into the M13 phage and sequenced by the dideoxy chain-terminating method. Comparison of the deduced amino-acid sequences with the corresponding sequences of E. coli ribosomal proteins showed that this fragment contains the region encoding the C-terminus of L2, the genes encoding S19, L22, S3 as well as the N-terminus of L16. Thus the organization of this gene cluster is the same as that in the S10 operon of E. coli. The deduced sequences of proteins L22 and S3, which have not been determined so far, were found to have 52% or 55% amino-acid identity, respectively, with those of the corresponding proteins in E. coli. The deduced B. stearothermophilus S19 protein sequence was in accordance with the reinvestigated protein sequence (H. Hirano, personal communication).  相似文献   

15.
The genes corresponding to the L11, L1, L10, and L12 equivalent ribosomal proteins (L11e, L1e, L10e, and L12e) of Escherichia coli have been cloned and sequenced from two widely divergent species of archaebacteria, Halobacterium cutirubrum and Sulfolobus solfataricus, and the L10 and four different L12 genes have been cloned and sequenced from the eucaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Alignments between the deduced amino acid sequences of these proteins and to other available homologous proteins of eubacteria and eucaryotes have been made. The data suggest that the archaebacteria are a distinct coherent phylogenetic group. Alignment of the proline-rich L11e proteins reveals that the N-terminal region, believed to be responsible for interaction with release factor 1, is the most highly conserved region and that there is specific conservation of most of the proline residues, which may be important in maintaining the highly elongated structure of the molecule. Although L11 is the most highly methylated protein in the E. coli ribosome, the sites of methylation are not conserved in the archaebacterial L11e proteins. The L1e proteins of eubacteria and archaebacteria show two regions of very high similarity near the center and the carboxy termini of the proteins. The L10e proteins of all kingdoms are colinear and contain approximately three fourths of an L12e protein fused to their carboxy terminus, although much of this fusion has been lost in the truncated eubacterial protein. The archaebacterial and eucaryotic L12e proteins are colinear, whereas the eubacterial protein has suffered a rearrangement through what appear to be gene fusion events. Within the L12e derived region of the L10e proteins there exists a repeated module of 26 amino acids, present in two copies in eucaryotes, three in archaebacteria, and one in eubacteria. This modular sequence is apparently also present in the L12e proteins of all kingdoms and may play a role in L12e dimerization, L10e-L12e complex formation, and the function of the L10e-L12e complex in translation.  相似文献   

16.
A 1643 base pair fragment encoding the S3 and L29 equivalent ribosomal proteins has been sequenced from the archaebacterium Halobacterium halobium. The incomplete open reading frame present upstream from the S3 gene encodes a protein homologous to the eubacterial ribosomal protein L22. The initiation codons of the S3 and L29 genes overlap with the termination codons of the upstream genes. A tight physical organization suggests that these genes are transcribed as a polycistronic operon. Peculiarities of the protein structure and gene organization are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The genome region of the extreme halophilic archaebacterium Haloarcula marismortui equivalent to the alpha-operon of Escherichia coli has been characterized. In H. marismortui, the alpha-operon was found to be located immediately upstream from the S9 gene cluster. The gene order in the halobacterial alpha-operon, given according to the gene products, is tRNA(Ser), HmaS13, HmaS4, HmaS11, and HmaRp alpha. Compared to the corresponding operon from E. coli, the halobacterial gene organization differs in (i) the presence of a gene for tRNA(Ser) (GCU), (ii) the reversed order of the genes for the ribosomal proteins HmaS11 and HmaS4, and (iii) the absence of the gene coding for the ribosomal protein L17. The primary structure of HmaRp alpha shows high similarity to a subunit of eukaryotic RNA polymerase II (YeaRpB3, HsaRpB33), whereas the similarity to the eubacterial alpha-subunit of RNA polymerase is only weak.  相似文献   

18.
We have isolated cDNA clones specific for Arabidopsis thaliana cytosolic ribosomal protein S11 and plastid ribosomal protein CS17, both of which are encoded in the nuclear genome, through the use of the corresponding soybean and pea cDNAs as probes, respectively. The nucleotide sequences of all four cDNAs were determined. The amino acid sequences derived from these cDNA sequences show that the soybean and A. thaliana S11 cDNAs encode proteins that are homologous to rat ribosomal protein S11 and that the pea and A. thaliana CS17 cDNAs encode proteins that are homologous to Escherichia coli ribosomal protein S17. The plant S11 cytosolic ribosomal proteins also show significant sequence similarity to both E. coli ribosomal protein S17 and plastid CS17 indicating that these are all related proteins. Comparison of A. thaliana CS17 with A. thaliana S11 and with E. coli S17 suggests that CS17 is more related to S17 than it is to S11. These results support the idea that the gene encoding CS17 was derived from a prokaryotic endosymbiont and not from a duplication of the eukaryotic S11 gene.  相似文献   

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The amino-terminal sequence of ribosomal protein L10 from Halobacterium marismortui has been determined up to residue 54, using both a liquid- and a gas-phase sequenator. The two sequences are in good agreement. The protein is clearly homologous to protein HcuL10 from the related strain Halobacterium cutirubrum. Furthermore, a weaker but distinct homology to ribosomal protein L6 from Escherichia coli and Bacillus stearothermophilus can be detected. In addition to 7 identical amino acids in the first 36 residues in all four sequences a number of conservative replacements occurs, of mainly hydrophobic amino acids. In this common region the pattern of conserved amino acids suggests the presence of a beta-alpha fold as it occurs in ribosomal proteins L12 and L30. Furthermore, several potential cases of homology to other ribosomal components of the three ur-kingdoms have been found.  相似文献   

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